3 REITs Paying 6%+ That Are “Cheap For A Reason”

 | Mar 11, 2018 01:03AM ET

I love nothing more than bargain real estate – especially if I can buy it with a single-click of my mouse (or one tap from my smartphone).

REITs (real estate investment trusts) are as cheap as they’ve been this decade. Prices are low, and yields are high – making this an ideal time to buy.

Unless, of course, their tenants are watching their own business models vanish before their very eyes. If clients can’t pay the rent, then their REIT landlords won’t be able to pay us our dividends.

And if we’re not banking dividends from REITs, then what’s the point? Here are three REITs that appear “pointless” to own right now:

Urstadt Biddle Properties (UBA)
Dividend Yield: 5.9%
52-Week Decline: 16%

Urstadt Biddle Properties Inc (NYSE:UBA) is a primarily retail-focused REIT – with tenants such as Party City Holdco Inc (NYSE:PRTY), Aldi and Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) – that operates across New York, New Jersey, New Hampshire and Connecticut. It also has a little exposure to office space and storage, but that slight amount of diversification hasn’t been enough to shield it from the malaise currently affecting its industry.

Back in November, I pointed out Urstadt Biddle as one of nine REITs that were slated to increase dividends sometime in December . Sure enough, UBA pulled through with a 9.1% hike to 24 cents per share, good for a 24th consecutive year of higher payouts.

That’s the good news.

As I also mentioned at the time, Urstadt Biddle had seen occupancy decline in the first three quarters of 2017, and the REIT capped off the golden sombrero with its Q4 report. Occupancy declined to 91% – off from 91.6% at the end of Q3, and all the way down from 92.8% at the end of fiscal 2016. Moreover, properties were 92.7% leased, off from 93.3% a year ago.

The company also had a lousy quarter on the operational front, with funds from operation plunging from 36 cents per class A share in the year-ago period to just 21 cents. That sent full-year FFO down from $1.25 per share to $1.15.

So despite the fact that that UBA is trading at levels last seen in 2015, it’s still going for roughly 16 times FFO. That hardly screams “value.” It’s just cheap.

GGP Inc Pref Series A (NYSE:GGP_pa)
Dividend Yield: 4.2%
52-Week Decline: 13%

GGP Inc. (GGP) is a particularly alluring choice at the moment not just because of its far-higher-than-normal yield, but also the still-existent possibility of a buyout pop.

GGP is a high-end retail real estate operator whose 125 property portfolio across 40 states includes a host of malls, but notably even some property on New York’s Fifth Avenue. The REIT’s tenants include the likes of Cartier, Prada and Versace, so it’s not as if Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) is necessarily banging at the door like it is for some of Urstadt’s tenants. But GGP, swanky clientele and all, has been struggling nonetheless.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

The stock is off nearly 35% from its mid-2016 peak as the company’s funds from operations have essentially flat-lined. Now, GGP’s dividend, at 88 cents per share annually, still is only 56% of its 2017 FFO ($1.57 per share). But the simple fact is that while the nominal dividend and its yield have been shooting higher, that hasn’t come on any extra ability to actually fund the payout.

GGP’s Dividend Isn’t in Danger, But Watch This Trend