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Video: What is a Stock Split?
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| Rogers Corporation designs, develops, manufactures, and sells engineered materials and components. Its segments include Advanced Electronics Solutions (AES), Elastomeric Material Solutions (EMS), and Other. The AES segment designs, develops, manufactures, and sells circuit materials, ceramic substrate materials, busbars, and cooling solutions for applications in electric and hybrid electric vehicles (EV/HEV), automotive, aerospace and defense, renewable energy, wireless infrastructure, mass transit, industrial, connected devices, wired infrastructure markets. The EMS segment designs, develops, manufactures, and sells engineered material solutions for a variety of applications and markets. According to our ROG split history records, Rogers has had 2 splits. | |
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Rogers (ROG) has 2 splits in our ROG split history database. The first split for ROG took place on July 31, 1995. This was a 2 for 1
split, meaning for each share of ROG owned pre-split, the shareholder now owned 2 shares. For example, a 1000 share position pre-split, became a 2000 share position following the split. ROG's second split took place on May 30, 2000. This was a 2 for 1
split, meaning for each share of ROG owned pre-split, the shareholder now owned 2 shares. For example, a 2000 share position pre-split, became a 4000 share position following the split.
When a company such as Rogers splits its shares, the market capitalization before and after the split takes place remains stable, meaning the shareholder now owns more shares but each are valued at a lower price per share. Often, however, a lower priced stock on a per-share basis can attract a wider range of buyers. If that increased demand causes the share price to appreciate, then the total market capitalization rises post-split. This does not always happen, however, often depending on the underlying fundamentals of the business.
Looking at the ROG split history from start to finish, an original position size of 1000 shares would have turned into 4000 today. Below, we examine the compound annual growth rate — CAGR for short — of an investment into Rogers shares, starting with a $10,000 purchase of ROG, presented on a split-history-adjusted basis factoring in the complete ROG split history.

Growth of $10,000.00
Without Dividends Reinvested
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| Start date: |
01/20/2016 |
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| End date: |
01/16/2026 |
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| Start price/share: |
$44.65 |
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| End price/share: |
$99.09 |
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| Dividends collected/share: |
$0.00 |
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| Total return: |
121.93% |
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| Average Annual Total Return: |
8.30% |
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| Starting investment: |
$10,000.00 |
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| Ending investment: |
$22,191.66 |
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| Years: |
10.00 |
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| Date |
Ratio |
| 07/31/1995 | 2 for 1
| | 05/30/2000 | 2 for 1
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