Realty Income (NYSE: O) has been one of the best dividend stocks for decades.
The real estate investment trust (REIT) literally calls itself the “Monthly Dividend Company,” so its dividend is part of its brand and is in its DNA.
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That commitment has resulted in 32 consecutive years of raising its dividend, through all different types of markets, including recessions, pandemics, market crashes, and the current real estate downturn.
REITs are mandated by federal law to provide 90% of their taxable income in dividends in exchange for certain tax advantages, so REITs, in general, often produce significant dividend income. But because of the volatile nature of the real estate market, REITs are subject to changing market conditions, interest rates, inflation, and other macroeconomic factors. That’s why it is difficult for many of them to sustain their dividends, let alone raise them, every year.
Realty Income is one of the few exceptions as one of only three REITs that have increased their dividends at least annually for more than 25 years in a row.
Realty Income is also unique in that it pays out a monthly dividend. Of the entire universe of dividend-paying stocks, there are only a little more than 80 stocks that distribute dividends monthly.
In March, Realty Income raised its dividend for the 134th time since it became a public company in 1994, boosting it to $0.2705 from $0.27. It has an annual payout of $3.25 per share at a higher-than-average yield of 5.26%.
So, if you owned $1,000 worth of Realty Income stock, that would currently buy you about 16 shares. With each share paying out $3.25 in dividends, you would have $52 in dividend income per year.
If you reinvested the dividend into the stock, your return over the past year would increase from 6.1% to 11.9% — almost doubling it. Going back to its initial public offering (IPO) in 1994, Realty Income has posted an average annualized return of 8.9%, and with the dividend reinvested, that increases to an average annualized return of 15.7% as of April 1.
So what is it about Realty Income that allows it to raise its dividend more than most other REITs?
It boils down to its strategy. Realty Income’s portfolio consists mostly of single-lease tenants, meaning they are big box stores or commercial tenants that rent the entire building, so they are often larger, more stable tenants.
finance.yahoo.com
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