Quick Read
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Realty Income (O) warrants continued buying at $61.28 with 5.27% yield premium over Treasuries and 114 consecutive dividend increases.
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The company deploys capital at 7.1% yields while maintaining 98.9% portfolio occupancy and expanding third-party capital vehicles.
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My order history shows another buy on Realty Income (NYSE:O) last month, and I already know the next paycheck will fund another one. I keep coming back to this stock because it pays me every single month, raises that payment on a schedule I can almost set my watch to, and treats the monthly dividend as the actual product.
The pitch I make to myself is simple. I own a slice of a global landlord collecting rent from single-tenant commercial properties, sending a check on the 15th of the month, and the company has done that for 670 consecutive months. That cadence matches how bills arrive in retirement. Monthly cash in the account is the entire reason I started this position and the reason I keep adding to it.
A reliable yield
The first data point that keeps the buy button warm is the spread. Shares closed at $61.28 carrying a dividend yield around 5.27%, against a 10-year Treasury at 4.45%.
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I am being paid a real premium over the risk-free rate by a company that has lifted the dividend 114 consecutive quarters and pushed the monthly check from $0.17 in January 1999 to $0.2705 today. The stock is also up 11.07% year to date and 15.31% over the trailing year, so the income has not come at the cost of capital.
Impressive fundamentals
Second, the operating engine is expanding. In Q1 2026, AFFO per share landed at $1.13, up 6.6% year over year. The portfolio is 98.9% occupied, and CEO Sumit Roy is recapturing 103.4% of prior rent on re-leased space.
The company invested $2.8 billion at a 7.1% initial weighted average cash yield in the quarter and lifted full-year investment guidance to $9.5 billion from $8 billion. AFFO guidance moved to $4.41 to $4.44 per share. That is a landlord deploying capital at yields wider than its cost of debt and telling shareholders to expect more of it.
Several funding lanes
Third, the capital structure keeps getting smarter. Net Debt to Annualized Pro Forma Adjusted EBITDAre improved to 5.2x from 5.4x. Roy stood up a $1 billion joint venture with Apollo across 492 retail properties, closed a $1.7 billion cornerstone raise for the U.S. Core Plus Fund, and grew third-party private capital AUM to $3.1 billion.
As Roy put it, “These new private capital vehicles allow us to grow with deep and stable pockets of capital, enhancing our financial returns for shareholders.” The dividend now has more funding lanes behind it.
The risk I respect is concentration and rate sensitivity. The trailing P/E sits near 50, the top 20 clients represent 35.8% of annualized base rent, and full-year 2025 impairment provisions reached $471.3 million. A 10-year Treasury at 4.45% keeps relative-yield pressure on every REIT.
I sit with that risk because the company is still acquiring real estate at a 7.1% cash yield, the portfolio is 98.9% leased, and the dividend has compounded through 2008, 2020, and every rate cycle since the NYSE listing.
One more receipt for the file: on May 21, 2026, ten directors each acquired 3,214 shares on the same day. The people who see the rent rolls first are aligning their own stock the same month I am buying mine. I will keep clicking buy as long as that check shows up on the 15th.
Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Realty Income didn’t make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.
