How To Put $100 In Your Retirement Fund Each Month With Sun Communities Stock
Sun Communities Inc. (NYSE:SUI) is a real estate investment trust that owns, operates, and develops manufactured housing and recreational vehicle communities, as well as marinas.
It will report its Q3 2025 earnings on Nov. 3. Wall Street analysts expect the company to post EPS of $2.14, down from $2.34 in the prior-year period. According to data from Benzinga Pro, quarterly revenue is expected to be $709.45 million, down from $939.90 million a year earlier.
The 52-week range of Sun Communities' stock price was $109.22 to $147.83.
Sun Communities' dividend yield is 3.28%. It paid $4.16 per share in dividends during the last 12 months.
Don't Miss:
The same firms that backed Uber, Venmo and eBay are investing in this pre-IPO company disrupting a $1.8T market —
Accredited Investors: Grab Pre-IPO Shares of the AI Company Powering Hasbro, Sephora & MGM—
The Latest On Sun Communities
The company on July 30 announced its Q2 2025 earnings, posting FFO of $1.76, compared to the consensus estimate of $1.68, and revenues of $623.50 million, compared to the consensus of $602.15 million, as reported by Benzinga.
'We are pleased to report strong second quarter results with earnings ahead of our expectations, as we demonstrated the strength of our platform. It was also one of the most pivotal quarters in our history as we completed the previously announced sale of Safe Harbor Marinas and repositioned Sun as a pure-play owner and operator of manufactured housing and RV communities with a best-in-class balance sheet. This transaction streamlined operations, unlocked meaningful financial flexibility, and enhanced shareholder value,' said CEO Gary A. Shiffman.
The company updated its 2025 guidance, now expecting core FFO per share in the range of $6.51 to $6.67.
Trending: 'Scrolling To UBI' — Deloitte's #1 fastest-growing software company allows users to earn money on their phones.
How Can You Earn $100 Per Month As A Sun Communities Investor?
If you want to make $100 per month — $1,200 annually — from Sun Communities dividends, your investment value needs to be approximately $36,585, which is around 288 shares at $126.83 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 (3.28% in this case). So, $1,200 / 0.0328 = $36,585 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.
For instance, assume a stock that pays $2 as an annual dividend is priced at $50. Its dividend yield would be $2/$50 = 4%. If the stock price rises to $60, the dividend yield drops to 3.33% ($2/$60). A drop in stock price to $40 will have an inverse effect and increase the dividend yield to 5% ($2/$40).
In summary, income-focused investors may find Sun Communities stock an attractive option for making a steady income of $100 per month by owning 288 shares of stock. There may be more upside to come as investors benefit from the company's consistent dividend hikes. Sun Communities has raised its dividend consecutively for the last nine years.
Read Next: $100k+ in investable assets? – no cost, no obligation.
