Kimco Realty Corporation

KIM
NYSEFree primer · Steps 1–3 of 21Updated May 13, 2026Coverage as of 2026-Q2
Moat
Narrow
Latest Q Revenue
$558MQ1 2026
Bull Case
RPT lease roll-up accelerating same-store NOI, leverage de-rating, and cap rate compression could drive meaningful multiple expansion for KIM.
Bear Case
Persistent SS NOI underperformance below 2%, elevated leverage above 6x, and cap rate expansion could compress KIM's multiple and NAV materially.

Business Model


ticker: KIM step: 01 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research

Kimco Realty Corporation (KIM) — Business Overview

Business Description

Kimco Realty Corporation is North America's largest publicly traded owner and operator of open-air, grocery-anchored shopping centers and mixed-use assets. Headquartered in Jericho, New York, Kimco owns a portfolio concentrated in the first-ring suburbs of major metropolitan markets — focusing on high-barrier coastal markets and rapidly expanding Sunbelt cities. The company's strategy centers on necessity-based retail: tenants that sell essential goods and services (groceries, healthcare, off-price apparel, home improvement, restaurants) that are resistant to e-commerce displacement and drive multiple shopping trips per week. Kimco became the dominant open-air retail REIT through two major mergers: the 2021 acquisition of Weingarten Realty and the January 2024 all-stock acquisition of RPT Realty.

Revenue Model

Revenue is generated from base rent on long-term leases (typically 5–15 years) with contractual annual rent escalators, plus percentage rent (a share of tenant sales above a threshold). The grocery anchor (Kroger, Publix, Whole Foods, Target/SuperTarget) drives foot traffic that benefits all inline tenants, supporting above-market occupancy and lease renewal rates. Kimco also owns an interest in mixed-use development projects that convert underutilized anchor space into residential or office uses — adding NOI diversification and NAV creation at existing sites.

Products & Services

  • Grocery-Anchored Open-Air Centers: 500+ properties anchored by national grocers; tenants include TJX, HomeGoods, Ross Dress for Less, Burlington, Ulta, Petco, Five Below
  • Mixed-Use Development: Conversion of underutilized anchor space into residential/office; active in Sunbelt markets
  • RPT Realty Portfolio (acquired Jan 2024): Added 56 open-air shopping centers primarily in Sunbelt and Midwest markets, expanding the combined portfolio to 559+ properties
  • Markets: NY/NJ Metro, DC/Mid-Atlantic, Florida, Texas, California, Southeast

Customer Base & Go-to-Market

Kimco's tenants are predominantly recession-resistant retailers: supermarkets, off-price and value apparel, pharmacies, dollar stores, home improvement, personal services (salons, dentists), and quick-service restaurants. The grocery-anchor model attracts tenants who need high-frequency foot traffic — they pay premium rents to be co-located with Kroger, Publix, or Whole Foods. No single tenant is more than ~4% of annualized base rent.

Competitive Position

Kimco competes with Regency Centers (REG), Brixmor Property Group (BRX), Inland Real Estate, and Simon Property's small-format assets in the open-air retail space. As the largest player in the segment post-RPT merger, Kimco benefits from portfolio scale (better financing terms), tenant relationships (national credit tenants prefer consolidated landlords), and geographic diversification that smaller peers cannot match.

Key Facts

  • Founded: 1966
  • Headquarters: Jericho, NY
  • Employees: ~700
  • Exchange: NYSE
  • Sector / Industry: Real Estate / Retail REITs
  • Market Cap: ~$14B

Financial Snapshot


ticker: KIM step: 04 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research

Kimco Realty Corporation (KIM) — Financial Snapshot

Income Statement Summary

Metric FY2022 FY2023 FY2024 YoY
Revenue ~$1.73B $1.78B $2.04B +14.2%
NOI Margin ~65% ~65% ~64%
FFO (total) ~$900M $970M $1.10B +13.4%
FFO/Share ~$1.48 $1.57 $1.65 +5.1%
Net Income/Share $0.16 $1.02 $0.55 -46%

FY2024 revenue and FFO surged due to the January 2024 RPT Realty all-stock acquisition (added 56 shopping centers). FFO/share growth of 5.1% is the per-share metric adjusted for dilution from shares issued in the RPT transaction.

Cash Flow & Balance Sheet (FY2024)

Metric Value
FFO $1.10B
Annual Dividend ~$0.96/share annualized (~5.2% yield)
Total Debt ~$7.8B
Net Debt / EBITDA ~7.8x
Occupancy (2024 year-end) Record high ~96%+

Post-RPT leverage elevated at ~7.8x Net Debt/EBITDA — above the comfort zone for some investors. Investment-grade rated; management targeting leverage reduction through organic NOI growth and selective asset sales.

Key Ratios (approximate)

  • Price/FFO: ~11x | Implied Cap Rate: ~6.5% | Dividend Yield: ~5.2%
  • FFO/Share Growth (FY2025): +6.7% (actual, above-expectation)
  • FFO/Share FY2026 Consensus: ~$1.77 (+3.5% growth)
  • Same-Store NOI Growth (FY2024): ~3–4%

Growth Profile

Kimco has transformed through mergers (Weingarten 2021, RPT 2024) into the dominant open-air retail REIT — nearly doubling in size over four years. FY2024 revenue growth of 14.2% reflects the RPT contribution (not organic). Organic same-store NOI growth has been 3–4% per year, driven by below-market lease renewals resetting at market rents and high occupancy. FY2025 delivered 6.7% FFO/share growth as RPT synergies materialized and record occupancy drove strong leasing spreads. FY2026 consensus estimates 3.5% FFO/share growth ($1.77/share) as the company shifts from integration mode to steady-state compounding.

