Reddit Posts
STAG (Strategic Tightening and Acquisition Gambit)
If the Fed Cuts Rates in Sept: 20% gain in 6 months (60/40 Banks/REIT)
If the Fed Cuts Rates in Sept: 20% gain in 6 months (60/40 Banks/REIT)
Deciding REITS for my portfolio. But lack the confidence in knowing how to valuate each choice.
How do I find monthly dividend stock that are in the early stages? Looking for more risk for potential long term gains
$STAG TA update, descending channel breakout confirmation.
$STAG has returned to a trend that started in 2016. It's average price target is $39 (High of $45, low of $33). Here is a 15 page DD on the company.
$VLCN with $70million preorder of their electric UTV called the STAG.
My top 5 dividend stocks right now. What are yours?
STAG Industrial — good fundamentals, monthly dividends — why the dividend growth is so modest?
Mentions
Found the next stupid play since Data Centers are the hype now…. PLD and STAG, real estate switching to Data Centers. They already have pipelines and 8 Data Centers being built….
My friend keeps saying AIQ. He’s got an advisor who says it’s a good long bet. I would also highly recommend investing into a cheap high-yield dividend stock like ANGC or STAG
This reminded me of the STAG WHEEL guy from r/thetagang and his TREASONOUS GAINS from wheeling PLTR and buying shares with the premium lol. Anyone else know who I'm talking about?
# -92k jobs number - STAG #+3.4% inflation - FLATION
So I don't become the "guy who complains TSLA is up," we should start an inverse-me fund since I have a special ability to crash stocks. My recent accomplishments were CRM, MSFT and now STAG and BX. The big red candle literally occurred two seconds after my purchase occurred. If there are any put buyers interested in such a service:-)
Thought REITs would like the bad job news but I guess not. PLD down 3.3% and STAG down 2.4% which is how they behave during a crash. But DLR and AMT are up a little.
Also avoid low volume stocks. Down hundreds of dollars on STAG which is trading hundreds of shares a minute. Not worth it. Losing money on no trend/action.
Yay Tarrifs illegal. Boo GDP 1.4% for a holiday quarter. Inflation back at $3%... I SMELL THAT STAG BRO... at all time highs. Someone fucked up.
Only "defensive" stock I can find that is not overvalued at this point is STAG Everything else that is defensive always finds a reason to crash when they hit the level they hit last week Source - I swing trade them but am sitting on my hands for a while I guess
Say it with me STAG-FLAY-SHUN
My current holdings at five stars at Morningstar (strong buy) are PFE, O, GSK, WU and STAG
Yes, I’ll wait for prices to continue to come down- I’m gonna play the spy next week due to the rate cut that may or may not happen, and then allocate the money I made from this most recent “headline hype” in cannabis and put it in( O) and (STAG) - both pay monthly dividends. Not pumping those stocks as they have been around and are stable.
Ever? ETRN - ([historical quotes](https://www.investing.com/equities/equitrans-midstream-historical-data)) I owned ETRN from June 2022 to July 2024. EQT had spun off ETRN to isolate itself from litigation/regulation issues. It paid 8-10% dividends that whole time. When that crisis passed in their favor, ETRN nearly doubled in price before EQT reabsorbed it. EQT wasn't paying enough divvies so I closed the position. Currently? ET/EPD. Bought a lot of these shares with the ETRN/EQT proceeds. My shares are up 35/65% and a lot of them were dividends reinvested. They pay about 7% dividends. This is my biggest sector (REITs are second) of the individual stocks we own. ET is currently rated a buy by Morningstar, EPD a hold. O, STAG and CCI are my REITs that are buy rated, with O a five star buy.
Do you want a second job as a landlord? Equities - you want to be in equities. Add some REITs if you feel your RE exposure is too low. I did - we have EPR AMT CCI O STAG (CCI is a four star buy at Morningstar, O and STAG five stars).
Are you *trying* to get extra tech heavy? VOO is already quite tech heav. I'd rather see any (or several) of * a REIT ETF (I have O, CCI, STAG, EPR and AMT - no residential mortgage stuff tho) * maybe 5% VXUS * some VYM But really just all in an index fund is fine, as well.
