Realty Income Sees Revenue Surge and Increases Its Dividend. Is It Time to Buy This 5.6% Yielding Stock?

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Realty Income (NYSE: O) shares have struggled over the past year -- they're down over 10%. However, the real estate investment trust (REIT) pays an attractive monthly dividend and just turned in solid first-quarter results.

Let's take a look at its most recent quarterly report, the safety of its dividend, and whether now is the time to buy the stock.

Solid Q1 results

Realty Income saw its first-quarter revenue surge 33% to $1.26 billion, helped by its acquisition of Spirit Realty in January. Same-store rental revenue grew 0.8% in the quarter, while its occupancy rate was 98.6%.

Following the acquisition of Spirit, nearly 80% of Realty Income's annual contracted rent was in retail properties, with nearly 15% now in industrial properties. Over 5% of its annual contracted rent was from gaming and other properties. Industrial properties showed strong same-store rental growth in the quarter, up 2.9%. Retail same-store rental growth was weaker, up only 0.4%, hurt by movie theater closures. The diversification Realty Income is getting from the Spirit acquisition appears to be paying off.

Realty Income was also busy investing in properties in the quarter, making $598 million in property investments. Over half of the REIT's investments were in the U.K. and Europe, where it said it was getting an 8.2% weighted average cash yield, which was above the 7.3% quarterly average it got in the U.S.. Realty Income has been able to get increasing capitalization rates (cap rates) with new investments, although rising cap rates have hurt the value of its older properties, which is why the stock has struggled in the past few years. It invested in properties not only in the retail space but also in the industrial and data center space, as it continues to diversify into other others.

Increasing cap rates, however, have also allowed the company to command higher rents in many cases when leases come up for renewal. For the quarter, the company had a rent recapture rate of 104.3% on properties it released.

The company's adjusted funds from operations (AFFO) per share climbed 5% to $1.03. AFFO is a measurement of the cash flow a REIT can generate from its operations. Realty Income prefers AFFO because it is more standardized across the REIT industry, since the metric is not affected by differing depreciation assumptions among REITs.

Realty Income largely maintained its earlier guidance for the full year. It is still looking to invest about $2 billion in new property investments, while getting a 1% increase in same-store rental income and having over 98% occupancy. It also reiterated its forecast for full-year AFFO per share of between $4.13 to $4.21.