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Is This Hot IPO the Next Carnival?

The Motley Fool

Viking (NYSE: VIK) completed its initial public offering (IPO) on May 1, pricing a little more than 64 million shares in the offering at $24 apiece. Most of the stock belonged to existing stakeholders. The inviting market waters greeted a new cruise line operator earlier this month.

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Want to Invest Like a Billionaire? This ETF Lets You Buy SpaceX, OpenAI, Stripe, and Other Unicorns for Less Than $50.

The Motley Fool

The majority of investors don't have a chance to participate until a unicorn pursues an initial public offering ( IPO ). According to the company's filings, the portfolio managers of the fund have a long-term goal of investing in 100 venture-backed technology companies. This where the Destiny Tech100 fund comes in.

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2 Stock-Split Stocks Billionaires Are Buying Hand Over Fist, and 1 They've Sent to the Chopping Block

The Motley Fool

A forward stock split involves reducing a company's share price to make it more nominally affordable for investors who may not have access to fractional-share purchases with their broker. Meanwhile, reverse stock splits are designed to increase a public company's share price to ensure continued listing on a major stock exchange.

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One Member of Congress Is Going Against the Grain and Selling This Skyrocketing Stock-Split Stock

The Motley Fool

A forward-stock split is used by public companies to make their shares more nominally affordable for everyday investors. Meanwhile, a reverse-stock split increases a company's nominal share price to ensure continued listing on a major stock exchange.

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Move Over, Walmart and Chipotle: Wall Street Has a New Stock-Split Stock

The Motley Fool

Meanwhile, reverse-stock splits aim to increase a company's share price to ensure it meets the minimum listing requirements on a major stock exchange. For all intents and purposes, most investors seek out companies enacting forward-stock splits.

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Meet Wall Street's Newest Stock-Split Stock -- a Company on the Cutting Edge of the Hottest Innovation

The Motley Fool

A forward-stock split is designed to make a company's shares more nominally affordable for investors who might not be able to purchase fractional shares through their online broker. Meanwhile, a reverse-stock split aims to increase the share price of a publicly traded company to ensure its continued listing on a major stock exchange.

Companies 246
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This Company Is Quickly Becoming a Leader in AI -- and Its Not Nvidia, Alphabet, or Microsoft

The Motley Fool

Palantir is nearly 20 years old, yet it only went public about three years ago. Since its debut on the New York Stock Exchange in late 2020, Palantir stock has been no stranger to the highs and lows of public company scrutiny.

Companies 246