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After a Reset and Rebuild, This Ultra-High-Yield Dividend Stock Is Starting to Grow Again

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Last year was a transitional period for W. P. Carey (NYSE: WPC). The diversified real estate investment trust (REIT) made a strategic decision to exit the office sector at the end of 2023. It took the company most of last year to complete that initiative.

The REIT's office exit acted as a headwind last year. However, it has started to rebuild its portfolio with properties that have better long-term growth fundamentals. Because of that, its earnings and high-yielding dividend (6.1% current yield) have started to rise again. That return to growth positions the company to produce higher total returns for its investors in the future.

It's finally turning the corner

W. P. Carey sold $1.2 billion of properties last year. Those divestitures included the office properties it didn't sell or spin off at the end of 2023 (by forming office REIT Net Lease Office Properties), the sale of a portfolio of self-storage properties back to the operating tenant, and some other noncore assets like several of its hotel operating properties.

Those sales weighed on the REIT's adjusted funds from operations (FFO), which declined by 9.3% to $4.70 per share last year. However, after falling for most of the year, W. P. Carey's adjusted FFO rose 1.7% in the fourth quarter as it started to benefit from new investments and rental escalations across its remaining portfolio.

The REIT invested $1.6 billion into new properties last year, including a record investment volume of $841.3 million in the fourth quarter. Notable new investments included a $191 million, 19-property industrial and warehouse portfolio acquisition in the U.S. and Canada, two separate sale-leaseback transactions in Poland ($23 million for 123 retail properties and $56 million for 11 industrial properties), a $100 million U.S. battery manufacturing plant, a $100 million U.S. data center facility, and a $100 million five-building manufacturing and industrial campus in Mexico.

The company's acquisitions had similar investment features. They were triple net leases (NNN) with long remaining terms (11.1 to 30 years) that will escalate rents at either a fixed rate or one tied to inflation. Because of that, they should supply the REIT with steady, rising rental income.

Owning properties with embedded rent growth is a core aspect of W. P. Carey's investment strategy. Currently, 51% of its properties link rents with inflation, while another 46% increase them at a fixed rate. That's helping drive solid same-store rental growth. Its same-store rents grew at a 2.6% annualized rate across its portfolio during the fourth quarter, partly because inflation remains elevated.