In This Article:
Benzinga and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue on some items through the links below.
Camden Property Trust (NYSE:CPT) is a real estate company primarily engaged in the ownership, management, development, redevelopment, acquisition and construction of multifamily apartment communities. Camden owns and operates 172 properties containing 58,250 apartment homes across the United States.
The 52-week range of Camden Property Trust’s stock price was $85.30 to $127.69.
Camden Property Trust’s dividend yield is 3.56%. During the last 12 months, it paid $4.12 per share in dividends.
Don’t Miss:
-
This Jeff Bezos-backed startup will allow you to become a landlord in just 10 minutes, and you only need $100.
-
Your biggest returns may not come from the stock market. Invest the way colleges, pension funds, and the 1% do.Benzinga Readers: Earn a 1% return boost on your first EquityMultiple investment when you sign up here (Accredited Investors Only)*.
The Latest On Camden Property Trust
On Oct. 31, the company announced its Q3 2024 earnings, posting an adjusted EPS of $0.33 compared to the consensus estimate of $0.37 and revenues of $387.20 million, compared to the consensus of $389.39 million, as reported by Benzinga.
The company expects an EPS of $0.34-$0.38 and an FFO of $1.65-$1.69 for Q4 2024. For the full year, it sees EPS in the $1.46-$1.50 range and FFO in the $6.67-$6.71 range.
How Can You Earn $100 Per Month As A Camden Property Trust Investor?
If you want to make $100 per month –$1,200 annually – from Camden Property Trust dividends, your investment value needs to be approximately $33,708, which is around 296 shares at $113.73 each.
Trending: These five entrepreneurs are worth $223 billion – they all believe in one platform that offers a 7-9% target yield with monthly dividends
Understanding the dividend yield calculations: When estimating, you need two key variables – the desired annual income ($1,200) and the dividend yield (3.56% in this case). So, $1,200 / 0.0356 = $33,708 to generate an income of $100 per month.
You can calculate the dividend yield by dividing the annual dividend payments by the stock’s current price.
The dividend yield can change over time as a result of fluctuating stock prices and dividend payments on a rolling basis.
For instance, assume a stock that pays $2 as an annual dividend is priced at $50. Its dividend yield would be $2/$50 = 4%. If the stock price rises to $60, the dividend yield drops to 3.33% ($2/$60). A drop in stock price to $40 will have an inverse effect and increase the dividend yield to 5% ($2/$40).