Top companies by Shareholder Yield — Real Estate
| # | Company | Shareholder Yield (%) | Sector | Period Ended | Reported Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 39.9% | Real Estate | |||
| 2 | 21.8% | Real Estate | |||
| 3 | 9.7% | Real Estate | |||
| 4 | 9.3% | Real Estate | |||
| 5 | 8.8% | Real Estate | |||
| 6 | 8.2% | Real Estate | |||
| 7 | 7.6% | Real Estate | |||
| 8 | 7.0% | Real Estate | |||
| 9 | 6.9% | Real Estate | |||
| 10 | 6.8% | Real Estate | |||
| 11 | 6.7% | Real Estate | |||
| 12 | 6.6% | Real Estate | |||
| 13 | 6.5% | Real Estate | |||
| 14 | 6.3% | Real Estate | |||
| 15 | 6.3% | Real Estate | |||
| 16 | 6.0% | Real Estate | |||
| 17 | 6.0% | Real Estate | |||
| 18 | 5.5% | Real Estate | |||
| 19 | 5.5% | Real Estate | |||
| 20 | 5.2% | Real Estate | |||
| 21 | 5.0% | Real Estate | |||
| 22 | 4.9% | Real Estate | |||
| 23 | 4.8% | Real Estate | |||
| 24 | 4.6% | Real Estate | |||
| 25 | 4.5% | Real Estate | |||
| 26 | 4.5% | Real Estate | |||
| 27 | 4.3% | Real Estate | |||
| 28 | 4.1% | Real Estate | |||
| 29 | 4.0% | Real Estate | |||
| 30 | 3.9% | Real Estate | |||
| 31 | 3.7% | Real Estate | |||
| 32 | 3.5% | Real Estate | |||
| 33 | 3.4% | Real Estate | |||
| 34 | 3.3% | Real Estate | |||
| 35 | 3.3% | Real Estate | |||
| 36 | 2.5% | Real Estate | |||
| 37 | 2.5% | Real Estate | |||
| 38 | 1.6% | Real Estate |
- 221.8%
- 58.8%
- 87.0%
- 136.5%
- 146.3%
- 156.3%
- 166.0%
- 176.0%
- 185.5%
- 205.2%
- 224.9%
- 254.5%
- 264.5%
- 284.1%
- 294.0%
- 303.9%
- 313.7%
- 323.5%
- 353.3%
- 362.5%
- 372.5%
- 381.6%
How shareholder yield is measured
Shareholder yield is trailing-twelve-month buybacks plus dividends paid, divided by current market capitalization. It captures the total cash a company returns to common shareholders over the past year as a percentage of equity value — a single number that weighs repurchases and dividends equally and makes capital-return-heavy small-caps comparable to dividend-heavy mega-caps.
Decomposed components live at buyback yield and dividends paid. Companies that show up here usually have low reinvestment needs — software franchises, consumer staples, regulated utilities. Both numerator and denominator are translated to USD (IAS 21 closing rate) so global filers stay comparable. Rankings USD translation methodology · IFRS IAS 21 (official)
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