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24 companies are executing stock splits today as part of a broader week of corporate restructuring. According to Yahoo Finance’s Stock Splits Calendar, most of these actions are reverse splits—a move in which companies consolidate existing shares rather than divide them, often to raise per-share prices or meet stock exchange listing requirements.
Quick Facts
- 24 stock splits take effect on Tuesday, June 2, 2026
- Reverse splits dominate the list, including a 1-for-7 ratio at Presurance Holdings
- Monday, June 1 saw 48 splits, with Wednesday expected to bring 38 more
- A stock split divides shares to lower per-share price, while a reverse split combines shares to raise it
What Reverse Splits Mean for Investors
A reverse stock split consolidates existing shares at a fixed ratio—for example, a 1-for-7 reverse split means every seven shares become one. This doesn’t change the total value of an investor’s position, but it increases the per-share price. Companies often pursue reverse splits when their stock has fallen to very low levels, either to regain confidence among institutional investors or to maintain compliance with stock exchange minimum price requirements.
According to market data, examples taking effect today include Presurance Holdings (PRHI) with a 1-for-7 reverse split and Silo Pharma with a 1-for-15 reverse split. These are not uncommon restructuring moves and do not directly alter shareholder ownership percentages, though the visible share price rises significantly.
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The Broader Splitting Week
The stock split activity extends across the entire week. Yahoo Finance data shows Monday, June 1 had 48 splits, Tuesday (today) brings 24, Wednesday is scheduled for 38 splits, and Thursday for 22 additional actions. This concentration reflects the end of a corporate actions cycle, where many companies align their splits to specific dates for administrative efficiency.
Not all of these are reverse splits. Some companies execute traditional (forward) stock splits, which increase share count but lower the per-share price, often used to make stock more accessible to retail investors.
Why Companies Split Stock
Companies split stock for a variety of strategic reasons. A traditional split makes shares more affordable, potentially broadening the investor base. A reverse split raises the share price on paper, which can improve market perception and maintain compliance with listing standards. Both types are corporate governance decisions that technically don’t create or destroy shareholder value—they simply reshape the share structure.
The cluster of splits happening this week illustrates how corporate actions often align with fiscal calendars and market conventions, rather than being spread evenly throughout the year.
Sources
- Yahoo Finance Stock Splits Calendar — 24 splits scheduled for Tuesday, June 2; 48 on Monday, June 1; 38 on Wednesday, June 3
- SEC Filings / Stock Titan — Presurance Holdings (PRHI) 1-for-7 reverse split effective June 2
- TradingView / Investing.com — Silo Pharma 1-for-15 reverse split effective June 2












