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5 Canadian Stocks I’d Buy for ‘Instant Income’

Alex Smith

Alex Smith

2 days ago

6 min read 👁 2 views
5 Canadian Stocks I’d Buy for ‘Instant Income’

If you are tired of waiting for the right moment to invest and want your money working for you from day one, these five Canadian REITs start paying distributions within a month’s time.

That cash can cover bills, top up a TFSA, or buy more REIT units on autopilot. It also steadies your nerves because you can collect distributions while prices wobble. In a market that tests patience, income investing gives you something concrete today.

Grocery REITs

RioCan REIT (TSX:REI.UN) feels relevant now because Canadians still run errands, even when they cut back elsewhere. It owns a mix of grocery-anchored and everyday retail centres, plus mixed-use projects in major cities. Over the last year, it leaned on leasing strength and portfolio pruning, and the unit price has often followed bond yields more than foot traffic. Right now, the dividend stock is hefty trading at 90 times earnings, but still offers a 5.8% dividend yield.

For income investors who want grocery-anchored monthly cash flow and don’t mind a premium valuation driven by bond yield sensitivity rather than business weakness, RioCan’s yield and urban mixed-use pipeline make it a relevant starting point.

Choice Properties REIT (TSX:CHP.UN) leans into the grocery theme as well, since Loblaw banners anchor a large share of its rent roll. That tie matters because food traffic stays steady, which supports long leases and high occupancy. In the past year, it has kept moving projects forward around strong sites, aiming to add density without chasing risky tenants. It’s also a far cheaper option trading at about 15 times earnings at writing, with a 4.8% yield.

Choice Properties is the most conservatively valued grocery REIT on this list, and its yield looks well-supported by occupancy rates and lease length.

Slate Grocery REIT (TSX:SGR.UN) offers a tighter grocery focus, with a meaningful U.S. portfolio that adds both diversification and currency swings. It looks relevant because it targets centres where the grocery store drives repeat visits, which can stabilize rent collections. Over the last year, investors have watched leverage and refinancing, and smaller real estate investment trusts (REIT) have felt sharper moves when bond yields jump. Again it’s a lower 17 times earnings, and offers a far higher 7.3% dividend yield.

Slate offers the highest yield of the grocery options here, but the leverage and refinancing watch means this is a “monitor the coverage” hold rather than a passive one. However, sized accordingly, it can round out your grocery income mix.

Infrastructure REITs

Dream Industrial REIT (TSX:DIR.UN) earns income from warehouses and light industrial space that keeps goods moving. Tenants still want modern logistics space near big population hubs, and renewals can reset rents higher. Over the last year, it balanced growth with balance-sheet caution as borrowing costs shifted. The yield currently trades at 5.3% at writing, and the dividend stock trades at 15.4 times earnings. The main risk comes from a weaker economy that slows demand, especially if new supply lands at the wrong time.

The main risk with Dream Industrial is the timing of new supply, but the demand backdrop for last-mile logistics stays structurally sound.

Granite REIT (TSX:GRT.UN) brings a quality tilt, with a conservative balance sheet and buildings that attract large, well-capitalized tenants. It feels relevant because companies still need efficient distribution networks, and Granite tends to hold newer, higher-spec space. Over the last year, the market has watched tenant concentration and lease rollovers, and Granite has aimed for steady, disciplined growth. The yield now sits at 3.8%, while the company trades at a bit higher 19 times earnings.

Granite’s yield is lower than Dream’s, but higher-spec assets, a stronger balance sheet, and disciplined growth make it a reliable hold through a full cycle.

Bottom line

These five REITs give you two ways to collect income from your investments fast: grocery traffic that keeps flowing regardless of the economy, and industrial logistics that keep goods moving regardless of the headlines.

REI.UN, CHP.UN, and SGR.UN ride grocery traffic and routine errands, while DIR.UN and GRT.UN ride the economy’s back-end plumbing. Even $7,000 can bring in solid income from each.

COMPANYRECENT PRICENUMBER OF SHARES YOU COULD BUY WITH $7,000ANNUAL DIVIDENDTOTAL ANNUAL PAYOUT ON A $7,000 INVESTMENTPAYOUT
FREQUENCYREI.UN$19.95350$1.16$406.00MonthlyGRT.UN$92.8975$3.44$258.00MonthlyDIR.UN$13.40522$0.70$365.40MonthlySGR.UN$15.94439$1.18$518.02MonthlyCHP.UN$16.01437$0.77$336.49Monthly

None of these investments comes without risk, but each one starts paying you right away, quietly, while you stay invested for the long haul. That’s what “instant income” actually means in investing: not a shortcut, but a head start.

The post 5 Canadian Stocks I’d Buy for ‘Instant Income’ appeared first on The Motley Fool Canada.

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Fool contributor Amy Legate-Wolfe has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Dream Industrial Real Estate Investment Trust, Granite Real Estate Investment Trust, and Slate Grocery REIT. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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