I don't see the *STAG* or the *FLATION* 😂
Cash: (\~3.5%) YTD P/L: (-2.75%) # 🧱 Dividend / Core (61.4%) * SCHD – 49.8% * JEPI – 21.1% * STAG – 6.9% # ⚡️ Swing / Speculative (38.6%) * CLF - 6.7% * CLSK – 5.1% * TSLL – 5.6% * GWH – 5.0% Feedback? Ideas? Allocation Feedback, small portfolio but open to anything
Correction: THE STAG WHEEL! 🤑💰
Put it all on dividend stocks and make $8-10k a year passively. I like PFLT/PNNT, O, STAG, GLAD/GOOD/LAND/GAIN, MAIN, and a few others.
STAG FLATION 
Hey all! I'm a 33 year old man, married. 3 kids. I'm the only one that works. I make 70k a year, and usually get an additional bonus between 9-12k a year.. I really want to do what I can to secure my families future. I've been taking baby steps in learning about investing. I really like the idea of mo they dividends as Income over cashing out everything and trying to make it last. Plus I lile the thought of rolling over those monthly dividend stocks to.my kids when I'm gone and creating some kind of generational wealth. I investing in custodial accounts for my kids, and a normal retirement account for me and my wife. Kid1- 0.25 a day in STAG Kid2- 0.25 a day in STAG Kid3- 0.25 a day in STAG My retirement account- 0.25 a day in PSEC, STAG, O, EARN, and SRET (monthly dividend ETF) I also contribute 6% of my paycheck to my 401k at work (I chose the most aggressive investing option) I net 1600 bi-weekly. So I lean pretty heavy into REITs and trying to keep my 401k to non dividend based stocks that focus on aggressive growth. Again, im new to this. I could use experienced thoughts .advice and encouragement. Let me know, thank you all for your time!
Market might be falling, but my gut says keep pumping. It's basically black Friday for anyone wanting to enter the stock market rn. Buy em while it's cheap, profit in a couple of years. My main focus is dividend stocks, especially monthly ones like MAIN and STAG. With them becoming so cheap, I'll be able to buy a lot and build a solid cash flow. I'm hoping some of the more expensive stocks like JPM, KMB, and PEP drop aswell as they all have a high dividend payout.
That's what I did back in 22/23, personally I recommend focusing on dividend stocks, especially monthly dividend ones like MAIN and STAG, it's a great way to build cash flow especially now that most of em are gonna be pretty cheap. Turn on DRIP aswell and it'll help build a great portfolio.
Good for industry i buy STAG
I have no idea that is point. I think when you're undergoing STAG-FLATION (economic decline + inflation) -- there are no good options. Add a re+arded Prez inflicting self-wounds on the economy and 18th century tariffs and we got big problems.
There are some REIT ETFs. I have about 5% in these REITs, all non-home-mortgage - O, CCI, AMT and STAG. Is this all the money you will have invested or just some of it? Makes a difference. How long a timeline? Also makes a difference. If this is most of your invested money right now and you have a 30+ year timeline to when you'll be spending it down, I would say go 80% VTI, 15% some REITs and 5% some other holding that weathers downturns better. In my case I chose oil & gas MLPs for that last bit.
The overall thesis has some logic, but your dates and strikes make no sense. First off, Jan 19 is a Sunday, so I'm going to assume you meant Jan 17... Next, the earliest the tariffs could be implemented is the 20th. Maybe it's a sell the news scenario, but still seems insane to expire the week before. With PLD, not only are you buying before tariffs can even be implemented, you're also buying 30% OTM AND expiring the week before earnings. Same thing with STAG. Add a month to expiry and you give them a chance to show a revenue bump.
