Corporate Actions
Corporate actions are company events — splits, bonuses, dividends, rights issues and mergers — that mechanically change a stock's price or share count, creating jumps in the raw price series that are not real market moves and must be adjusted for.
Quick answer: Corporate actions are company events — splits, bonuses, dividends, rights issues and mergers — that mechanically change a stock's price or share count, creating jumps in the raw price series that are not real market moves and must be adjusted for.
In simple words
A corporate action is something a company does to its own shares: split one share into two, give bonus shares, pay a dividend, or merge with another firm. These events change the share price for purely mechanical reasons — the pie is cut differently, but its value has not moved. On the raw chart this shows up as a sudden gap that looks like a crash or a spike but is nothing of the sort.
Purpose
Understanding corporate actions matters because they are the single most common reason a historical price series lies: they insert artificial jumps that trigger false signals and corrupt indicators unless the data is adjusted.
Professional explanation
The main types and what they do to price
A stock split (say 1:5, or in Indian terms a face-value split from ₹10 to ₹2) multiplies the share count and divides the price proportionally — a ₹2,000 share becomes five ₹400 shares. A bonus issue (say 1:1) gives existing holders extra shares free, similarly diluting the per-share price. A dividend pays cash per share, so on the ex-dividend date the price drops by roughly the dividend amount because the cash has left the company. A rights issue lets holders buy new shares at a discount, and a merger or demerger replaces shares with those of another entity or a new spinoff. Every one of these changes the raw price without any change in an investor's total value.
Why raw prices jump on the ex-date
The key concept is the ex-date — the first day a buyer no longer receives the benefit. On the ex-split or ex-bonus date the quoted price steps down to reflect the new share count; on the ex-dividend date it steps down by about the dividend. This is an accounting adjustment, not supply and demand. A ₹2,000 stock going ex a 1:1 bonus opens around ₹1,000 — a 50% 'drop' on the chart that no investor actually lost. To a naive algorithm scanning raw prices, this is indistinguishable from a genuine crash, and that confusion is where the damage begins.
How corporate actions silently corrupt backtests
Consider a mean-reversion system that buys large single-day drops. On the ex-date of a 1:5 split, a raw series shows an 80% overnight fall, and the system enthusiastically 'buys the dip' into a move that never happened, booking a fictional 400% gain as the price 'recovers' to its adjusted level the next day. Trend systems suffer the reverse — a bonus looks like a crash and stops out phantom positions. Volatility and ATR readings spike. Every one of these is silent: the backtest runs cleanly and produces a beautiful, entirely fictitious equity curve. Corporate actions are the archetypal example of bad data corrupting a strategy without any error message.
Adjustment: back-adjusting the history
The fix is to restate the historical series so the mechanical jump disappears. For a split or bonus you multiply all prices before the ex-date by the adjustment ratio (and volumes by its inverse) so the series is continuous in split-adjusted terms. For dividends you subtract the dividend from prior prices (or use a proportional total-return factor). The result is an adjusted price series with no artificial gap. Note that adjustment rewrites history: today's split changes every past price in your database, so any cached indicator computed on the old prices is now stale and must be recomputed.
India-specific mechanics and pitfalls
In India, corporate actions are announced to the exchanges and NSE publishes them; the ex-date and record date are set by the company and the exchange applies a price adjustment to the previous close for circuit-limit purposes. F&O adds complexity: on a split or bonus, the exchange revises the lot size, strike prices and outstanding positions of that stock's derivatives so contract value is preserved, and index constituents are re-weighted. Special dividends above a threshold can also trigger strike adjustments. A backtest that adjusts the cash equity but forgets that the F&O lot size or strikes changed will mis-state position sizes and P&L for the whole pre-action period.
