Retail REITs
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All Stocks (43)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
|
SPG
Simon Property Group, Inc.
SPG is a Retail REIT owning malls, outlets, and shopping destinations.
|
$59.77B |
$182.44
-0.35%
|
|
O
Realty Income Corporation
65% ABR of the portfolio is retail, making Retail REITs a primary asset category for Realty Income.
|
$51.81B |
$56.52
-0.26%
|
|
WPC
W. P. Carey Inc.
Portfolio includes retail properties leased long-term to tenants, aligning with retail REIT exposure.
|
$14.70B |
$67.08
-0.06%
|
|
KIM
Kimco Realty Corporation
Kimco operates open-air, grocery-anchored shopping centers and mixed-use retail properties, the core Retail REIT business model.
|
$13.79B |
$20.39
+0.15%
|
|
REG
Regency Centers Corporation
Regency Centers is a premier owner/operator of grocery-anchored shopping centers, a Retail REIT by property type.
|
$12.87B |
$70.94
+0.10%
|
|
BPYPP
Brookfield Property Partners L.P.
BPYPP has a diversified retail footprint, including malls and retail centers, aligning with the Retail REITs investable theme.
|
$9.75B |
$14.77
+0.10%
|
|
FRT
Federal Realty Investment Trust
FRT is a Retail REIT owning and operating shopping centers and retail properties; retail is core to their portfolio.
|
$8.45B |
$97.36
-0.62%
|
|
ADC
Agree Realty Corporation
The portfolio is retail-anchored with national tenants, aligning with Retail REITs.
|
$8.25B |
$74.22
-0.42%
|
|
BRX
Brixmor Property Group Inc.
BRX operates as a retail REIT with a portfolio of open-air community shopping centers, generating rental income from base rents and CAM.
|
$8.08B |
$26.01
-1.44%
|
|
NNN
NNN REIT, Inc.
Company owns and leases retail real estate assets, classifying it as Retail REITs.
|
$7.73B |
$40.98
+0.07%
|
|
VNO
Vornado Realty Trust
Vornado's portfolio includes retail assets that generate rents from retail tenants, indicating Retail REIT exposure.
|
$6.50B |
$35.04
+3.55%
|
|
KRG
Kite Realty Group Trust
KRG operates as a Retail REIT owning, operating, and leasing open-air shopping centers and retail assets.
|
$5.03B |
$22.75
-0.52%
|
|
PECO
Phillips Edison & Company, Inc.
PECO operates a grocery-anchored retail REIT portfolio of neighborhood centers, aligning with the Retail REITs investment theme.
|
$4.43B |
$35.16
-0.33%
|
|
MAC
The Macerich Company
Macerich's portfolio consists of regional retail centers owned and operated as shopping malls, aligning with Retail REITs.
|
$4.19B |
$16.48
-0.63%
|
|
SKT
Tanger Inc.
Tanger is a retail REIT that owns, operates, and leases open-air retail centers (retail property type).
|
$3.79B |
$33.09
-1.16%
|
|
BNL
Broadstone Net Lease, Inc.
Significant exposure to retail properties (including restaurants and medtail) in portfolio.
|
$3.46B |
$18.50
+1.12%
|
|
AKR
Acadia Realty Trust
Directly invests in and operates urban street retail REITs, i.e., Retail REITs.
|
$2.64B |
$20.08
-0.35%
|
|
FCPT
Four Corners Property Trust, Inc.
FCPT's portfolio consists of retail properties (restaurants/retail) leased to tenants, aligning with Retail REITs.
|
$2.51B |
$24.05
+0.19%
|
|
CURB
Curbline Properties Corp.
Curbline Properties is a public REIT focused on owning and leasing curbline convenience shopping centers, i.e., a Retail REIT.
|
$2.46B |
$23.53
+0.60%
|
|
UE
Urban Edge Properties
UE is a retail REIT that owns, operates, and leases retail centers, primarily in urban grocery-anchored formats.
|
$2.40B |
$18.91
-0.66%
|
|
IVT
InvenTrust Properties Corp.