Image: Shutterstock
This article How To Put $100 In Your Retirement Fund Each Month With Sun Communities Stock originally appeared on Benzinga.com
Error al recuperar los datos
Inicia sesión para acceder a tu cartera de valores
Error al recuperar los datos
Error al recuperar los datos
Error al recuperar los datos
Error al recuperar los datos
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Gizmodo
a few seconds ago
- Gizmodo
Spirit Airlines Admits It Might Not Survive Another Year
Spirit Airlines has just admitted what many suspected: its future is in serious doubt. The news, delivered in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on August 11, sent the company's stock into a freefall, plummeting 41% in a single trading session on Tuesday. Spirit's total market value now sits at a paltry $54.3 million. In the filing, the ultra-low-cost carrier said there is 'substantial doubt' about its ability to continue operating for more than 12 months from the date of its financial statements. Translation: Spirit could disappear by August 2026. The company used the expression 'going concern,' which is an official accounting term that a company is forced to use when it is in severe financial distress and may not have enough money to stay in business. It is one of the gravest signals a public company can send to its investors. The airline — famous for its bright yellow planes and no-frills service — only emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy in March after a failed merger with JetBlue. The regulators blocked the merger between the two airlines, arguing that the deal would eliminate a key competitor and drive up fares for consumers. Without the merger, a weakened Spirit was forced to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, which it only emerged from in March. But just months later, Spirit says it's still in a deep financial crisis. Spirit blames a brutal mix of factors: too much domestic airline capacity, weak demand for leisure travel, and a tough pricing environment that has dragged down revenue. The company reported a $246 million net loss in the second quarter of 2025. In its SEC filing, Spirit said the downturn is expected to last at least through the rest of the year, even after cost-cutting moves like selling spare engines in sale-leaseback deals, reducing discretionary spending, and furloughing pilots in July. But it hasn't been enough. The company admitted that its financial results are not improving fast enough to meet the minimum cash requirements of its debt agreements and, crucially, its credit card processing agreement, which expires at the end of the year. The airline is now in a last-ditch race for liquidity. It is considering selling off planes, real estate, and excess airport gate capacity. It is also in urgent discussions with its credit card processor, which has requested additional collateral to renew their contract, a deal Spirit cannot afford to lose. Time is running short. Without a dramatic turnaround or a new source of cash, one of America's best-known budget airlines could soon be grounded for good.


Forbes
a minute ago
- Forbes
Why Aren't Track Meets Paying Athletes On Time? More On The Economics Of Prize Money
When it first appeared Grand Slam Track was having serious money problems in July, with outstanding prize and appearance fee payments in the amount of nearly $13 million still due from its meets, the response was immediate. Social media stirred into a frenzy. 'Fyre Festival Track Edition,' one Instagram user wrote in response to a post on the league's missed payments. But not everyone jumped to conclusions. There was Carl Lewis, arguably the most decorated Olympic champion in United States history, who deterred. 'Diamond League takes longer,' the University of Houston head coach wrote in a response to a post on Instagram. 'Stop hating.' Many others came to the first-year league's defense, including the likes of Caleb Dean, a recent NCAA champion who turned professional in 2024 (he was also one of the league's showcase 'racers' in Kingston, Miami and Philadelphia), and Reggie Jager III, the 2025 U.S. champion in the discus. Grand Slam Track founder Michael Johnson, meanwhile, appeared twice to confront those issues on live shows and podcasts, including most recently on Justin Gatlin's 'Ready Set Go.' The track league, which boasted $30 million in 'financial commitments' when it was announced in June 2024, initially set a deadline for the first installment of its payment plan to athletes by 'late July,' but, according to Dennis Young of Front Office Sports, it missed the mark on the heels of the USATF Outdoor Championships in Eugene, Oregon. With athletes still waiting for their paydays, the topic remains a core issue. While there are no answers yet, Lewis' statement did prompt valid questions about the delivery of payments to athletes in the sport. Is this issue bigger than Grand Slam Track? Just how long does it take to issue prize money won during major competitions, and what are normal roadblocks which prevent professional athletes from receiving their earnings? We spoke with two U.S.