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1 Magnificent S&P 500 Dividend Stock Down 31% to Buy and Hold Forever

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Like bargains? You should. Although you're often required to pay a premium for quality, if you can get the quality you want at a lower price, so much the better!

Income-seeking investors may want to consider taking on a new position in Realty Income Corporation (NYSE: O) while this dividend stock is down 31% from its highest-ever high. The market's just not giving this company all the credit it's due.

What's Realty Income?

Never heard of it? It wouldn't be terribly surprising if you haven't. It's not exactly in a game-changing business. Indeed, it doesn't even sell a product or service to consumers.

You've almost certainly visited one of its properties, though, perhaps without even realizing it. Realty Income is a real estate investment trust, or REIT. That means it owns a portfolio of revenue-bearing real estate, and passes along the bulk of its profits to shareholders in the form of dividends. REITs can hold a variety of real estate, ranging from hotels to apartment complexes to office buildings.

Even by REIT standards, however, Realty Income is a bit of an oddity for a couple of reasons.

One is the sort of property it owns. It specializes in retail real estate. Its top tenants include Dollar General, Dollar Tree, 7-Eleven, FedEx, and Walmart. With over 15,400 properties and 337 million square feet of retailing space, Realty Income is one of the biggest players of its kind.

What's the second reason Realty Income is a relatively unique real estate investment trust? It doesn't pay the usual quarterly dividend. Rather, it makes monthly payments, aligning with how most people incur and pay their bills.

Not the risk it seems to be on the surface

It's an interesting alternative to the usual pace of dividend payments, to be sure. Still... retail? The so-called retail apocalypse stemming from the advent of e-commerce certainly seems real enough. Coresight Research reports that 7,325 U.S. stores shut down in 2024 alone, with another 15,000 closures expected this year. It doesn't look or feel like things are moving in the right direction for Realty Income, which partly explains why shares are down 31% from their late 2019 peak.

There are a couple of important details to draw out here, however.

The first is the simple fact that the retail apocalypse isn't as much of a collapse of the brick-and-mortar side of the business as it is a refinement of it. The struggling laggards are being thinned out, while outfits like Walmart and Dollar General that are strong enough to survive are actually getting better. Walmart, for instance, is in the early stages of a five-year plan to build another 150 U.S. stores, despite its already massive domestic footprint of over 5,200 locales. Dollar General is planning to open another 575 new stores this year, even though it's already operating over 20,500.