Is Realty Income Corporation a Buy?

In This Article:

Realty Income (NYSE: O) is a real estate investment trust, or REIT, that focuses on free-standing, single-tenant retail real estate. The company is a large REIT with roughly 5,500 properties in its portfolio rented to 257 different commercial tenants.

It's also worth pointing out that Realty Income is not a pure-play retail REIT. In fact, about 20% of the portfolio consists of nonretail property types, particularly office and industrial properties. This adds an element of diversification, and also gives Realty Income additional opportunities to find value-adding acquisitions.

Having said that, is retail the industry you should be investing in right now? Is Realty Income still a good stock to buy, or should it be avoided as e-commerce continues to evolve and wreak havoc on so many brick-and-mortar retail businesses?

Shelves of medications in a pharmacy.
Shelves of medications in a pharmacy.

Drug stores are one of the largest components of Realty Income's portfolio. Image source: Getty Images. (Note: Image does not necessarily depict a Realty Income-owned property.)

The right kind of retail (and some diversification, too)

About 80% of Realty Income's properties (by rent) are occupied by retail tenants. If this scares you, that's totally understandable. There has been an epidemic of retail bankruptcies, store closures, and other struggles. In fact, the day before I wrote this article, massive mattress retailer Mattress Firm declared bankruptcy.

However, most of Realty Income's retail tenants are about as e-commerce-resistant as well as recession-resistant as you can get. Just to name a couple of examples, nearly 11% of Realty Income's portfolio consists of drug stores, which sell products that people need, and often need quicker than online retailers can get them to their door. Dollar stores make up 7.4% of the portfolio, and these businesses offer bargains that e-commerce giants can rarely beat. In fact, Realty Income estimates that a total of 94% of its portfolio income is protected against both e-commerce headwinds and recessions.

Realty Income also has a substantial nonretail component to its portfolio, as I mentioned earlier. Seventeen percent of the portfolio is made up of industrial and office properties, the majority of which are leased to investment-grade tenants. There's a small agricultural component as well. The point is that not only does Realty Income focus on the right kinds of retailers, but it diversifies its portfolio beyond the realm of retail as well.

Built for predictable earnings growth

In addition to focusing on the right kind of properties for long-term investors, Realty Income also has a lease structure that's designed for predictably growing income over time and minimal vacancies.