Google is finally ready to split its stock for the first time, more than three years after co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin began discussing a move engineered to ensure they remain in control of the Internet’s most powerful company.
The split is scheduled to occur on April 2. It had been delayed because of staunch resistance from other Google Inc. shareholders, who feared the manoeuvre would unfairly benefit Page and Brin at the expense of just about everyone else.
Google proposed the unorthodox split so that Page and Brin could preserve power in the company they started in a rented garage more than 15 years ago.
It addresses concerns that the founders would lose control of Google as the company creates more shares to compensate its employees and buy startups.
To gain clearance for the split, Google settled a shareholders lawsuit and agreed to pay up to $7.5 billion if the split does not pan out the way the Mountain View, California, company envisions.
Google’s split will create a new class of “C” stock that carries no voting power. One share of C stock will be distributed for each share of voting Class A stock owned as of March 27.
Initially, the value of the current stock will be divided equally between the two types of shares. But they will then trade separately with different ticker symbols. Class C shares will get the company’s existing “GOOG” ticker symbol, while Class A will change to “GOOGL.”
If the split had not been delayed by a legal skirmish, Google’s stock probably would not have exceeded $1,000 for the first time last fall.
Page and Brin primarily own Google’s Class B stock, which already gives them 10 times the voting power of each Class A share. Combined, the Google founders control 56 per cent of the shareholder votes, even though they own less than 15 percent of the stock issued.
Nonetheless, the voting clout of Page and Brin has been gradually shrinking, as Google has used Class A stock to reward employees and finance some of its acquisitions during the past decade.
Distributing a new class of non-voting stock will enable Google to continue doling out shares to its nearly 44,000 workers without further undermining the co-founders’ power.
As with any stock split, the division will lower Google’s trading price on the Nasdaq Stock Market as investors account for a big increase in shares. The company will be distributing about 277 million shares of Class C stock, based on how many Class A shares had been issued as of late last year.
If Google’s shares behave similarly to other 2-for-1 splits, the stock’s price would be cut roughly in half from its current level of more than $1,100. Google’s market value would remain roughly the same at about $380 billion because it will have nearly double the number of shares issued.