Practical example
Illustrative example (Indian market)
Suppose a stock trades at ₹2,400 and announces a 1:1 bonus with an ex-date. On the ex-date it opens near ₹1,200. An unadjusted mean-reversion backtest sees a 50% one-day fall — far beyond any normal move — and buys, then records the price 'rebounding' to its adjusted path and books a spurious ~100% gain on that trade. Adjusted correctly, every pre-ex-date price is halved (₹2,400 becomes ₹1,200 in the adjusted series) and volumes doubled, so the ex-date transition is seamless and no false signal appears. If this stock is also in F&O, the exchange doubles the lot size and halves the strikes on the ex-date, so a derivatives backtest must apply the same restatement or its lot-based P&L before the bonus will be wrong by a factor of two.
A face-value split from ₹10 to ₹1 is a 10:1 split: the price divides by ten on the ex-date. NSE's corporate-actions bhavcopy and the announced ex-date are the authoritative reference; relying on a broker chart that silently shows adjusted or unadjusted prices without telling you which is a frequent source of confusion.
Advantages
- Knowing corporate actions lets you produce a continuous, tradeable-return price series
- Correct adjustment removes the single most common source of phantom signals
- Reference data on ex-dates enables exact reconstruction of what an investor actually held
- Handling them properly is what makes multi-year backtests meaningful
Limitations
- Adjustment rewrites all historical prices, invalidating any cached indicators computed earlier
- Dividend adjustment methods differ (subtractive vs proportional), giving slightly different histories
- F&O lot-size and strike changes are easy to forget, corrupting derivatives P&L
- Missing or mis-dated corporate-action records silently reintroduce the very jumps you tried to remove
- Adjusted prices no longer equal the prices actually traded, which complicates order and cost modelling
Common mistakes
- Backtesting on raw, unadjusted prices so a split or bonus reads as a real crash and triggers phantom trades
- Adjusting the cash equity but forgetting the corresponding F&O lot-size and strike revision
- Assuming a broker's chart is adjusted (or unadjusted) without confirming which, then mixing the two
- Adjusting for splits and bonuses but ignoring dividends, so long-horizon returns are understated
- Not recomputing indicators after an adjustment, leaving stale values that no longer match the prices
- Using an outdated or incomplete corporate-actions file, so some ex-date jumps remain uncorrected
Professional usage
Data teams maintain a corporate-actions master keyed to each security and ex-date, sourced from the exchange, and apply it deterministically to produce adjusted series, storing both raw and adjusted with the adjustment factors so any point in history can be reproduced. They reconcile the F&O contract adjustments (lot size, strikes) alongside the cash adjustment so derivatives and equity histories agree. Crucially, they treat a newly announced action as an event that invalidates and triggers recomputation of downstream indicators. The governing principle is that adjustment is a versioned transformation with full provenance, never an irreversible overwrite.
Key takeaways
- Corporate actions mechanically move raw prices without any real change in value
- The ex-date jump is indistinguishable from a crash or spike to a naive algorithm — this is where backtests break
- Adjust splits, bonuses and dividends, and remember F&O lot-size and strike changes too
- Adjustment rewrites history, so keep raw and adjusted series with factors and recompute indicators
Frequently asked questions
What is a corporate action?
Why does a stock price jump on the ex-date?
How do corporate actions corrupt a backtest?
What is the difference between a split and a bonus?
How do I adjust prices for a split or bonus?
How are dividends adjusted for?
Do corporate actions affect F&O contracts?
Where do I get corporate-action data for Indian stocks?
What is the ex-date versus the record date?
Why does adjustment invalidate my cached indicators?
Are broker charts adjusted for corporate actions?
What happens to options strikes on a stock split?
Can a merger break my historical data?
Should I store raw or adjusted prices?
Voice search & related questions
Natural-language questions people ask about Corporate Actions.
What is a corporate action in simple terms?
Why did my stock suddenly drop 50 percent for no reason?
Do I need to adjust prices for splits and dividends?
What is the ex-date?
Do stock splits affect futures and options?
Are the charts on my broker app already adjusted?
Sources & references
Last reviewed 11 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Markets and rules change; verify current conventions with SEBI, NSE/BSE and your broker.