Realty Income (NYSE: O) has increased its dividend payout every single year for 30 consecutive years, which is an impressive streak. But Realty Income is a real estate investment trust (REIT), so most investors view it as nothing more than an income stock. It does, indeed, offer a high yield.
But if you change your framework just a little, you’ll see how the stock could be attractive to growth-minded investors, too. Let’s dive in and see why.
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Real estate investment trusts operate under a specific corporate structure that is designed to pass their income on to their investors in a tax-advantaged manner. As long as REITs distribute at least 90% of their taxable income to shareholders through dividends each year, they avoid corporate-level taxation. Most REITs, including Realty Income, own physical properties that they lease out to tenants.
Realty Income uses a net lease model that makes its tenants responsible for most of the property-level costs of the real estate they occupy, like maintenance and taxes. Most of the company’s assets are occupied by single tenants, which means that there’s a higher level of risk with regard to the rents from each individual property.
However, with over 15,400 properties spread across North America and Europe, Realty Income is the world’s largest net lease REIT, so the actual risk to its finances is pretty low. Add in its investment-grade-rated balance sheet and concerns about risk should fade even further.
In fairness, however, most investors correctly see Realty Income as a conservative income investment. At the current share price, its dividend yields an attractive 5.5%, and it has boosted its payouts annually for three decades. The dividend growth rate over that time? About 4.3% a year. That’s great if you are trying to live off of the dividend income your portfolio generates, but it doesn’t really sound like something that growth-minded investors of any kind would appreciate.
Wait, one second though. What happens if you reinvest those dividends?
One of Realty Income’s most attractive qualities for a certain type of investor is its consistency. It is a slow and steady tortoise. That’s boring — but boring can be powerful when it comes to compound growth. With income stocks, much of that compound growth comes from reinvesting the dividends into more shares. With REITs, that effect becomes even more powerful if done within a Roth IRA, since there will be no taxes paid on the dividend (ever). The numbers speak for themselves.