IVT operates as a retail REIT owning and leasing grocery-anchored multi-tenant shopping centers, a core real estate product.
|
$2.21B |
$28.05
-1.32%
|
|
OGCP
Empire State Realty OP, L.P.
Portfolio includes prime retail assets (e.g., Williamsburg) generating rental income.
|
$1.77B |
$6.41
|
|
GTY
Getty Realty Corp.
The company's portfolio comprises retail real estate anchored by convenience stores, car washes, auto service centers, and drive-thru QSRs.
|
$1.62B |
$28.49
-0.21%
|
|
NTST
NETSTREIT Corp.
Company's portfolio consists of retail properties leased to retailers, aligning with Retail REIT exposure.
|
$1.52B |
$18.13
-0.44%
|
|
IRS
IRSA Inversiones y Representaciones Sociedad Anónima
IRSA owns and operates shopping malls and retail centers, generating rental income from retail tenants.
|
$1.18B |
$14.00
-12.01%
|
|
AAT
American Assets Trust, Inc.
AAT owns and operates retail properties, including shopping centers like Gateway Marketplace.
|
$1.17B |
$19.16
-0.05%
|
|
ALEX
Alexander & Baldwin, Inc.
Owns/operates grocery-anchored neighborhood shopping centers, a retail real estate portfolio, aligning with Retail REITs.
|
$1.14B |
$15.51
-0.96%
|
|
ESRT
Empire State Realty Trust, Inc.
Owns and operates retail assets (e.g., Williamsburg prime retail), a core Retail REIT segment.
|
$1.13B |
$6.75
+1.28%
|
|
ALX
Alexander's, Inc.
The Rego Park complex includes retail components, giving Retail REIT exposure for the portfolio.
|
$1.06B |
$209.92
+1.14%
|
|
CBL
CBL & Associates Properties, Inc.
CBL operates a portfolio of retail shopping centers and malls as a Real Estate Investment Trust, fitting Retail REITs.
|
$1.02B |
$32.73
-1.00%
|
|
BFS
Saul Centers, Inc.
BFS is a REIT focused on owning and operating retail properties (grocery-anchored shopping centers) in a regional market.
|
$753.91M |
$30.42
-1.68%
|
|
WSR
Whitestone REIT
Whitestone REIT operates as a retail REIT owning/open-air shopping centers, aligning with the Retail REITs investment theme.
|
$683.64M |
$13.27
-0.97%
|
|
CTO
CTO Realty Growth, Inc.
CTO Realty Growth operates as a retail-centric REIT that owns and leases shopping centers and retail properties.
|
$576.77M |
$17.63
+0.69%
|
|
AHH
Armada Hoffler Properties, Inc.
AHH's portfolio includes retail assets, aligning with Retail REITs.
|
$502.60M |
$6.18
-1.36%
|
|
TCI
Transcontinental Realty Investors, Inc.
TCIs commercial portfolio includes retail properties generating rental income (Retail REITs).
|
$414.69M |
$45.70
-4.79%
|
|
INRE
Inland Real Estate Income Trust, Inc.
Directly owns a portfolio of retail properties, predominantly grocery-anchored, classifying INRE as a Retail REIT.
|
$397.29M |
$11.00
|
|
SITC
SITE Centers Corp.
Owns and operates open-air shopping centers, aligning with Retail REITs.
|
$370.79M |
$7.19
+1.70%
|
|
SVC
Service Properties Trust
Net-lease retail properties (e.g., travel centers) fall under Retail REITs.
|
$285.33M |
$1.62
-4.97%
|
|
SRG
Seritage Growth Properties
Seritage Growth Properties is a retail-focused REIT that owns and monetizes shopping-center and retail assets (Retail REITs).
|
$192.07M |
$3.42
+0.15%
|
|
BRST
Broad Street Realty, Inc.
BRST's portfolio centers on grocery-anchored and retail/mixed-use assets, typical of Retail REITs.
|
$53.90M |
$0.03
|
|
MDRR
Medalist Diversified REIT, Inc.