-based agents to learn more about the process, including American Track League founder Paul Doyle. When Athletes Typically Earn Prize Money The simplest answer as to why earnings are often held up is anti-doping control. For major competitions like the Wanda Diamond League, which requires event operators to run drug screening processes in line with global standards, an athlete must first pass anti-doping testing before prize money is released. Sometimes, that 'pass' could take 30 days or more. Using the 2025 Diamond League schedule as an example, there is merit to the idea of delayed payments. Doyle sent us clearance notices – information gathered by the Athletics Integrity Unit, which is then sent to the Association of Athletic Managers, and then to the managers themselves – for nine Diamond League events. Here's the breakdown of how long it took for anti-doping to clear athletes from the conclusion of each meet: According to this sample size, the longest delay was just over a month. In Monaco, where event operations are among the best in the sport, it took less than three weeks. Based on this data, athletes weren't waiting very long – at least in theory – for money to hit their bank accounts. One agent we spoke to said the process to transfer prize money to an athlete is typically prompt, too. 'As soon as we receive a payment,' one prominent agent said, 'we let them (the athlete) know. We send them a statement and tell them, 'Here's how much from this amount is deducted for our commission.' Here's what we will send you. That's the way we operate.' It should be said, too, that around $9.2 million in prize money is being handed out across 15 Diamond League events in 2025, while another roughly $9 million will cover promotional fees. Winners of most Diamond League events are netting $30,000, while in Diamond+ Disciplines athletes can garner as much as $50,000. At the USATF Outdoor Championships, a total of $1.1 million was earned by athletes, including $8,800 for winners of each event. Like the Diamond League, each has to clear anti-doping protocols before that money finds its way into their hands. Conversely, it's been 128 days since Grand Slam Track's payment for Kingston, Jamaica; 100 days for Miami, Florida; and 73 days for Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The U.S.-based agent told us he feels penalties could be an answer to non-payments. 'There should be consequences,' he said. 'Maybe you lose your status, a certain World Athletics label if you're gold or silver or bronze.' On a smaller scale, however, payment doesn't always come through promptly. Doyle says he's seen this happen, though prior exemptions aren't dealing with huge sums. What he's more concerned with, he said, is the flaws in waiting to release money before anti-doping is completed. While it's crucial for the reputation of the sport and to maintain fair play, '98 percent of the time,' he said, 'an athlete comes back clean.' 'I don't think it's a good policy,' he added of holding money. 'You might have a meet where you have 150 athletes competing. And maybe 10 of them get tested. You are really looking at six-to-seven percent of the athletes waiting on doping control results.' But most meets aren't offering five- or six-figure prize winnings, either. Sitting At The Doorstep of a Deal As Johnson revealed recently, Grand Slam Track faced 'major cash flow issues' when an investor pulled an eight-figure term sheet from the books. But deals falling through the cracks aren't new to track and field. Meet directors sometimes hinge prize money around the promise of sponsorship dollars. Doyles' own American Track League, which debuted in 2014 and ran consistently through 2024, recently lost Puma as its main sponsor. As a result, the series did not convene a single meet over the 2025 calendar year. 'Meet directors sometimes have to receive funds from their sponsor in order to pay,' said Doyle, who says he's currently in conversations with new sponsors for the track series. 'There are a whole bunch of boxes you need to check in order for the sponsor to justify the payment. If I have a contract for the American Track League, we have to deliver first. Once we deliver, we send the invoice.' Costs certainly add up for any meet organizer putting on a major competition, too. For a meet to even reach the guidelines of a World Athletics Continental Tour gold-level label, it's minimum doping requirements must include '12 urine tests' at the 'cost borne by Meet Organizer," and have over $200,000 in prize money allocated. Often, the cost of hosting a meet doesn't always secure a return on investment. There's no doubt Doyle understands the economics of the low-margin business. It sometimes also comes at a personal cost. In 2014, during the first year of his American Track League series, the average expense of each meet was $85,000. 'We had five events that year that I paid out of my pocket,' he said. 'We didn't have any sponsors. I was basically able to pay the first couple of meets, but I had to wait for my company to make more money to pay off the debts.' Much like Grand Slam Track's issues, Doyle faced his own about a decade ago. But the 52-year-old agent and meet director rebounded and paid those debts. Only, he wasn't wasn't facing millions of dollars due. On the other side, Doyle says he's also experienced a few meets where one of his athletes wasn't paid by a meet organizer. Nearly two decades ago, Asafa Powell ran at an event in Belgrade, Serbia. He still hasn't been paid for it. The U.S. agent we spoke to says he's heard of others as well. He said one major U.S. meet which often features the sport's top athletes struggles to pay on time, too—he's aware of that timeline being close to a year even. Bearing a Force Majeure – a God-like event preventing an event from happening – contracts are explicitly written for meets to be held accountable for their liabilities. Most track meets can handle a small hiccup. The difference with Grand Slam Track is a matter of scale. 'You often deal with delays,' the agent said. 'It's not $100,000, though. It's usually a maximum of $10,000 or a lot less.'


