How To Put $100 In Your Retirement Fund Each Month With Alexandria Real Estate Stock

view original post

Benzinga and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue on some items through the links below.

Alexandria Real Estate Equities Inc. (NYSE:ARE) is a mission-driven life science real estate investment trust that owns, operates, and develops collaborative Megacampus ecosystems in AAA life science innovation cluster locations, including Greater Boston, the San Francisco Bay Area, San Diego, Seattle, Maryland, North Carolina’s Research Triangle, and New York City.

The 52-week range of Alexandria Real Estate stock price was $67.37 to $130.14.

Alexandria Real Estate’s dividend yield is 7.23%. It paid $5.28 per share in dividends during the last 12 months.

Don’t Miss:

On April 28, the company announced its Q1 2025 earnings, posting FFO of $2.30, compared to the consensus estimate of $2.28, and revenues of $758.16 million, compared to the consensus of $751.55 million, as reported by Benzinga.

The company reduced its full-year 2025 guidance, now expecting EPS in the range of $1.36 to $1.56, and adjusted FFO per share of $9.16 to $9.36.

Trending: Invest Where It Hurts — And Help Millions Heal: Invest in Cytonics and help disrupt a $390B Big Pharma stronghold.

If you want to make $100 per month — $1,200 annually — from Alexandria Real Estate dividends, your investment value needs to be approximately $16,598, which is around 227 shares at $73.06 each.

Understanding the dividend yield calculations: When making an estimate, you need two key variables — the desired annual income ($1,200) and the dividend yield (7.23% in this case). So, $1,200 / 0.0723 = $16,598 to generate an income of $100 per month.

You can calculate the dividend yield by dividing the annual dividend payments by the current price of the stock.

The dividend yield can change over time. This is the outcome of fluctuating stock prices and dividend payments on a rolling basis.

See Also: Maximize saving for your retirement and cut down on taxes: Schedule your free call with a financial advisor to start your financial journey – no cost, no obligation.

For instance, assume a stock that pays $2 as an annual dividend is priced at $50. Its dividend yield would be $2/$50 = 4%. If the stock price rises to $60, the dividend yield drops to 3.33% ($2/$60). A drop in stock price to $40 will have an inverse effect and increase the dividend yield to 5% ($2/$40).