Passive Income + Value: A Cheap Canadian REIT to Scoop Up

CT Real Estate Investment Trust (TSX:CRT.UN) looks like a big bargain for passive-income seekers.

| More on:

REITs can help you combat volatility while providing you with above-average yields to satisfy your income needs. If you’re an older investor who’s looking to lower your risk, it’s in your best interest to up your TFSA’s exposure to the REITs. Here’s one winner to get you started: CT REIT (TSX:CRT.UN).

Canadian Tire (TSX:CTC.A), CT REIT’s largest tenant, may be a wonderful Canadian retailer, but it’s in the crosshairs of some pretty hungry e-commerce and foreign brick-and-mortar competitors. While the iconic Canadian retailer isn’t going under any time soon, I believe the firm’s ROEs will fall under pressure as management places bets on efforts that aim to win back the business that was lost to up-and-coming competitors.

As much as I love the Canadian Tire brand, it’s tough to justify owning shares of a retail company that’s getting disrupted, both online and offline. Margins will come under pressure, even if the company is able to keep store traffic up.

As such, I’d strongly urge investors to consider CT REIT instead. It’s the perfect way to feast on the traffic going through Canadian Tire stores without the indigestion of margin-eroding competition. The REIT houses Canadian Tire (accounting for 93% of base minimum rent), as you may have guessed, but it has been making moves to diversify its rental stream.

CT REIT has a solid pipeline of developments, redevelopments, and intensifications that’ll bolster AFFO growth over time. Over the past five years, CT REIT has posted a CAGR of just over 5%. As CT REIT reaps the rewards from Canadian Tire’s slow and steady expansion while making moves to score non-Canadian Tire tenants, CT REIT could eventually evolve to become more of a mixed-use property play with Canadian Tire stores used as the primary anchor.

With an impressive 99.1% occupancy rate as of the latest quarter thanks to a 40-bps increase quarter over quarter due to the recent signing of a short-term lease, CT REIT looks to be one of the most robust retail REITs that money could buy.

At the time of writing, CT REIT sports a 5.3% distribution yield, which is about average when it comes to REITs. When you consider the AFFO-growth potential and the slight undervaluation (14 times AFFO) relative to other retail REITs, the name looks that much more attractive for value-conscious income investors.

Stay hungry. Stay Foolish.

Fool contributor Joey Frenette has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.

More on Dividend Stocks

warehouse worker takes inventory in storage room
Dividend Stocks

A 4.8% Dividend Stock That’s Quietly Becoming a Top Pick for 2026

Choice Properties REIT offers a near-5% monthly yield backed by grocery-anchored stability and an industrial growth runway.

Read more »

Canadian Dollars bills
Dividend Stocks

How to Use a TFSA to Bring in $1,000 a Month — Completely Tax-Free

Nexus Industrial REIT posted record NOI in 2025 and is targeting investment-grade status in 2026. Here's what that could mean…

Read more »

ETFs can contain investments such as stocks
Dividend Stocks

This Monthly Income ETF Yields 3.5% — and it Deserves a Closer Look

Vanguard FTSE Canadian High Dividend Yield Index ETF (TSX:VDY) has a 3.5% yield.

Read more »

young adult uses credit card to shop online
Dividend Stocks

2 Canadian Dividend Stocks That Could Belong in Almost Any Investor’s Portfolio

These Canadian dividend stocks have sustainable payouts with the potential for gradual capital gains in the long term.

Read more »

young people dance to exercise
Dividend Stocks

2 High-Yield TSX Stocks Worth Buying if You Have $2,000 to Put to Work

Consider buying two high-yield TSX stocks to generate consistent income even if you have only $2,000 to spare.

Read more »

telehealth stocks
Dividend Stocks

2 High-Yield Dividend Stocks That Could Be a Safer Pick for Canadian Retirees

These two quality dividend stocks with solid underlying businesses, consistent dividend payouts, and visible growth prospects are ideal for retirees.

Read more »

cookies stack up for growing profit
Dividend Stocks

4 Dividend Stocks I’d Happily Double My Position in Today

These four quality dividend stocks offer attractive buying opportunities in this uncertain outlook.

Read more »

Canadian investor contemplating U.S. stocks with multiple doors to choose from.
Dividend Stocks

3 Canadian REITs Worth Holding in an Income Portfolio Through Any Market Condition

These Canadian REITs offer a mix of safety, growth and reliable income, giving investors the confidence to hold them in…

Read more »