CNN
a minute ago
- CNN
China's property crisis icon Evergrande will delist following debt woes
The severely indebted real estate developer China Evergrande, already in the process of liquidation, said on Tuesday it will be delisted from Hong Kong's stock exchange on Aug. 25, another setback to mainland China's property sector. Evergrande was the world's most heavily indebted real estate developer, with over $300 billion owed to banks and bondholders, when the court handed down a liquidation order in January 2024. The court had ruled that the company had failed to provide a viable restructuring plan for its debts, which fueled fears about China's rising debt burden, and trading of its shares has been halted since the ruling. The city's rules stipulate that the listing of companies may be canceled if trading in their securities has remained suspended for 18 months consecutively. China Evergrande Group received a letter Aug. 8 from the city's stock exchange notifying the firm of its decision to cancel the listing as trading had not resumed by Jul. 28. The last day of the listing will be Aug. 22 and Evergrande will not apply for a review of the decision, the company said in a statement. 'All shareholders, investors and potential investors of the company should note that after the last listing date, whilst the share certificates of the shares will remain valid, the shares will not be listed on, and will not be tradeable on the Stock Exchange,' the statement said. Evergrande is among scores of developers that defaulted on debts after Chinese regulators cracked down on excessive borrowing in the property industry in 2020. Unable to obtain financing, their vast obligations to creditors and customers became unsustainable. The crackdown also tipped the property industry into crisis, dragging down the world's second-largest economy and rattling financial systems in and outside China. Once among the nation's strongest growth engines, the industry is struggling to exit a prolonged downturn. Home prices in China have continued to fall even after the introduction of supportive measures by policymakers. The Hong Kong court system has been dealing with liquidation petitions against some Chinese property developers, including one of the largest Chinese real estate companies, Country Garden, which is expected to have another hearing in January. China South City Holdings, a smaller property developer, was also ordered to liquidate on Monday. Evergrande, founded in the mid-1990s by Hui Ka Yan, also known as Xu Jiayin, had over 90% of its assets on the Chinese mainland, according to the 2024 ruling. The firm was listed in Hong Kong in 2009 as 'Evergrande Real Estate Group' and suspended its share trading on Jan. 29, 2024, at 0.16 Hong Kong dollars ($0.02). Its liquidators said in a progress report that they received debt claims totalling $45 billion as of Jul. 31, much higher than the some $27.5 billion of liabilities disclosed in December 2022, and that the new figure was not final. The liquidators said they have assumed control of over 100 companies within the group and entities under their direct management control with collective assets valued at $3.5 billion as of Jan. 29, 2024. They said an estimate of the amounts that may ultimately be realized from these entities wasn't available yet. About $255 million worth of assets have been sold, the liquidators said, calling the realization 'modest.' Of this amount, $244 million was derived from subsidiaries' assets, and not all of them will be available to the company, given the complex ownership structures of the assets. 'The liquidators believe that a holistic restructuring will prove out of reach, but they will, of course, explore any credible possibilities in this regard that may present themselves,' they said. Hui, Evergrande's founder, was detained in China in September 2023 on suspicion of committing crimes, adding to the company's woes. In 2024, the China Securities Regulatory Commission issued a fine of 4.2 billion yuan (about $584 million) against the firm's subsidiary, Hengda Real Estate Group Company, over violations including falsifying financial records. Hui was fined 47 million yuan ($6.5 million) and barred from China's securities markets for life. Some other executives were also penalised. Chinese authorities in September 2024 banned the accounting firm PwC for six months and fined the company more than 400 million yuan ($56.4 million) over its involvement in the audit of the collapsed property developer.