Prologis already making moves on this. [Converting warehouses to data centers](https://finance.yahoo.com/news/prologis-apos-warehouse-data-center-194700041.html) for even more tendies. 96.2% occupancy rate and [68% net effective rent change](https://beyondspx.com/article/prologis-inc-pld-a-versatile-leader-navigating-the-dynamic-logistics-landscape) last quarter. They're not just waiting for tariffs - they're evolving. STAG's also been gobbling up prime real estate. Just [dropped $74M on 5 warehouses](https://finance.yahoo.com/news/stag-snags-industrial-74m-cbre-143230458.html) near Chicago. Smart money knows where the puck is going. Your PLD calls gonna print harder than JPow's money printer. Warehouse gang rise up 🚀🚀🚀
Whenever I see "wheeling" and "PLTR" in the same sentence all I can think of is the TREASONOUS STAG Wheel guy from r/thetagang 
Honestly real estate funds will take a while to scale and grow... I would just invest in a proven real estate fund... there are the go too's like Realty Income(O) or Stag industries(STAG) then let the dividends compound and grow the value.
I also wanted to have some REITs in my portfolio since I dont own a real property. I couldnt find an ETF which the companies I liked so I picked 6 Individual REITs: IRM, O, AMT, STAG, PLD and WPC
My 2 cents.. 1. Make money work for you. Diversify and invest in REITs like AGNC,O STAG,CLM 2. Reinvest your dividends and make it grow. After a year, you will notice the difference Finally.. keep investing in small lots and keep exploring newer stocks
I have REIT in our IRAs and taxable both. 10% of our IRAs, 6% of net worth (less house). Haven't looked for correlation with stocks. ONly been in them for a year, once the RE decision had been made to shift to a bit more income and a bit less equity (more real estate, that is). I also bought some bond funds for the first time ever around then. Long: O, AMT, CCI, STAG (and MCD which some consider REITish)
OMG JUAN WEEK OF STAG DATA AND SUDDENLY IS STAGFLATION. oh no. Anyway. Ice is melting. Make sure there’s no salt on the fries
No, that one is a ghetto mortgage REIT, stay away from those. Realty Income or STAG Industrial if you like monthly dividend payments, VICI, Prologis etc. Or just buy an ETF if you don't want to stock pick.
None have replied Realty INcome yet, surprised (O). It's five stars on Morningstar, none of these others are. I own O, STAG, APLE, AMT and CCI Avoiding residential SFH mortgage REITs for now in case it's bubbling.
Many REITs pay monthly dividends. STAG and O are good examples
O CCI AMT STAG VICI. reits are kind of ass i just buy them when on big dips
Drop AGNC for STAG or SCHD
Feedback on my ROTH IRA and investment help for a young investor. I’m 19 and have been investing into my Roth and taxable brokerage for just about a year now. I’ve watched numerous videos on how to invest in a Roth at my age and have seen many different strategies but would like to get other opinions on my portfolio from other voices and people who have been in the markets longer then I have. I contribute $525 a month into my Roth and $100 into my taxable brokerage account as of now for reference. My current Roth IRA breakdown goes as such. 25% $VTI 22% $SCHD 19% $O 13% $STAG 12% $MAIN 9% XLV My current plan is to sell out of $STAG because I am practically at break even and have seen no gains besides the dividend reinvestments and allocate a majority of this holding into VTI and SCHD split. I know as a young investor I should be based more so on growth oriented stocks and ETFS but the instant payments from MAIN and O$ which I’m up a good % on are just too pleasing to my mental. For my taxable I have just about 1000$ in it and just have a 50/50 $DGRO $SCHD split. Any thing helps and would love to discuss any portfolio changes thanks !
#JPOW said I see neither STAG nor FLATION BEARS
The hope would be that stocks would eventually gain the dividend back - if it's just paying a dividend and going nowhere or paying a dividend and the share price keeps eroding it's probably not a good company. The thing that I dislike that I see on here incessantly is people who are 20-something who are buying things that their parents should be considering and/or "dividend above all else" ("I don't care what it is, just that it yields a lot and if it pays every month even better") then it becomes yield chasing. There's also an emphasis at times on dividends as if they are some sort of magic safety, when they're not. Look at something like VFC, which was a dividend aristorcrat for many years and then the rug is pulled. Look at GE post-Immelt and pre-Larry Culp. So, imo the dividend focus is not something that I agree with because on here 1) it often seems like what it pays is so much more important than what the business actually is/does and 2) "dividends for the sake of dividends" often leads to buying low/er quality businesses that in some cases aren't paying dividends that can be sustained 3) there's too much focus by younger people on here on income names that would be in some cases more appropriate for their parents and 4) I joked the other day the investable REIT universe on here seems to be largely made up of Realty Income/O - it's a weird little mini cult stock on here because everyone looks for a REIT because they have elevated the idea of dividends in their mind and they all copy each other. People buy STAG instead of much larger/better peer PLD because it pays a bigger/monthly dividend and PLD has a smaller, quarterly dividend. So, TLDR: I just don't like the prioritization of what something pays over what it does. Company fundamentals should be the focus, not what the yield is, but any time dividend names/yield come up on here it often seems like the latter.