Legacy retail exposure and ongoing retail portfolio management categorize MDRR within Retail REITs.
|
$18.23M |
$14.20
+4.80%
|
|
SQFT
Presidio Property Trust, Inc.
Portfolio includes retail property exposure, adding a Retail REIT component.
|
$6.31M |
$4.22
-2.99%
|
|
GIPR
Generation Income Properties, Inc.
GIPR's retail properties constitute a significant portion of ABR post-Modiv acquisition, aligning with Retail REITs.
|
$5.29M |
$1.01
+4.53%
|
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# Executive Summary
* The Retail REIT sector is navigating a challenging macroeconomic environment where elevated interest rates are pressuring financing costs and testing balance sheet resilience.
* Despite macro headwinds, industry fundamentals are buoyed by a powerful structural tailwind: historically low new supply, which is driving record-high occupancy and giving landlords significant pricing power.
* Strategic capital allocation has become the key differentiator, with leaders actively recycling capital out of non-core assets to fund accretive acquisitions and value-add redevelopments in high-growth segments.
* A clear bifurcation exists between REITs focused on necessity-based, grocery-anchored, and convenience retail, which demonstrate resilience, and those exposed to more discretionary spending.
* The evolution towards omnichannel retail continues, fueling demand for well-located physical stores and investment in mixed-use properties that blend retail, residential, and entertainment.
* Technology and data analytics, particularly AI, are emerging as a competitive advantage, enabling operational efficiencies, faster leasing, and more sophisticated underwriting.
## Key Trends & Outlook
The Retail REIT industry in 2025 is defined by a conflict between challenging macroeconomic conditions and exceptionally strong underlying property fundamentals. Elevated interest rates present the most significant headwind, increasing the cost of capital and creating refinancing risk for REITs with near-term debt maturities. This pressure on balance sheets forces a focus on disciplined debt management and separates companies with strong liquidity and well-laddered debt from those facing potential cash flow compression. Agree Realty Corporation (ADC) exemplifies balance sheet strength with no material debt maturities until 2028, contrasting with the broader industry's refinancing concerns. Conversely, a historic lack of new retail construction, with supply growth at just 0.2-0.3% of existing stock, has created a landlord-favorable market. This supply-demand imbalance is fueling record-high occupancy rates and giving property owners significant pricing power, resulting in robust double-digit rent growth on new and renewal leases, as evidenced by Kimco Realty Corporation's (KIM) 11% blended leasing spreads.
In response to this environment, the primary strategic focus is on disciplined capital allocation. Leading REITs are actively recycling capital, divesting from slower-growth assets to fund acquisitions in resilient, high-growth sectors like grocery-anchored and convenience retail. This portfolio curation is coupled with investment in value-add redevelopments, transforming traditional centers into higher-yield, mixed-use destinations to meet modern consumer demand. Curbline Properties Corp. (CURB) demonstrates this strategic playbook with its aggressive acquisition strategy in the convenience space, having acquired over $850 million in assets since its spin-off.
The greatest opportunity lies in leveraging the supply-constrained environment to redevelop and remerchandise existing assets into higher-quality, omnichannel hubs, thereby capturing significant rent upside and future-proofing portfolios. The primary risk is a severe economic downturn that sharply curtails consumer spending and leads to a wave of tenant bankruptcies, which would undermine the current strong leasing fundamentals.
## Competitive Landscape
The competitive landscape within the Retail REIT industry is defined by strategic focus on specific asset types and locations rather than a simple contest for overall market share, though consolidation trends are ongoing.
Several of the largest players, such as Simon Property Group (SPG), focus on dominating the high-end of the market with premier malls and mixed-use destinations. This core strategy involves owning and operating a large portfolio of high-traffic assets, leveraging scale for operational efficiency and tenant relationships, and creating experiential hubs. SPG's significant $944 million development pipeline for mixed-use projects exemplifies this model, showcasing its dominant market position, strong tenant relationships with national brands, and high operating margins. This approach, however, requires high capital intensity for redevelopment and carries greater exposure to discretionary consumer spending.
