3 Dividend Stocks That Could Keep Paying Through Market Chaos

Market chaos is exactly when dividend investors should focus on payouts backed by real assets and steady tenants.

Key Points
  • SmartCentres leans on Walmart-anchored retail with high occupancy, supporting a roughly 6.5% yield.
  • Vital Infrastructure owns healthcare real estate with long leases and a discount to NAV, but leverage still matters.
  • Firm Capital offers an 8% yield and affordable-housing exposure, though coverage is thin and liquidity is smaller.

Market chaos can make dividend investing feel trickier than it should. The goal isn’t to chase the biggest yield on the board, but to find companies with steady cash flow, useful assets, and payouts that still look supported when investors get nervous. Real estate can still fit, especially when tenants sell essentials, provide health care, or live in practical, affordable housing. These three TSX dividend stocks aren’t perfect, but each has a case for keeping the cash coming through a rough market.

groceries get more expensive as inflation rises

Source: Getty Images

SRU

SmartCentres REIT (TSX:SRU.UN) owns one of Canada’s largest portfolios of value-focused shopping centres, often anchored by Walmart. That gives it steady traffic, even when shoppers tighten budgets. Over the last year, SmartCentres has kept leaning on its core retail strength while also advancing mixed-use development projects on land it already owns. The story here isn’t explosive growth, but dependable rent, strong locations, and patience.

At the end of 2025, SmartCentres reported in-place and committed occupancy of 98.6%, a strong number in any market. Same-property net operating income grew 3.7% for the full year, while funds from operations (FFO) per unit held steady enough to support the payout. The annual distribution remained at $1.85 per unit, giving the stock a yield of around 6.5%. The payout ratio to adjusted FFO improved to 89.2% for 2025. With the dividend stock trading around 19 times earnings, it doesn’t look expensive for a dominant retail REIT. Risks include higher debt costs and slow development timelines, but the core business still looks solid.

VITL

Vital Infrastructure Property Trust (TSX:VITL.UN) has a new name and a clearer pitch. Formerly NorthWest Healthcare Properties REIT, it owns healthcare real estate across major global markets. These assets include hospitals, clinics, and medical office properties. That kind of tenant base can look attractive when markets wobble, as health care doesn’t depend on whether consumers feel rich this month. People still need care, and providers still need space.

The trust has also made progress after a tough stretch. In 2025, same-property net operating income (NOI) rose 3.1%, occupancy stayed above 96%, and the weighted average lease term sat above 12 years. Adjusted FFO per unit rose 7.7% to $0.42, while the payout ratio improved to 86%. The monthly distribution sits at $0.03 per unit, or $0.36 annually, giving it a yield of around 6.5%. Units recently traded near $5.50, below the reported net asset value (NAV) of $7.55 per unit. That discount looks tempting, but investors shouldn’t ignore leverage, past distribution cuts, and asset sales. Still, the healthcare property base gives Vital a defensive angle.

FCD

Finally, Firm Capital Property Trust (TSX:FCD.UN) owns a mix of multi-residential, industrial, retail, and manufactured-home community properties. That mix gives it exposure to practical real estate categories, not just one narrow theme. Over the last year, Firm Capital also pushed further into manufactured-home communities, a space tied to affordable housing demand. In a tighter economy, that could become a stronger asset class, not a weaker one.

The latest numbers looked steady enough for income investors. In the fourth quarter of 2025, AFFO rose 2% to about $4.9 million, while AFFO per unit hit $0.133. The payout ratio improved to 98% from 100% a year earlier, so the cushion remains thin but has moved in the right direction. The trust declared monthly distributions of $0.0433 per unit, or roughly $0.52 per year, offering up a yield of 8% at writing. Debt and small-cap liquidity remain risks, but the monthly income case looks alive.

Bottom line

SmartCentres, Vital Infrastructure, and Firm Capital all come with different risk levels. SmartCentres offers scale and retail strength, Vital brings health-care real estate and long leases, and Firm Capital adds a higher yield and affordable-housing exposure. And all these dividend stocks can provide ample income even with $7,000.

COMPANYRECENT PRICENUMBER OF SHARESANNUAL DIVIDENDANNUAL TOTAL PAYOUTFREQUENCYTOTAL INVESTMENT
SRU.UN$28.45246$1.85$455.10Monthly$6,998.70
VITL.UN$5.601,250$0.36$450.00Monthly$7,000.00
FCD.UN$6.551,068$0.52$555.36Monthly$6,995.40

Of course, no one can promise a smooth ride through market chaos. But for investors who want dividends backed by real assets, these three still look capable of paying while the market gets messy.

Fool contributor Amy Legate-Wolfe has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends SmartCentres Real Estate Investment Trust and Vital Infrastructure Property Trust. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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