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Monthly Dividend Stock In Focus: BTB Real Estate Investment Trust


Published on January 20th, 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:

 

BTB Real Estate Investment Trust (BTBIF) 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 BTB Real Estate Investment Trust in greater detail.

Business Overview

BTB Real Estate Investment Trust is a Canadian REIT that owns, operates, and actively manages a portfolio of industrial, suburban office, and necessity-based retail properties, with a strong concentration in Québec and Eastern Ontario and a growing presence in Western Canada.

As of September 30th, 2025, BTB owned 73 income-producing properties totaling 6.0 million square feet and a gross asset value of about C$1.2 billion, with the portfolio weighted 41% suburban office, 36% industrial, and 23% necessity-based retail by fair value.

It reports its financials in CAD and pays dividends on a monthly basis. All figures in this report have been converted to USD unless otherwise noted.

On November 3rd, 2025, BTB REIT reported its Q3 results for the quarter ended September 30th, 2025, with revenue from real estate properties of $23.6 million, up 1% year over year, driven by operating improvements, new leasing, and higher renewal rents.

Net operating income increased about 6% year over year to $14.3 million, while cash NOI rose roughly 4%, reflecting strong same-property performance and lease cancellation income on space already re-leased.

Portfolio occupancy was 91.5%, modestly lower year over year due to a planned industrial tenant departure, offset by solid leasing activity and average renewal rent growth of 14.5%. FFO per unit was $0.083, up 7% compared to last year.

For FY2025, we expect FFO per share of $0.29.

Growth Prospects

BTB’s FFO per share trajectory has been somewhat underwhelming over the past decade. From 2015 through 2017, the modest improvement in FFO per share was due to a mix of portfolio expansion and steady property-level execution.

The Trust spent these years adding assets and stabilizing cash flow via leasing and occupancy management, while keeping trust-level costs relatively contained, so incremental NOI translated into per-unit cash flow despite a gradually rising unit count.

The downshift between 2018 and 2020 was largely about portfolio repositioning friction and a challenging operating environment, with per-unit cash flow pressured by a combination of dispositions/non-core pruning, higher financing costs, and heavier leasing/capital activity to protect occupancy.

These issues were amplified by COVID-era disruption in 2020 (especially for office leasing velocity and tenant-related measures).

Even where revenue held up, the Trust was managing through a period where “clean” NOI-to-FFO translation was less favorable because more dollars were being absorbed below NOI and in capital/leasing intensity.

From 2021 through 2024, we saw operational improvements. However, these were offset by higher cost of capital. Same-property performance and leasing improved through tilting the mix toward industrial (higher-quality cash flows and better leasing momentum), which supported the rebound into 2022–2023.

However, by 2024 the per-unit decline was due to interest expense and refinancing/carry costs in a higher-rate environment, plus incremental dilution from DRIP participation.

Dividend & Valuation Analysis

Moving forward, we expect no FFO per share growth as higher interest costs and capital recycling is likely to offset
incremental NOI from its growing industrial portfolio.

We also expect no growth in the dividend. The company slashed monthly payouts in 2020 from C$0.0350 per month to C$0.0250 per month. It has since been unchanged.

BTB has historically traded at 10x its FFO per share. Today, the REIT trades at 10.3x this year’s expected FFO. Our fair value is 10x, as its past decade-average accurately reflects the risks involved in its investment case.

The dividend yield now stands at 7.3%, and we expect it to be the primary driver of BTB’s total return prospects in the coming years.

BTB shows a mixed risk profile. On the positive side, the REIT has been actively improving portfolio quality by increasing its exposure to industrial assets and necessity-based retail, which offer somewhat stable demand and better long-term fundamentals than office.

However, financial safety is weaker, due to elevated leverage (56.8%). The decision to cut the distribution in 2020 also shows vulnerability during periods of stress.

The portfolio’s suburban office exposure further limits recession resilience, as office leasing demand remains structurally challenged.

The payout ratio of 76% is healthier than in previous years, when it often exceeded 100%, so we believe the REIT can sustain its current dividend. Still, a prolonged downturn in the real estate sector wouldn’t exclude the possibility of another dividend cut.

Final Thoughts

BTB REIT is making progress improving its asset mix, but elevated leverage, meaningful office exposure, and a history of a dividend cut limit its safety and near-term risk-adjusted appeal.

We forecast an annualized total return potential of 7.1% over the medium term to be powered mainly by the starting dividend yield.

However, due to the lack of dividend growth in recent years, we rate the stock a sell.

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.

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