I feel like the case can be made that homes have been underbuilt post 2008 and we do need to catch up. That will not happen in a straight line and both homebuilders and suppliers are rate concious and will be obliterated the moment anyone suspects any cooling in the economy. So I think there's fundamental demand over the medium term for new houses but even if that is the case the names will not move in anything resembling a straight line there. Really dislike O. PLD is a great company with extraordinary scale but it is going to go down heavily if there's any cooling in the economy. But would I choose that over STAG, which seems to be the choice for many solely because the monthly dividend? Without question.
I’m weird and highly risky…. I’m not not a financial advisor. I’m just some guy in reddit. But I am deep into ORC, AGNC, STAG… with a few tech stock thrown in for a “stability”. I could not pass up the $0.12 dividends on the REIT stocks. I put $90 down on GME just for the fun of it.
maybe you weren't listening to JPOW. WE SEE NEITHER STAG NOR FLATION MUTHTTTAAA FUCCKERRRSSS
O, STAG, and MAIN should be monthly. I believe STAG had the lowest yield, but it's the cheapest and in a pretty solid industry imo. T/CWEN are quarterly.
O, STAG, and MAIN are good monthly dividends stocks. Two REIT and then one financial. Pfizer is another good medical one and is pretty cheap right now. I personally like T and CWEN, although their not super popular or well run, they've been good to me.
That 7% correction was your “crash” Earnings have been good, JPOW sees NO STAG and NO FLATION, and it’s an election year ATH this week
In other words, weak consumer, high inflation. But jerome doesn't see either the STAG nor the FLATION
maybe you didn't hear big daddy JPOW the 1st time. THERE IS NO SIGNS OF STAG OR FLATION BIATTCHHH
Listen...I don't see the STAG nor the FLATION. So you can mosey on.
But Papa JPOW sees no STAG and no FLATION Earnings season has been going well We already had a correction from ATH I think we pump until/unless bearish economic data comes out, since JPOW says all decisions will be based on the data, therefore markets will be hypersensitive to data releases
NO STAG NO FLATION Any questions?
I bought calls after JPOW said he doesn’t see the STAG or the FLATION I thought that was the biggest balled bullish comment and was confident we’d see a +2-3% pump on that alone 
I got fucked today Lost 2k on weed calls in the morning Lost nearly 2k on SPY calls in the afternoon That pump and dump was sick In the end, JPOW couldn’t save us, despite his dovish language. He even said he doesn’t see the STAG or the FLATION. How do we sell off after that???? If JPOW can’t save us with that language, nothing can. SPY is going down to 470 after AAPL earnings
lots of regards are buying $STAG right now
Haha the trending banner now has STAG ticker listed up there
He said I don’t see the STAG or the FLATION J POW is so funny ❤️🙏🏻
I own O, STAG and VICI.. is that too many reits? Should I consolidate and use the other two to buy the O dip?
Is having O, STAG and VICI considered too many reits? Should I downsize and buy the O dip? Thanks
In no particular order, VICI, MAA, STAG, FPI, OBDC, CPT, CCI, AWK, and AGE.
I like VNQ but I would consider just looking at its largest holdings and buy some of them. I own AMT, O, DLR, PSA and STAG. I leave the dividends on Drip while I am still working and have these in tax deferred accounts because of the generous dividend yield.
