MCX, Caspian Corporate Services, and A-1 Limited Shares Analyzed
During the trading period from December 29, 2025, to January 2, 2026, the prices of some stocks are going to change because of corporate actions. These companies – MCX, Caspian Corporate Services, and A-1 Limited – will have “ex-dates.” This means if you buy the stock after the ex-date, you won’t get the benefits of these changes.
An ex-date is the date when a company makes a change, like a stock split or bonus issue, and the stock price starts to reflect that change. To get these benefits, you need to own the stock before the ex-date.
Each company is doing something different. MCX is splitting its shares, Caspian Corporate Services is consolidating them, and A-1 Limited is offering a bonus issue and splitting its shares. It’s important to know the specific dates for each company because that’s when the changes take effect.
Key Points
- Three companies (MCX, Caspian, A-1) have ex-dates coming up.
- Stock splits, consolidations, and bonus issues will affect share prices.
- Investors need to own stock *before* the ex-date to benefit.
- Each company has a specific ex-date and corporate action.
- Record dates determine eligible shareholders for each action.
- Changes impact ownership value, requiring proactive investment decisions.
MCX – Stock Split
MCX is splitting each of its shares into five shares. This means if you had one share, you’ll now have five. They’ve set January 2, 2026, as the record date to decide who gets the new shares.
Caspian Corporate Services – Share Consolidation
Caspian Corporate Services is combining ten of its shares into one larger share. They’ve set December 29, 2025, as the record date. This makes each share worth ten times more.
A-1 Limited – Bonus Issue and Stock Split
A-1 Limited is giving shareholders three bonus shares for every one they own, and it’s also splitting each share into ten smaller shares. The record date for both is December 31, 2025.
“Understanding ex-dates is crucial for investors to avoid missing out on potential gains from corporate actions.”



