Dividend Cuts Could Be Right Around The Corner For These 3 REITs
Orchid Island Capital Corp. (NYSE: ORC ) is a finance company that acquires, invests in and offers financing from U.S. residential mortgage-backed securities (MBS). The Florida mortgage real estate investment trust ( REIT ) initiated an IPO in March 2013 at a price of $14.50. Its monthly dividend of $0.135 returned an approximate annual yield of 11%. However, in the last few years, the stock price has floundered, and ORC has reduced its dividend payment several times. Orchid’s price had recently been below $3, with a dividend of $0.045 per month or an annual dividend yield of over 18%. The last three quarters have seen negative earnings per share (EPS) and revenue. Clearly, things have not been going well. But there was breaking news on the company this week — Orchid announced a 1:5 reverse stock split, so the stock opened this morning at $13.60. Reverse stock splits are often seen as negative by Wall Street and are sometimes a desperate move by a troubled company trying to avoid a delisting or simply to pump up its image.
Dividend Cuts Could Be Right Around The Corner For These 3 REITs
Orchid Island Capital Corp. (NYSE: ORC ) is a finance company that acquires, invests in and offers financing from U.S. residential mortgage-backed securities (MBS). The Florida mortgage real estate investment trust ( REIT ) initiated an IPO in March 2013 at a price of $14.50. Its monthly dividend of $0.135 returned an approximate annual yield of 11%. However, in the last few years, the stock price has floundered, and ORC has reduced its dividend payment several times. Orchid’s price had recently been below $3, with a dividend of $0.045 per month or an annual dividend yield of over 18%. The last three quarters have seen negative earnings per share (EPS) and revenue. Clearly, things have not been going well. But there was breaking news on the company this week — Orchid announced a 1:5 reverse stock split, so the stock opened this morning at $13.60. Reverse stock splits are often seen as negative by Wall Street and are sometimes a desperate move by a troubled company trying to avoid a delisting or simply to pump up its image.