Dividend Increase | Realty Income
Getting a pay raise while sitting on the couch? Sign me up! Thanks Realty Income for yet another dividend increase! |
That's why one of my favorite things is when one of the companies I own decides to pay out more in dividends. You mean I get a pay raise just for owning a small piece of a company? Not going and doing R&D for new products or technology. Not selling any products. Not managing any employees or inventory. Not making sales calls. All I had to do was have the foresight to invest some of my savings in excellent companies.
On Wednesday the Board of Directors at Realty Income (O) announced another increase to their monthly dividend. The dividend was increased from $0.2210 per share up to $0.2255 per share. That works out to a 2.04% raise. Realty Income is a Dividend Champion with 26 consecutive years of dividend increases. Shares currently yield 4.18% based on the new annualized payout.
Realty Income is a bit different from most dividend growth stocks. For starters they don't pay quarterly dividends; rather they pay them out monthly. They also typically announce one larger increase in January and then 3-4 smaller increases throughout each year. Compared to the year ago payout the new monthly dividend represents a 2.97% increase.
Since I own 100.464 shares of Realty Income in my FI Portfolio this raise increased my forward 12-month dividends by $5.43. This is the 18th dividend increase I've received from Realty Income since initiating a position in July 2013. Cumulatively, the organic dividend growth from O has totaled a whopping 24.2% over that time. According to US Inflation Calculator the cumulative rate of inflation over that same time is 7.8%.
A full screen version of this chart can be found here.
Realty Income won't be confused as a company with a rapidly growing dividend; however, that's more than made up for by it's consistently high initial yield and it's steady 4-6% annual dividend growth. From calendar year 2005 through 2018 the average 10 year dividend growth rate has been 4.98% and has ranged from 3.97% to 6.16%. That slow and steady growth is what makes Realty Income tick and is why the valuation at the time of purchase is very important.
The 1-, 3-, 5- and 10-year rolling dividend growth rates since 1994 can be found in the following chart.
A full screen version of this chart can be found here.
*2019's dividend assumes the new monthly payout of $0.2255 per share is maintained for the rest of 2019.
Wrap Up
This raise increased my forward dividends by $5.43 with me doing nothing. That's right, absolutely nothing to contribute to their operations. Based on my portfolio's current yield of 3.08% this raise is like I invested an extra $176 in capital. Except that I didn't! One of the companies I own just decided to send more cash my way.
That's how you can eventually reach the crossover point where your dividends received exceed your expenses. That's DIVIDEND GROWTH INVESTING AT WORK! The beauty of the dividend growth investing strategy is that you build up your dividends through fresh capital investment as well dividend increases from the companies you own.
This was the first increase for 2019 among my holdings and I expect the last week of January to bring a flurry of increase announcements.
My FI Portfolio's forward-12 month dividends increased to $6,437.15. Including my FolioFirst portfolio's forward dividends of $92.14 brings my total taxable accounts dividends to $6,825.85. My Roth IRA's forward 12-month dividends remain at $402.79.
Do you own shares of Realty Income and do you think they can maintain 4-6% annual dividend growth?
Please share your thoughts below.
I have never researched REITs before, so I am not sure the metrics to look for as it relates to valuation. I think I have a blind spot to it because when I started making money it was right after the 2008 crash so I just sort of shut myself down to that asset class.
ReplyDeleteEvan,
DeleteYeah you can't just go and look at Net Income/EPS you have to look at it more from a cash flow perspective. FFO (funds from operation) or Adj. FFO is the way to go for most REITs although you need to find out how they determine their Adj FFO to see if it makes sense to you. The big thing with REITs is that their depreciation expenses, non cash, are really high so it reduces net income substantially but doesn't reflect the actual cash that the operations are throwing off.
I use REITs as an approximate substitute for rental real estate investments. I want to get some rental properties but frankly don't have the time to deal with it due to my job. So I go with REITs knowing that I'm giving up return potential in exchange for not having to do anything and getting diversification.
Thanks for stopping by!