$62.58-0.54 (-0.86%)
Realty Income Corporation, an S&P 500 company, is real estate partner to the world's leading companies.
Realty Income Corporation in the Real Estate sector is trading at $62.57 with a market capitalization of $58.1B. Wall Street consensus targets $67.90 (20 analysts), implying a +8.5% move over the next 12 months. The stock is currently 8% below its 52-week high of $67.94, remaining 4.8% above its 200-day moving average. On fundamentals, Piotroski 5/9 shows mixed financial quality, Altman Z in the distress zone. The Whystock Score of 80/100 reflects bullish alignment across trend, valuation and analyst targets.
| Metric (USD) | Q1 2026 | Q4 2025 | Q3 2025 | Q2 2025 | Q1 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Revenue | $1.45B↓ | $1.71B↑ | $1.39B↑ | $1.34B↑ | $1.31B |
| Gross Profit | $1.33B↓ | $1.60B↑ | $1.28B↑ | $1.23B↑ | $1.21B |
| Operating Income | $601.38M↓ | $943.04M↑ | $582.41M↑ | $533.38M↓ | $534.30M |
| Net Income | $311.77M↑ | $296.08M↓ | $315.77M↑ | $196.92M↓ | $249.81M |
Realty Income Corporation, an S&P 500 company, is real estate partner to the world's leading companies. We serve our clients as a full-service real estate capital provider. As of December 31, 2025, we have a portfolio of over 15,500 properties in all...
Realty Income's 5.3% yield sits well above the S&P 500's average of approximately 1.1% as of June 2026, Yahoo Finance reported. Realty Income pays that kind of income on a monthly schedule, not the quarterly cadence that most dividend-paying companies follow. The San Diego-based real ...
Realty Income (NYSE:O) has announced a new fixed-rate Eurobond offering maturing in 2032. The bond is unsecured and includes call features, creating a multi-year funding source in the European debt market. This Eurobond adds to the company’s existing capital markets tools for supporting long-term investment activity. Realty Income, a large net lease real estate investment company, regularly accesses both equity and debt markets to fund its property portfolio. The new 2032 Eurobond fits into...
A portfolio that throws off $60,000 a year sounds like a finished puzzle. The brokerage statement says $5,000 a month, the bills get paid, life goes on. Then the retiree adds up what actually reached the checking account and discovers the spendable amount is thousands of dollars lower than expected. Taxes, Medicare costs, and inflation ... Your Portfolio Pays $60,000 A Year. So Why Can You Only Spend $45,000?
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Pickleball has become the fastest-growing sport in America, and retirees helped fuel the boom. The game is easy to learn, relatively gentle on aging joints, highly social, and dramatically cheaper than golf or boating. In many retirement communities, a few pickleball courts now do the work that country clubs once did, providing exercise, competition, and ... Here’s How You Can Retire In America’s Pickleball Capital