Suggestions on ROTH IRA portfolio. I am 27 and started investing in the stock market. I do realized I am heavy on real estate but planning to add VTI and VTI from now on. Also considering to remove STAG and VZ, any advices are appreciated. Apple 9.55% KO 16.38% O 28.37% STAG 8.06% VT 1.18% VZ 13% WM 23%
I have some questions regarding about my ROTH IRO portfolio. Currently in my mid 20s and planning to invest in long term. I do noticed my portfolio is heaving on real estate. Planning to just keep adding VTI and VT onwards to set my real estate position at 10%. Apple - 9.55% KO - 16.38% O - 28.37% STAG - 8.06% VZ - 13% WM - 23% VT - 1.18% Also considering to remove VZ and STAG from the portfolio but some suggestions would be appreciated.
Suggestions on ROTH IRA portfolio. Just started investing in mid 20 and want to get some advice on my portfolio. I do realized that I am heavy on real estate but planning to just keep adding VTI and VT onwards and lower my real estate position to under 10%. Apple - 9.55% KO - 16.38% O - 28.37% STAG - 8.06% VZ - 13% WM - 23% VT - 1.18% Also considering to remove Verizon and STAG from my ROTH IRA but not really quite sure. Any advice would be appreciated.
Is REIT worth starting a position? Looks pretty beaten up and undervalued, and has good dividends. Any thoughts on O or STAG?
Is owning O, STAG, and VICI having too many reits or should I keep buying them? Or Should I cut any? Cut 1? Looking for advice lol
It's not, but I do like it. I also like NLY, PEAK, O, and STAG
I'd rather PLD (which is enormous and has a moat w/sheer scale) than STAG. STAG might eventually be bought by a larger player but otherwise PLD is basically King Kong if you want to bet on industrial RE. Also, people keep talking about REITs but nobody mentioning BX - not a REIT but owns a real estate empire and has offered a good mix of growth + dividend (although the div is variable.)
Is owning O, Vici and STAG having too many reits? Should i just go O only? Or keep throwing money in all 3? Anyone got any advice? Mostly buying for long term dividends
How would be split your % splits among these: * O. * SCHD * STAG * QQQM * VT * VTI
At the risk of exposing me not knowing what I'm doing (but wanting to learn), I think nearly always my bid-ask spreads had a delta of like $0.05, and I'd place it on $0.02-0.03 of that to have a "high fill likelihood" and I've made money, with time left. And for the remainder of the time that would have been left, the stock went the opposite direction, so I typically sell at a great time (not talking STAG, just general options). I've never understood what I'm selling, and to who, or why they would buy it. A put is a contract that is "the right to sell at X-Price". But I've never exercised, I just made a prediction that was semi-right and filled at the bid-ask. So what would someone be looking for (to "buy off me"), and why am I sensing that there are no bidders, and there will be no bidders. If I'm close to ITM with lots of time left - wouldn't this print?
STAG. I was shocked I was already profitable if I sold and was still close to ITM and then, just - nothing. I thought maybe something absurd happened with the company or I somehow messed up with my selections.
If you're in a state where the tax advantages of T-Bills apply, I'd look strongly at a solid portion (20-35%) of this infusion there. I bonds could be maxed out for the year (10K) with only ca. 3% of the total to invest. I'm not qualified to speak to 150K into NVDA; I'm also not used to dealing with sums like that or the freedom to put so much on one stock. I respect your thesis on it and wouldn't tell you not to invest in NVDA, but more than 50% of this seems risky to me. Your non-taxadvantaged equities sound like they might be very sector concentrated. You might consider something "boring" like VOO/DIA/MOAT/VTI to increase diversification with the ease of "set/forget". A high-yield bond fund set on DRIP might be useful to you too. I'm unclear if you're uninterested in real estate as a sector for investment or if you just don't want to own property (investment or vacation home). You could consider REIT as a mechanism to gain the diversification of the real estate sector to your portfolio. O, STAG, ABR, are commonly mentioned, and there are others. Are you having enough fun? If not, you could consider just spending some of it -- vacation, new fishing rod, new stereo, etc. What is the old Tug McGraw (?) quote, "90% I'll spend on whiskey and women, the rest I'll probably waste..." Seriously, mental health is important. Buffett talks about investing in ourselves.
