EPR Properties Stock: Buy, Sell, or Hold?

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Many high-yielding dividend stocks slumped as interest rates rose in 2022 and 2023. Those higher rates lifted the yields of CDs and T-bills above 5%, so many income investors shifted their cash from stocks toward those safer fixed-income investments.

However, the Federal Reserve finally cut its benchmark rate twice in 2024 as inflation cooled. Those reductions, along with expectations for future cuts, drove many investors back toward dividend stocks again as fixed-income yields declined.

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Coins flying into a piggy bank.
Image source: Getty Images.

Real estate investment trusts (REITs) -- which buy properties, rent them out, and split the rental income with their investors -- are attracting more attention in this market because they're required to pay out at least 90% of their taxable income as dividends to maintain a favorable tax rate. As a result, they usually pay much higher yields than traditional dividend stocks.

One such high-yielding REIT is EPR Properties (NYSE: EPR), which rents its properties to amusement parks, movie theaters, ski resorts, and other experiential and educational businesses in the U.S. and Canada. It's paid continuous dividends since its public debut in 1997, it switched from quarterly to monthly payments in 2013, and it pays a hefty forward yield of 7.5%. Let's see if it's the right time to buy, sell, or hold this resilient REIT.

How stable is EPR's portfolio?

EPR is a triple net lease REIT, which means its tenants are responsible for covering all of a property's real estate taxes, insurance, and maintenance fees. It owns 352 properties and serves more than 200 tenants in 44 states and Canada. But in the first nine months of 2024, it generated 45% of its revenue from just four tenants -- Topgolf (14.3%), AMC Theaters (13.6%), Regal Cinemas (11.1%), and Cinemark (6.3%).

EPR's heavy dependence on the declining movie theater market is a sore spot. Only 852 million movie tickets were sold in the U.S. in 2023, representing a 46% drop from the peak of 1.85 billion tickets in 2002, and that decline could continue for the foreseeable future. Streaming video platforms, cheaper big screen TVs, and soaring ticket prices have all driven more people to watch movies at home.

But despite those challenges, EPR still maintained an occupancy rate of 99% at the end of the third quarter of 2024. It accomplished that by selling its vacant theaters, gaining more non-theater experiential tenants, and expanding its smaller portfolio of education properties.