2 High-Yield REITs to Buy Hand Over Fist and 1 to Avoid

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If you are looking at high-yielding stocks while the S&P 500 Index (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) is trading near all-time highs, as it is today, you'll likely be considering stocks with higher levels of risk. Simply put, the high yield is the compensation for the extra risk.

As an income investor, you need to make sure you are shouldering risks that are worth taking. AGNC Investment (NASDAQ: AGNC) and its nearly 14% yield have a very real chance of eventually letting you down. EPR Properties (NYSE: EPR) and W.P. Carey (NYSE: WPC) have let investors down, too, but they both look like they're on an upward trajectory. Here's what you need to know.

AGNC Investment is one to avoid

To be fair, AGNC Investment isn't a bad company. It has produced a fairly strong total return since going public. But the total return includes reinvesting dividends.

If you are a dividend investor trying to live off your dividends, you won't be buying more shares with that income, you will be spending it on things like food and housing. This is where the big problem comes in for this mortgage real estate investment trust (REIT).

AGNC Chart
AGNC Chart

As the chart above highlights, while the total return line (orange) is positive, the price (purple) and dividend (blue) have been trending steadily lower for years. And before that decline started, the dividend was volatile.

Even if the dividend is increased from its current level, there will always be a substantial risk that it will be cut again because of the nature of the mortgage REIT niche. Indeed, mortgage REITs are fairly complicated investments that only more aggressive and active investors should probably be looking at.

But dividend investors don't really need a deep dive into the mortgage REIT sector to see that AGNC Investment's payout history isn't going to be appealing.

All dividend cuts aren't the same

That said, just because a REIT cuts its dividend doesn't mean you should permanently throw it off your high-yield wish list. Two dividend-cutting REITs that you might want to consider today are landlords EPR Properties and W.P. Carey.

EPR Properties cut its dividend during the pandemic because the experiential properties it owns (like casino resorts and movie theaters) were effectively shut down by social distancing.

W.P. Carey cut its dividend at the start of 2024 when it decided to exit the office sector in one quick move after the pandemic's work-from-home trend led to ongoing difficulties for that property type.

What's notable, however, is that both are growing their dividends again. W.P. Carey's move was the more compelling, because it started back up with its cadence of quarterly increases in the quarter after the cut. It was a clear sign that it was nothing more than a reset driven by the large portfolio change it made (office space was 16% of assets prior to the exit from that property type).