3 Stocks That Cut You a Check Each Month

A handful of companies choose to send their shareholders a check each month instead of every quarter. That's an appealing proposition, especially for investors who rely on portfolio income to afford their lifestyle.

STAG Industrial (NYSE: STAG), Vermilion Energy (NYSE: VET), and LTC Properties (NYSE: LTC) are three such businesses. Let's look at the bull case for owning each to see if any of them could be worth buying today.

Man in suit handng over hundred dollar bills.
Man in suit handng over hundred dollar bills.

Image source: Getty Images.

STAG Industrial

Consumers have been shifting their shopping habits in favor of e-commerce sales for more than two decades. This reality is finally catching up with retailers, which are now scrambling to rightsize their footprint. However, for every loser, there's often a winner, and one hidden beneficiary of this trend is the warehouse industry. After all, e-commerce goods need to be stored somewhere so they can be shipped quickly when purchased.

This is a trend that STAG industrial has been capitalizing on for years. STAG is a real estate investment trust (REIT) that specializes in acquiring warehouse properties that house a single tenant. The company's business model is to raise capital from investors, buy warehouses on the cheap, and then lease them out to tenants under favorable terms. STAG then passes its rent checks back to investors in the form of a growing monthly dividend. That lifts the share price, and the cycle repeats anew.

This playbook has worked like a charm thus far: STAG's investors have enjoyed a total return of nearly 250% since its 2011 IPO, crushing the market in general.

Looking ahead, the warehouse market remains huge, so STAG looks well positioned to keep chugging along for years to come. With its shares currently yielding 5% and the wind at its back, STAG is a monthly dividend payer that certainly deserves consideration.

Vermilion Energy

Many oil and gas producers set up shop in unstable parts of the world. That can seem like a savvy decision when everything is going well, but when there's a political upheaval or even an armed conflict, it can be a recipe for disaster.

Vermilion Energy is an oil and gas producer that takes a far more conservative approach to capital deployment. The company only invests in politically stable parts of the world -- think France, Canada, and Germany -- which helps to keep the oil flowing even when there's civil unrest elsewhere. This cautious method of asset acquisition hasn't harmed shareholders at all. In fact, Vermilion's long-term returns have been nothing short of amazing.