The annual REITweek conference in New York proved a fertile ground for Realty Income, producing not just a fresh analyst endorsement but also a deeper look at the company’s expanding network of private capital partnerships. The combination drove the stock 2.62% higher on Friday to close at €52.85, though the shares remain trapped between two key moving averages.
Jefferies kicked off coverage with a Buy rating and a price target of $69, arguing that net-lease REITs are trading at a significant discount to their ten-year average. The call redirected investor attention from quarterly noise toward the sector’s broader valuation gap, providing the immediate catalyst for Friday’s rally. On a weekly basis the gain was a more modest 0.67%, and the month-to-date decline still stands at roughly 3%.
Underpinning the analyst optimism, however, is a strategic shift that goes well beyond the stock’s technical skirmishes. Chief Financial Officer Jonathan Pong, speaking at the same conference, laid out how Realty Income is building relationships with investors who lack a REIT mandate but still want real estate exposure. That opens capital sources beyond the public equity market.
The most tangible evidence is a series of parallel structures: a $1.7 billion open-ended US fund (Core Plus LP), a partnership with Apollo subsidiary Athene Holding, and a $1.5 billion joint venture with Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC focused on industrial build-to-suit projects. The Apollo vehicle started with 492 single-tenant retail properties, with Realty Income holding 51% and Apollo 49%. Crucially, none of this private capital is included in the company’s $9.5 billion investment volume forecast for 2026 — meaning it represents pure additive firepower, not a reallabeling of planned spending.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Realty Income?
The operational foundation for this expansion was laid in the first quarter. Realty Income reported adjusted funds from operations (AFFO) of $1.13 per share, up 6.6% year on year, on investment volume of $2.8 billion at an initial cash yield of 7.1%. Management raised full-year 2026 AFFO guidance to a range of $4.41 to $4.44 per share. The portfolio now spans 15,571 properties leased to 1,786 tenants across 92 industries, with occupancy at 98.9%.
For income-focused holders, the dividend remains the bedrock. In May the company announced its 671st consecutive monthly payout — $0.2705 per share, equating to an annualized $3.25. That continuity, paired with a year-to-date share price gain of about 8%, has kept long-term sentiment intact even as the stock struggles to break higher.
Technically, the action is bracketed. The 50-day moving average at €53.51 has capped the recovery, while the 200-day line at €51.88 provides a medium-term floor. The relative strength index at 48.7 signals neutral momentum. A drop below €51.88 would darken the picture, but a push above €53.80 would clear the path for further gains. Realty Income’s next scheduled update — second-quarter results — will show whether its twin engines of analyst conviction and private capital can finally deliver a breakout.
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