In contrast, a significant portion of the industry, including companies like Kimco Realty Corporation (KIM), specializes in the resilient grocery-anchored sector, prioritizing necessity-based tenants in suburban locations. This model concentrates portfolios on open-air shopping centers anchored by leading grocers, driving stable, daily-needs-driven foot traffic. KIM's portfolio, with 86% of its Annualized Base Rent (ABR) from grocery-anchored centers, is the quintessential example of this defensive approach, benefiting from resilient cash flows and consistent leasing demand. The primary vulnerability for this segment is intense competition for high-quality assets, which can compress acquisition cap rates. A third approach involves achieving a first-mover advantage in a specialized sub-sector, as Curbline Properties Corp. (CURB) has done with convenience retail. As the sole publicly traded REIT exclusively focused on convenience retail, CURB's rapid acquisition of over $850 million in assets since its formation demonstrates this consolidation strategy in action, leveraging deep expertise in a specific niche.
While no single REIT dominates the entire retail landscape, leaders like SPG hold a premier position in the mall sector, while the grocery-anchored space is highly competitive. Key competitive battlegrounds include access to capital for accretive acquisitions, the ability to execute complex redevelopments, and the adoption of technology like AI to create operational efficiencies. Agree Realty Corporation (ADC), for instance, leverages AI and machine learning for lease underwriting and abstraction, with its ARC 3.0 platform planned for 2026, showcasing a technological edge.
## Financial Performance
Revenue growth in the Retail REIT sector is bifurcated, driven by strategic activity rather than purely organic growth. This wide divergence is a direct result of capital allocation strategies. Growth leaders are those executing large-scale acquisition programs in specialized niches.
Curbline Properties Corp. (CURB) stands out as a prime example of an acquisition-fueled strategy, reporting a +49.9% year-over-year (YoY) revenue growth for the nine months ending September 30, 2025, driven by $850 million in acquisitions since its spin-off. In contrast, more mature players like Simon Property Group (SPG) exhibit stable, low-single-digit growth, with a projected +2.0% YoY revenue growth for Q3 2025, reflecting the performance of a high-quality, established portfolio.
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Profitability in the industry demonstrates that high-quality portfolios continue to command premium margins, though the focus remains on maintaining those margins amidst rising operating and interest expenses.
Simon Property Group (SPG) exemplifies the profitability inherent in a premium, high-quality portfolio, reporting a trailing twelve-month (TTM) operating margin of 51.47%. This superior margin is driven by its dominant, high-sales-per-square-foot properties, which command higher rents and reimbursements. Across the board, however, the primary pressure on profitability comes from the macroeconomic environment, including rising insurance, utility, and property tax expenses, coupled with higher interest expense from refinancing debt.
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Capital allocation in the Retail REIT sector is characterized by a clear split between offensive and defensive capital deployment. In the current market, capital allocation is a critical strategic tool. Some REITs are on offense, leveraging strong balance sheets to aggressively acquire assets and fund development, thereby locking in future growth. Others are playing defense, prioritizing debt reduction and shareholder returns (dividends and buybacks) to navigate economic uncertainty. Agree Realty Corporation (ADC) exemplifies the offensive strategy, raising its 2025 investment guidance to $1.5 billion to $1.65 billion, demonstrating its capacity for massive investment.
The industry's balance sheets are generally strong and liquid among the large-cap leaders, though pockets of stress exist. The largest players have proactively fortified their balance sheets over the past several years, resulting in low leverage, ample liquidity, and well-laddered debt maturities. This financial strength is a significant competitive advantage, providing the capacity to withstand economic shocks and fund growth. Agree Realty Corporation (ADC) serves as a best-in-class example of a fortified balance sheet, reporting a pro forma net debt to recurring EBITDA of approximately 3.1x and over $2.3 billion in total liquidity as of June 30, 2025.
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