You need to contact Kellogg's shareholder services department. Kellogg has split its stock eight times since 1951. So...
100 shares of stock became 200 shares in 1951...
which became 400 shares in 1958...
which became 800 shares in 1963...
1600 shares in 1970...
3200 shares in 1973...
6400 shares in 1986...
12,800 shares in 1991...
and finally 25,600 shares in 1997.
So call the company and have them help you out. Their number is(877) 910-5385.
1000.00
The shares would be worth $2,800.00 today giving you a profit before tax of $2,200.00.
500,000
3000 dollars
1 million dollars
5 million
2.1 million
you would still have 100 shares, they would just not be worth the same each.for example, the price per share was $2 in 1995 and you bought a 100 for $200. Today, the value is $19.36 today which means you would have a little over $1900s worth of Intel's shares.your count of shares doesnt change, just their value does.
Around $120,984. 100 original shares would now be 2,400 shares without the dividend reinvestment. One hundred shares at $180 original if you bought in at $1.80 or so.
As of 17 June 2012 they would be worth $199.10 each so around $19910.00
$7501.28 2 shares bought in 1983 have split 2:1 3 times since then, so now you have 16 shares. At today's closing price of 468.83, times 16, equals 7501.28. When a stock splits 2:1 your number of shares double. a 3:1 split triples your number of shares, and so on.
Berkshire Hathaway Class A stock closed at $118,000 per share on September 9, 2008. So...100 shares of it would be worth $11.8 million.