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Video: What is a Stock Split?
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| Central Pacific Financial Corp. is the bank holding company of Central Pacific Bank (the Bank). The Bank is engaged in offering traditional deposit and lending products and services to consumer and business customers, such as accepting demand, money market, savings and time deposits, originating loans, including commercial loans, construction loans, commercial real estate loans, residential mortgage loans, and consumer loans and fiduciary and investment management services. Its investment securities portfolio includes mortgage-backed securities (MBS), other debt securities and equity securities. Its MBS portfolio comprises residential MBS issued by U.S. government entities and agencies. According to our CPF split history records, Central Pacific Financial has had 1 split. | |
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Central Pacific Financial (CPF) has 1 split in our CPF split history database. The split for CPF took place on February 03, 2011. This was a 1 for 20 reverse split, meaning for each 20 shares of CPF owned pre-split, the shareholder now owned 1 share. For example, a 1000 share position pre-split, became a 50 share position following the split.
When a company such as Central Pacific Financial conducts a reverse share split, it is usually because shares have fallen to a lower per-share pricepoint than the company would like. This can be important because, for example, certain types of mutual funds might have a limit governing which stocks they may buy, based upon per-share price. The $5 and $10 pricepoints tend to be important in this regard. Stock exchanges also tend to look at per-share price, setting a lower limit for listing eligibility. So when a company does a reverse split, it is looking mathematically at the market capitalization before and after the reverse split takes place, and concluding that if the market capitilization remains stable, the reduced share count should result in a higher price per share.
Looking at the CPF split history from start to finish, an original position size of 1000 shares would have turned into 50 today. Below, we examine the compound annual growth rate — CAGR for short — of an investment into Central Pacific Financial shares, starting with a $10,000 purchase of CPF, presented on a split-history-adjusted basis factoring in the complete CPF split history.

Growth of $10,000.00
With Dividends Reinvested
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| Start date: |
06/20/2016 |
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| End date: |
06/16/2026 |
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| Start price/share: |
$23.74 |
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| End price/share: |
$36.06 |
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| Starting shares: |
421.23 |
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| Ending shares: |
618.46 |
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| Dividends reinvested/share: |
$9.41 |
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| Total return: |
123.02% |
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| Average Annual Total Return: |
8.36% |
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| Starting investment: |
$10,000.00 |
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| Ending investment: |
$22,309.97 |
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| Years: |
9.99 |
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Growth of $10,000.00
Without Dividends Reinvested
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| Start date: |
06/20/2016 |
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| End date: |
06/16/2026 |
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| Start price/share: |
$23.74 |
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| End price/share: |
$36.06 |
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| Dividends collected/share: |
$9.41 |
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| Total return: |
91.53% |
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| Average Annual Total Return: |
6.72% |
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| Starting investment: |
$10,000.00 |
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| Ending investment: |
$19,155.94 |
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| Years: |
9.99 |
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| Date |
Ratio |
| 02/03/2011 | 1 for 20 |
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