KEY POINTS
  • Rite Aid shareholders have approved the company's reverse stock split. 
  • In a reverse stock split, companies combine shares to increase the price.
  •  Rite Aid has been struggling to find a way forward after two failed mergers in two years.
Pedestrians walk past a Rite Aid Corp. store in Oakland, California.

Rite Aid shareholders have approved the company's reverse stock split, in a move aimed at boosting the drugstore chain's shares high enough to continue trading on New York Stock Exchange.

Shares of Rite Aid opened Thursday at 70 cents per share. They need to be above $1 to comply with the exchange's trading rules. In a reverse stock split, companies combine shares to increase the price.