📊 Topic

Dividend yield

5 stories · First covered Mar 13, 2026 · Latest Mar 21
Dividend yield Coverage
H/2 Dropped $24 Million More Into RLJ at $7.26 a Share. Here's What They're Actually Buying.

H/2 Dropped $24 Million More Into RLJ at $7.26 a Share. Here's What They're Actually Buying.

A credit-focused fund keeps adding to a position in a lodging REIT trading at $7.60 while RevPAR declines and net income hits a penny per share. The math tells you this isn't a hotel bet. It's a balance sheet bet.

Sunstone's Proxy Tells You Exactly Who's Getting Paid. Let's Check Who's Holding the Risk.

Sunstone's Proxy Tells You Exactly Who's Getting Paid. Let's Check Who's Holding the Risk.

Sunstone's 2026 proxy drops a $750K CEO salary, a $500M buyback authorization, and $95-115M in CapEx. The numbers look clean. The question is what "clean" means when an activist is at the table and a major holder just walked.

Citi Dumped 56% of Its RLJ Stake. The Real Number Is Worse Than the Headline.

Citi Dumped 56% of Its RLJ Stake. The Real Number Is Worse Than the Headline.

Citigroup slashed its RLJ Lodging Trust position to $2.05 million... a rounding error for a bank that size. The interesting part isn't why Citi sold. It's what RLJ's full-year numbers say about who's actually making money in this portfolio.

Host Hotels' $1.1B Asset Sale Looks Smart Until You Check the Reinvestment Math

Host Hotels' $1.1B Asset Sale Looks Smart Until You Check the Reinvestment Math

Host Hotels just dumped two Four Seasons properties for $1.1 billion and is projecting FFO per share to decline in 2026. The capital recycling story sounds clean. The numbers tell a more complicated story about what "optimization" actually costs the shareholder.

Park Hotels Is Betting $300M That Fewer, Better Hotels Win. Here's Why I'm Not Sure.

Park Hotels Is Betting $300M That Fewer, Better Hotels Win. Here's Why I'm Not Sure.

Park Hotels & Resorts just filed its proxy ahead of an April shareholder vote, and buried in the governance paperwork is the real story: a REIT that lost $283 million last year, sold off five properties for $120 million, and is now asking shareholders to trust the same board with a "portfolio reshaping" strategy that S&P already flagged with a negative outlook.