Benzinga and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue on some items through the links below.
Prologis Inc. (NYSE:PLD) is a global leader in logistics real estate with a focus on high-barrier, high-growth markets.
It will report its Q1 2025 earnings on April 16. Wall Street analysts expect the company to post EPS of $1.38, up from $1.28 in the year-ago period. According to data from Benzinga Pro, quarterly revenue is expected to be $1.99 billion, up from $1.83 billion in a year earlier.
The 52-week range of Prologis stock price was $100.82 to $135.76.
Prologis dividend yield is 3.22%. It paid $3.84 per share in dividends during the last 12 months.
Don’t Miss:
On Jan. 21, the company announced its Q4 2024 earnings, posting rental and other revenue growth of 10.3% year-on-year to $1.937 billion, missing the analyst consensus estimate of $1.956 billion, as reported by Benzinga.
Core FFO of $1.50 beat the analyst consensus estimate of $1.39. Owned & Managed Average Occupancy was 95.6% and Prologis Share Average Occupancy was 95.8%.
Diluted earnings per share for the quarter was $1.37 versus $0.68 last year. Adjusted EBITDA of $2.1 billion rose 22.5% year-over-year.
Prologis sees 2025 core FFO of $5.65 – $5.81 with an estimate of $5.77. The company expects Prologis Share Average Occupancy of 94.50% – 95.50%.
Check out this article by Benzinga for 10 analysts’ insights on Prologis.
Trending: Unlock the hidden potential of commercial real estate — This platform allows individuals to invest in commercial real estate offering a 12% target yield with a bonus 1% return boost today!
If you want to make $100 per month — $1,200 annually — from Prologis dividends, your investment value needs to be approximately $37,267, which is around 313 shares at $119.17 each.
Understanding the dividend yield calculations: When making an estimate, you need two key variables — the desired annual income ($1,200) and the dividend yield (3.22% in this case). So, $1,200 / 0.0322 = $37,267 to generate an income of $100 per month.
You can calculate the dividend yield by dividing the annual dividend payments by the current price of the stock.
The dividend yield can change over time. This is the outcome of fluctuating stock prices and dividend payments on a rolling basis.