Sure Dividend

High-Quality Dividend Stocks, Long-Term Plan
Member's Area

Monthly Dividend Stock In Focus: Artis Real Estate Investment Trust


Published on January 14th, 2026 by Bob Ciura

Monthly dividend stocks have instant appeal for many income investors. Stocks that pay their dividends each month offer more frequent payouts than traditional quarterly or semi-annual dividend payers.

For this reason, we created a full list of over 100 monthly dividend stocks.

You can download our full Excel spreadsheet of all monthly dividend stocks (along with metrics that matter like dividend yields and payout ratios) by clicking on the link below:

 

(ARESF) is a monthly dividend stock based in Canada. This potentially makes the stock more attractive for income investors looking for more frequent dividend payouts.

This article will analyze in greater detail.

Business Overview

Growth Prospects

Artis’ FFO per share has been under pressure over the past decade. In the years from 2015 to 2017, FFO per unit was broadly stable, with year-to-year movements driven mainly by acquisitions and dispositions, foreign exchange, and leasing-related items.

The portfolio was actively recycled during this period, and changes in the income base from asset sales and purchases, along with FX, explain the modest fluctuations in per-unit results.

The decline in 2018 reflects the impact of a smaller portfolio following a heavy period of dispositions, which reduced NOI and FFO, only partly offset by acquisitions and completed developments.

The rebound in 2019 came as results stabilized after this reset and per-unit metrics benefited from normalization and capital allocation actions, even as Artis continued to simplify and reposition the portfolio.

From 2020 through 2024, FFO per unit was affected by portfolio downsizing, a rise in interest expense, and changes in capital structure. COVID had a limited net impact in 2020, as lower interest expense, FX, and unit buybacks offset asset sales and operating pressure.

However, in subsequent years, continued dispositions and rising interest rates weighed on.

FFO, partially offset by repurchases and income from the preferred investment that it received as part of Cominar’s 2022 privatization, with 2023 marking the trough before a modest stabilization in 2024.

Moving forward, we believe Artis can grow its FFO per share at ~2% per year, supported by continued unit repurchases, stabilization of interest expense as the balance sheet is simplified, and a more stable earnings base following the bulk of its portfolio dispositions.

Dividend & Valuation Analysis

With an annualized dividend payout of $0.44 per share, compared with expected 2025 FFO-per-share of $0.58, ARESF has an expected payout ratio of 76%.

While this is a high payout ratio, it is not unusual for a REIT, which typically distribute the majority of FFO as dividends to shareholders.

Artis’ performance is anchored by a portfolio of institutional-quality commercial assets and a capital allocation strategy focused on simplification and per-unit value creation rather than growth.

Following several years of dispositions and balance-sheet work, leverage now sits at the mid-40% range of gross book value, which is materially improved but still elevated relative to best-in-class peers, meaning financial risk is lower than in prior years but not yet fully normalized.

The REIT has shown it can protect per-unit results through disposals and buybacks, but the remaining office exposure and still-meaningful leverage mean earnings remain sensitive to a market downturn.

Shares are currently trading for a 2025 P/FFO ratio of 10.7, which is above our fair value estimate of 9.0. Therefore, shares appear overvalued right now.

Combined with 2% expected FFO-per-share growth each year and the 8% dividend yield, total returns are estimated at 8% per year over the next five years.

Final Thoughts

Artis is a simplifying, value-focused REIT with improving balance sheet quality and strong capital discipline. However, the lack of above-average growth prospects doesn’t leave us too interested in it.

We see annualized returns of 8% through 2030 to be powered mainly by the dividend and soft growth expectations, offset by the possibility of a modest valuation headwind.

Regardless, we rate the stock a sell due to the lack of dividend growth.

Additional Reading

Don’t miss the resources below for more monthly dividend stock investing research.

And see the resources below for more compelling investment ideas for dividend growth stocks and/or high-yield investment securities.

Thanks for reading this article. Please send any feedback, corrections, or questions to support@suredividend.com.