Forward Estimates

  • FY2025 FFO/Share: actual ~$1.76 (+6.7% vs. FY2024)
  • FY2026 FFO/Share consensus: ~$1.77 (+0.6%–3.5% range depending on source)
  • Piper Sandler Overweight, $28 target; JPMorgan Neutral, $25 target; Barclays Overweight, $25 target
  • Leverage reduction path: organic EBITDA growth + selective asset dispositions targeting <7x net debt/EBITDA

Recent Catalysts


ticker: KIM step: 12 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research

Kimco Realty Corporation (KIM) — Investment Catalysts & Risks

Bull Case Drivers

  1. Grocery-Anchored Retail Is the Most E-Commerce-Resistant Real Estate Category — Kimco's grocery-anchored, open-air shopping center strategy targets the most defensible segment in retail real estate. Grocery stores cannot be effectively replaced by e-commerce for the majority of shoppers (fresh produce, same-day needs), and the grocery anchor drives weekly foot traffic that benefits all inline tenants (pharmacy, salons, fitness, restaurants). Necessity-based tenants (off-price apparel, dollar stores, home improvement) are also capturing share from department stores and discretionary retail — creating a structural demand tailwind at exactly the type of centers Kimco owns. Record occupancy in 2024–2025 and robust leasing spreads demonstrate the market is validating Kimco's thesis.

  2. Below-Market Lease Expiration Runway = Built-In Rent Growth for 3–5 Years — A significant portion of Kimco's lease portfolio was written 5–10 years ago at below-market rents — especially the Weingarten and RPT assets acquired in 2021 and 2024 respectively. As these leases expire and roll to current market rents, Kimco captures positive re-leasing spreads that are 10–30% above expiring rents in many markets. This "embedded mark-to-market" represents a 3–5 year pipeline of organic same-store NOI growth that doesn't require any new leasing or economic acceleration. The combination of positive re-leasing spreads and contractual escalators (~2%/year) provides a durable, predictable organic growth floor.

  3. Scale + RPT Integration Synergies Create Compounding Competitive Advantage — As the largest publicly traded open-air retail REIT, Kimco negotiates from a position of strength with both tenants (who want national presence with a single landlord) and lenders (who offer better terms at scale). RPT integration delivered above-expectation synergies in 2025 (+6.7% FFO/share growth exceeded consensus). Excess free cash flow post-dividend is available for buybacks (when shares trade at a discount to NAV), further deleveraging (targeting <7x), or additional acquisitions. Piper Sandler's Overweight rating and $28 target reflects confidence that Kimco's scale advantage compounds over time.

Bear Case Risks

  1. Elevated Post-RPT Leverage at ~7.8x Limits Flexibility — Kimco's Net Debt/EBITDA of ~7.8x is above investor comfort zones for a retail REIT (most peers target 5.5–7x). At 7.8x, any unexpected NOI shortfall (tenant defaults, occupancy decline) would require asset sales or equity issuance to maintain investment-grade metrics — both of which are potentially dilutive. Higher-for-longer interest rates raise refinancing costs on the $7.8B debt stack; each 50 basis points increase in refinancing rate costs ~$40M in incremental annual interest expense. The leverage path down depends on organic EBITDA growth continuing at 3–4%/year without significant disruption.

  2. Consumer Stress Could Hit Inline Tenants Faster Than the Grocery Anchor — While the grocery anchor is resilient, Kimco's inline tenants (restaurants, clothing, personal services) are more vulnerable to consumer spending pullbacks. If the U.S. consumer weakens materially (persistent tariff inflation, labor market softening), discretionary inline tenants could experience sales declines that elevate defaults and vacancies. Barclays, while remaining Overweight on Kimco, flagged a sector preference shift toward apartments, storage, and single-family rentals vs. retail in the 2026 REIT outlook — suggesting institutional capital may rotate away from retail REITs even if Kimco's fundamentals remain solid.

  3. E-Commerce Acceleration and Structural Retail Shifts Threaten Long-Term Demand — The grocery-anchored thesis assumes grocery stores remain as physical locations — but rapid growth in grocery delivery (Instacart, Amazon Fresh, DoorDash) and dark store fulfillment could reduce the foot traffic that Kimco's inline tenants depend on. If grocery stores downsize their physical footprints (reducing anchor space per location) in response to online grocery penetration, Kimco's re-leasing economics worsen. Major tenant failures (Bed Bath & Beyond, JCPenney) demonstrate that even large-format anchor-adjacent tenants can fail quickly, leaving significant vacant space in Kimco's centers.

Upcoming Events

  • Q2 2026 Earnings (July 2026): Update on same-store NOI growth, occupancy, re-leasing spread trends, and leverage trajectory
  • Leverage Reduction Progress: Each quarter's EBITDA growth vs. debt level progress toward <7x target — a key metric for investor confidence
  • Dividend Growth: Dividend per share growth has been modest; any acceleration signals management confidence in FCF durability

Analyst Sentiment

Cautiously constructive: Piper Sandler Overweight ($28), JPMorgan Neutral ($25), Barclays Overweight ($25). Consensus leans Buy, reflecting confidence in the grocery-anchored thesis, RPT integration success, and below-market lease expiration tailwind. Key concern is elevated leverage and consumer spending uncertainty. At ~11x FFO and ~5.2% dividend yield, Kimco offers reasonable risk/reward for REIT income investors who believe in the necessity-based retail thesis.

Research Date

Generated: 2026-05-13

Full Research Available

This primer covers steps 1–3 of 21. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, returns on capital, institutional/insider activity, and an investment memo.

View Investment MemoEach memo is $2. Coverage subscriptions for funds coming soon — join the waitlist.