I have O For stores, VICI for gambling and fun, STAG for industrials, and PCH for lumber industry. we will always build and need lumber.
O, VICI, STAG, CTO, and then mREITs STWD, ABR, RITM
Ignore the doom and gloom "you must index or you'll be broke" comments. If you can spare a couple hours a week to keep up with your stock picks, news, earnings, etc. I think you'll do fine. I wouldn't just sell your current positions though, at least these names: DE, NKE, O, PFE, SBUX, SCHD, STAG, V, VICI, WBA. I'm less confident about the others but they might be perform okay as long term dividend plays, you'll have to decide for yourself. But the new picks you listed in your post will I think outperform the S&P 500 over time. Decide which of your current picks you're most confident in, sell the rest, and begin building up positions in the new picks. Spend a little time each week keeping up with your picks and pay attention to earnings every quarter and you should do fine. As someone else said, maybe consider getting some exposure to small cap stocks through the IWM index fund, set it at 5-10% of your allocation.
I mean it could and is a stable way, but you won’t fully take advantage of the compounding in it. Even $30K in it will only yield you an extra $1,500/year so don’t expect too much. As far as the portfolio goes: SPHD/SCHD, O, JEPI/JEPQ, VZ, T, UPS, CVX, and STAG. You’ll have to figure out the allocation percents to best suit your needs however. For me, it yields me around 6%/year. Alternatively, you could throw the dividends from them into a yieldmax like TSLY if you’re more impatient. ONLY the dividends! I can’t stress that enough. Yieldmaxes are way too risky and trend down, but pay out pretty good so you won’t lose any real money by just putting the dividends into it.
Hi everyone (: I have a question on understanding the return, risk and exposure profile of an options + share strategy. The strategy (which has been mentioned within other subreddits) is an accumulating variation on the "Wheel" where the premium from selling covered calls and cash secured puts are reinvested into more shares of the underlying. One proponent of the strategy calls it the "STAG Wheel" (admittedly with a lot of hyperbole) has increased the number of shares held of the underlying (PLTR) by 300% through the last 2 - 3 years. I have the intuition that some complex, multi-legged options strategies can be replicated by simpler strategies. One view I have in this case is that the purchase of shares from CC & CSPs add a fraction of a constant +1 delta to the stock+option position. At the point of purchase this can also be replicated by skewing the put and call strikes up. But I don't think this is the correct way to understand this strategy, especially when more than 1 round of CCs and CSPs are carried out. Another attempt at figuring this out has me consider the written options as being 0 premium sales which do not affect the cost basis of the original shares but contribute to an cost-free increase in leverage (i.e. 3 shares from the premiums = +3% leverage) on the underlying, but this view seems to run into trouble when considering assignments. Still, this suggests that this option + stock strategy hopes to profit by increasing leverage for some future sale above cost basis. Are there any resources or opinions I can consult to understand the risk and return profile of this strategy? Thank you very much.
My REITs are hurting right now. My CFP and a friend's both like some exposure to REITs. I currently hold O, STAG, ARB. I recently tax loss harvested on SPG. I've stopped my DRP on O. I just don't want to increase my holdings right now. STAG is down but I like the warehouse and AMZN connection.
Every week I buy more of whatever is the lowest percentage of my portfolio to try and keep everything around 10%. Thinking of replacing NFG with something else. Thoughts on the picks? AAPL MSFT F V KO PG DIS O STAG NFG
Very basic picks in my Roth. I put in more money every week and buy more of whatever is the lowest percentage of my portfolio to try and keep everything around 10%. Thinking of replacing NFG with something else. Thoughts on the picks? AAPL MSFT F V KO PG DIS O STAG NFG
Just my thoughts and I have no idea what I’m doing, so take what I say with a mountain of salt. I bought Tesla because I still think it has potential for growth as an EV company long term, regardless of Musk chicanery. I put money in STAG because it it has been trending very well over the past 5 years and pays decent dividends. Related to real estate though so caveat emptor. Either way, being young and having a mindset to invest early is a great start regardless, so good on ya, good luck and keep at it!
