This Real Estate Stock Could Secure Your Passive Income Dreams

Income-seeking investors should consider holding this REIT to benefit from a growing dividend yield and long-term capital gains.

| More on:
Key Points
  • Granite Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) offers a forward yield of 4.3% and has more than tripled investor returns over the past decade through strategic acquisitions and management of logistics and industrial properties in North America and Europe.
  • In Q2, Granite REIT reported a 5.3% increase in funds from operations per unit, boosted by significant lease renewals and new leases, with expectations for further growth and high occupancy rates by year-end.
  • Analysts anticipate Granite's revenue and adjusted earnings will grow steadily by 2027, with projected stock gains of 10% over the next 18 months and cumulative returns potentially reaching 16% when dividends are included.

The real estate sector has arguably created the most millionaires over the past five decades. In addition to diversification, investors can generate a stable stream of passive income by holding these cash-generating assets.

But investing in real estate is capital-intensive, given that the average home price in Canada is close to $700,000. This number will be significantly higher in cities such as Toronto and Vancouver, suggesting that the average homeowner will have to take on substantial debt to fund the purchase. Moreover, real estate investors will have to allocate additional resources to fund maintenance costs, taxes, and vacancy periods.

Alternatively, Canadians can gain exposure to the real estate sector by investing in real estate investment trusts (REITs). Typically, REITs own and operate a portfolio of real estate properties, which further reduces investment risk. Further, REITs distribute most of their net income to unit holders as dividends, making them attractive to income-seeking shareholders.

One top Canadian REIT you can buy right now is Granite Real Estate Investment Trust (TSX:GRT.UN). Valued at a market cap of $4.8 billion, Granite REIT has more than tripled investor returns over the past decade, after adjusting for dividend reinvestments. Despite these stellar returns, the REIT offers you a forward yield of 4.3% in 2025.

warehouse worker takes inventory in storage room

Source: Getty Images

Is this TSX REIT a good buy?

Granite acquires, develops, owns, and manages logistics, warehouse, and industrial properties in North America and Europe. It owns 141 properties totalling 60.6 million square feet of gross leasable area.

In Q2 2025, Granite REIT grew its funds from operations or FFO per unit by 5.3% to $1.39. In the June quarter, it completed 1.3 million square feet of renewals for 2026 expiries and 1.1 million square feet of new leases, expected to contribute over $10.5 million in first-year gross rent.

Management renewed roughly 80% of 2025 expiries at a weighted-average increase exceeding 40%, with a standout Atlanta lease achieving a 58% increase in rental rate. The company raised its constant-currency same-property net operating income guidance to 5% to 6.5% from 4.5% to 6%.

Granite increased FFO per unit guidance to $5.75 to $5.90, representing 6% to 9% growth over 2024, while lifting AFFO per unit guidance to $4.90 to $5.05. Management expects occupancy to range between 96.5% and 97% by year-end, roughly 100 basis points above first-quarter expectations.

The REIT announced plans to classify five assets as held for sale, totalling approximately $310.5 million, generating $14.8 million in annualized revenue, as part of its capital recycling strategy.

New opportunities

The company completed a Florida acquisition in the Miami market during the quarter and is actively pursuing new opportunities totalling $65 million across Europe and the United States.

Management emphasized capital deployment in select core markets while maintaining conservative leverage ratios. Granite has repurchased 2.2 million units year-to-date at an average cost of $67.01, taking advantage of the discount to net asset value.

Net leverage increased to 36% from 32%, primarily due to the classification of assets as held for sale, which reduced investment property values while drawing on the credit facility to fund acquisitions and buybacks.

The REIT expects leverage ratios to normalize following asset sales and intends to reduce the $91 million outstanding balance on its credit facility throughout 2025 with operating cash flow.

Is the Canadian REIT still undervalued?

Granite REIT’s growth story is far from over, given that it is forecast to increase revenue from $569 million in 2014 to $678 million in 2027. Comparatively, adjusted earnings are forecast to expand from $5.22 per share in 2025 to $6.62 per share in 2027.

If the TSX stock is priced at 13 times forward earnings, which is reasonable, it should gain 10% over the next 18 months. After adjusting for dividends, cumulative returns could be closer to 16%. The REIT is also projected to grow its annual dividend per share from $3.30 in 2025 to $3.61 in 2027.

Fool contributor Aditya Raghunath has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Granite Real Estate Investment Trust. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Dividend Stocks

House models and one with REIT real estate investment trust.
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Stocks That Turn Any Investment Into a Passive Income Payday

Two TSX REITs are delivering steady 4%+ yields by collecting rent from apartments and grocery-anchored shopping centres.

Read more »

Warning sign with the text "Trade war" in front of container ship
Dividend Stocks

The Canadian Stocks Worth Owning When a Trade War Hits

These TSX grocery stocks have a lower beta and could be more insulated from tariff volatility.

Read more »

Piggy bank with word TFSA for tax-free savings accounts.
Dividend Stocks

This Is the Average TFSA Balance for Canadians at Age 60

The average TFSA balance for Canadians at 60 is under $45,000. Here's why that may not be enough – and…

Read more »

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell speaks with U.S. president Donald Trump
Dividend Stocks

The U.S. Economy Is Slowing Down — These 3 Canadian Stocks Look Built to Keep Delivering

Fortis (TSX:FTS) can keep on paying dividends even with the economy slowing down.

Read more »

money goes up and down in balance
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Stocks That Look Like Obvious Buys Right Now

These dividend stocks have solid fundamentals, a strong history of dividend growth, and the financial strength to grow their payouts.

Read more »

Real estate investment concept with person pointing on growth graph and coin stacking to get profit from property
Dividend Stocks

A Practical Way to Use Your TFSA to Generate $300 a Month – Tax-Free

Generate $300 a month in tax‑free TFSA income using a balanced mix of stocks such as this high-yielding trio.

Read more »

pumpjack on prairie in alberta canada
Dividend Stocks

3 Canadian Oil Stocks Built for Volatile Crude Prices

How to invest in oil stocks when crude prices swing $20 in just two days.

Read more »

holding coins in hand for the future
Dividend Stocks

3 Canadian Stocks Built for Investors Who Want to Be Paid First

These three Canadian dividend stocks are some of the best and most reliable businesses to buy and hold for consistent…

Read more »