Sun Communities Stock: Buy, Sell, or Hold?

Date:

Gradually declining benchmark interest rates have lured some investors back toward real estate investment trusts (REITs) over the past year. Those lower rates make it easier for REITs to purchase more properties, while shrinking yields for CDs, bonds, and Treasuries drove many income-focused investors back toward higher-yielding dividend stocks again.

But amid a good year for REITs, one that was left out in the cold was Sun Communities (NYSE: SUI), which mainly invests in manufactured home communities, RV communities, and marinas. Sun’s stock has fallen by about 8% over the past 12 months as the S&P 500 rose by nearly 30%. So what’s the right course of action for investors now when it comes to this out-of-favor REIT?

Image source: Getty Images.

As of the end of the third quarter, Sun’s portfolio consisted of 659 properties, including 288 manufactured housing properties, 179 RV properties, and 138 marina properties across North America, plus 54 U.K. properties of various types. That represented a decline from a total of 670 properties a year earlier. That drop was mainly caused by a restructuring of its manufactured housing portfolio, where it struggled with high inventories as interest rates increased.

On the bright side, the blended occupancy rate for its North American manufactured housing and RV segments rose 50 basis points year over year to 97.7% in Q3. The U.K. segment’s occupancy rate grew 90 basis points to 91.5%.

From 2018 to 2023, Sun’s core funds from operations (FFO) per share grew at a robust compound annual rate of 9%, even as its residential business weathered the pandemic and rising interest rates. But for 2024, it expects its core FFO to decline by 4% to 5% as it prunes its manufactured housing business. It also plans to restructure its business to further cut costs.

Sun’s business seems stable, but it was hit by some concerning allegations this past September from Blue Orca Capital, a Texas-based short-selling hedge fund. Short-sellers make money when a stock’s price falls, so investors should keep that bias in mind.

In its report, Blue Orca made several claims of financial improprieties by Sun President and CEO Gary Shiffman. Blue Orca further critiqued some of the approaches the company takes in its financial reporting. It also claims the company is too highly leveraged, with a net-debt-to-recurring-EBITDA ratio of 6.0.

However, investors may want to take those bearish claims with a grain of salt. Also, Sun isn’t the only REIT to report results in the way that it does, and it certainly isn’t unusual for REITs to take on lots of debt.

Share post:

Popular

More like this
Related

49ers vs. Cardinals injury report: Deebo out; Kittle questionable

49ers vs. Cardinals injury report: Deebo out; Kittle questionable...

Australia v India: fifth men’s cricket Test, day two – live

Key eventsShow key events onlyPlease turn on JavaScript to...

What one picture tells us about Trump’s power in Congress

Shortly after Mike Johnson appeared to come up two...