Increased Split Activity Spotlights Stock Split ETF

For various reasons, institutional investors typically are not big supporters of stock splits. Nor is Wall Street, probably because a company’s decision to split its shares does involve fees to that firm’s investment bank of choice.

Those points do not prevent companies from splitting their shares, as highlighted by a recent uptick in split activity. Thirteen companies have engaged in traditional forward splits this year, according to Fidelity, but Fidelity’s split calendar has not been update to reflect last week’s 2-for-1 split announcement from Starbucks (NasdaqGS: SBUX) and Tuesday’s 2-for-1 announcement from Ross Stores (NasdaqGS: ROST).

Exchange traded fund investors can play increased split activity with the USCF Stock Split Index Fund (NYSEArca: TOFR), which debuted in September. TOFR is the first non-commodities ETF courtesy of U.S. Commodity Funds, the ETF issuer behind popular commodities ETFs, such as the United States Oil Fund (NYSEArca: USO), United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSEArca: UNG) and the United States Brent Oil Fund (NYSEArca: BNO). [An ETF for Split Stocks]

TOFR benchmarks to the 2 for 1 Index, an equal-weight index that is currently home to 30 companies. “Each month, the 2 for 1 Index is updated on the Friday closest to the 15th of that month. The pool of eligible companies is evaluated and ranked according to a proprietary methodology, and the top ranked choice is selected for the Index.  One new stock is added to the Index, and the oldest stock is removed,” said USCF in the statement.

That means Visa (NYSE: V), Starbucks and Ross Stores could be new additions to TOFR when the ETF’s index is updated next month.

While the index is the 2 for 1 Index, that does not mean TOFR is limited to stocks that have split on that basis. For example, Apple (NasdaqGS: AAPL) which underwent a 7-for-1 split last year, is a member of TOFR’s lineup. Other well-known companies held by TOFR include DaVita HealthCare Partners (NYSE: DVA), Colgate-Palmolive (NYSE: CL) and Union Pacific (NYSE: UNP).