REIT'S are a wonder option. It's very condescending to assume he knows nothing about real estate. He can easily read up on various REIT companies to understand what sectors of real estate they hold properties in. There is plenty of information out there for him to research the different sectors to determine varying risk levels and how the present climate affects them. Besides there are quite a few REIT's considered to be dividend aristocrats. Their track records of year over year dividend increases for 25 plus years or more are a fairly safe proposition. Companies like STAG, O, FRT, NNN to name a few hold essential retail, industrial and storage properties that keep bringing in income in both up and down markets. He can and should learn about real estate as well as other sectors.
When someone says “tenant” in regards to REITs and rents it doesn’t automatically mean “human beings living in residential housing”. In fact that is absolutely NOT what I was talking about. American Tower Crown Castle STAG Iron Mountain Medical Properties Trust All of these are REITs in sectors I’m interested in. None of them residential real estate.
I did not pick the REITs only by their yield. I wanted a mix of solid growth and steady payments. Out of the 6 I picked I like IRM and STAG by far the most. Not so sure about WPC anymore. But I think I will hold all of them for a few years now and then reevalute again.
Ahhh I have them too. Haven't gotten divs from them either. Also waiting on AGNC, GOOD, STAG, ORC and ARR divs so looking forward to comparing them, I have the exact same amount in each to get a nice baseline
NEVER SELL O,STAG,SHW,MO,TROW,HD,KR,NKE,KO,PEP you will be rich in 30 years
Charge your phone then dump ford and buy some STAG or O for some monthly dividends
I second JohnnyIsSoAlive. You could invest your remaining funds into a monthly dividend REIT like STAG or O and use those dividends to pay down your loan. The dividends will get taxed but you could slowly pay back your loans.
Well you said you want to stay away from stocks. You're interested in real estate investing but don't have much time. By your statement I gather you're looking for a passive way to own investment real estate. The best passive strategy for real estate is to simply buy REIT stocks. These Real Estate Investment Trusts are companies with portfolios of income producing real estate. There are many to choose from. Some specialize in Hospital & skilled nursing home facilities like OHI and MPW as just a couple of examples. Others focus on industrial warehouse properties like STAG. Others own portfolios of malls & shopping centers. SPG is a good example for this sector. Of course there are companies like SLG and CIO who own office properties. I am sure there are others owning residential real estate. These companies are required to pay 90% of their income as dividends to shareholders. While there is volatility in the share prices of these companies I prefer this angle of investing in real estate because I don't want to deal with the headaches of tenants calling me at 3 AM with repair requests or a bad tenant who can't pay or decides to become a squatter I can't kick out. Commercial real estate is a better play anyways. Many REIT's have NNN tenants who are responsible for the maintenance, repairs & property taxes which leaves more profit to the REIT's. This is just my take on it.
Instructions unclear, bought more STAG.
$HD, $LOW, $IRM, $STAG, $ASML, $RTX, $SBUX, $WM and $ODFL are my main dividend stocks. I hold them in my ROTH ira so they can grow tax free. Personally I like dividend companies that also have some growth potential and I think I can hold for 20-40 years. I’m 25 now so I have a long time to hold them.
At this point, I would look at REITs like DRL, STAG or PLYM instead of small banks since interest rates will decrease before the end of the year.
Basically your VOO is your golden goose, you don't sell bits and pieces of your goose. You goose lays a golden egg (dividends) and you use that golden egg to live off of life. Your Golden Goose lays four eggs a year, one egg every three months. The value of that egg may vary depending on size. Your other options are to buy a goose that lays an egg every month let's call that Goose STAG or O . You buy that Goose when you're young and let him eat all the food (dividends) he wants until you're ready for the goose to lay eggs and you collect them. On the other hand you could buy four different geese that lay eggs in different months. Lots of Geese out there to buy. Future reference Go to your local library and study investing. Don't be a silly goose.
AGNC, Annally, Armour, OPI, STAG Industrial, Easterly Government Poperties, etc they were all down when I made the post, there's been some bounce back since I posted