Kilroy Realty has been named as a Top 10 Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT), according to Dividend Channel, which published its most recent ”DividendRank” report. The report noted that among REITs, KRC shares displayed both attractive valuation metrics and strong profitability metrics. For example, the recent KRC share price of $26.91 represents a price-to-book ratio of 0.6 and an annual dividend yield of 8.03% — by comparison, the average stock in Dividend Channel’s coverage universe yields 4.3% and trades at a price-to-book ratio of 2.3. The report also cited the strong quarterly dividend history at Kilroy Realty, and favorable long-term multi-year growth rates in key fundamental data points.
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The report stated, ”Dividend investors approaching investing from a value standpoint are generally most interested in researching the strongest most profitable companies, that also happen to be trading at an attractive valuation. That’s what we aim to find using our proprietary DividendRank formula, which ranks the coverage universe based upon our various criteria for both profitability and valuation, to generate a list of the top most ‘interesting’ stocks, meant for investors as a source of ideas that merit further research.”
REITs hold a special place in the hearts of dividend investors, because they must distribute at least 90% of their taxable income each year to shareholders as dividends. While this can make for a high dividend yield, it also introduces some volatility and uncertainty into the level of payments from year to year — huge dividend payouts are common when a REIT turns large profits, versus smaller payouts or even periods of no dividends in times of losses.
The current annualized dividend paid by Kilroy Realty is $2.16/share, currently paid in quarterly installments, and its most recent dividend has an upcoming ex-date of 06/29/2023. Below is a long-term dividend history chart for KRC, which the report stressed as being of key importance. Indeed, studying a company’s past dividend history can be of good help in judging whether the most recent dividend is likely to continue.
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