1 Stock-Split Stock to Buy Hand Over Fist in February and 1 to Avoid

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It's a great time to be an optimist on Wall Street. For more than two years, the bulls have been in firm control, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite all recently achieving record-closing highs.

A plethora of catalysts have helped fuel this rally, including the emergence of artificial intelligence (AI), Donald Trump's return to the White House, better-than-anticipated corporate earnings, and a decline in the prevailing rate of inflation from a four-decade peak of more than 9%. But it's important not to overlook the role stock splits have played in lifting the broader market.

A U.S. dollar coin split in half that's been set atop a paper stock certificate for shares of a public company.
Image source: Getty Images.

A stock split is an event that allows a publicly traded company to cosmetically alter its share price and outstanding share count by the same magnitude. Stock splits are "cosmetic" in the sense that they have no impact on a company's market cap or its underlying operating performance.

Splits come in two varieties, one of which is far more sought after by investors than the other. Reverse splits are the least-liked of the two and are designed to increase a company's share price. Reverse splits are often undertaken from a position of operating weakness and designed to keep a company's stock from being delisted due to a low nominal share price.

In comparison, investors usually gravitate to companies conducting forward splits. This type of split makes shares more nominally affordable for investors who can't purchase fractional shares through their broker. It's also the type of split undertaken by companies that have consistently out-innovated and out-executed their peers.

In 2024, more than a dozen high-profile stocks conducted a split, only one of which was of the reverse variety. Among these stock-split stocks, two stand out in February -- but for markedly different reasons.

The stock-split stock that can be bought hand over fist in February: Sony Group

On one end of the spectrum is a time-tested business that's still ripe for the picking by opportunistic long-term investors. I'm talking about Japan-based electronics juggernaut Sony Group (NYSE: SONY), which completed a 5-for-1 stock split in early October.

The reason Sony isn't getting a lot of attention from the investing community at the moment is simple: it's in the middle of a gaming console cycle. The PlayStation 5 (PS5) debuted during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic in November 2020, and the company's next-generation console isn't expected to hit retail shelves for two to three more years. While the absence of a new gaming console might have some investors overlooking Sony stock, multiple aspects of its operations suggest this is a mistake.