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INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION FIRST QUARTER 2019

FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

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Page 1: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATIONFIRST QUARTER 2019

Page 2: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Contents

Company Overview & 1Q19 Results 4

Recent Developments 6

Investment Thesis 11

Portfolio Diversification 20

Defensive Retail Portfolio 25

Asset Management & Real Estate Operations 30

Investment Strategy 33

Capital Structure & Scalability 40

Dependable Dividends 44

Summary 46

Appendix

- Superior Performance During Great Recession

- Top Industries Overview

47

48

53

All data as of March 31, 2019 unless otherwise specified 2

Page 3: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Safe Harbor For Forward-Looking Statements

Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking"statements. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, which may cause thecompany‘s actual future results to differ materially from expected results. These risks include,among others, general economic conditions, domestic and foreign real estate conditions, tenantfinancial health, the availability of capital to finance planned growth, continued volatility anduncertainty in the credit markets and broader financial markets, property acquisitions and thetiming of these acquisitions, charges for property impairments, and the outcome of any legalproceedings to which the company is a party, as described in the company's filings with theSecurities and Exchange Commission. Consequently, forward-looking statements should beregarded solely as reflections of the company's current operating plans and estimates. Actualoperating results may differ materially from what is expressed or forecast in this investorpresentation. The company undertakes no obligation to publicly release the results of any revisionsto these forward-looking statements that may be made to reflect events or circumstances after thedate these statements were made.

3

Page 4: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Realty Income Company Overview

4

S&P 500 REAL ESTATE COMPANY

DIVERSIFIED, HIGH-QUALITY“NET LEASE” PORTFOLIO

TRACK RECORD OF SAFETY AND CONSISTENCY

$29B enterprise value

1 of only 2 REITs in both categories

Member of S&P High-Yield Dividend Aristocrats® index

1 of 8 U.S. REITs with at least two A3/A- ratings

5,876commercial real estate properties

82% of rent generated

from retail properties

261 commercial tenants

48 industries

49 states represented

A3 / A-

(1) AFFO through most recent calendar year/ Excludes earnings from Crest Net Lease, a subsidiary of Realty Income, as earnings do not reflect recurring business operations

16.9%TSR since 1994

NYSE listing

$1.3B annualized rental

revenue

50years of operating

history

credit ratings by Moody’s and S&P

22 OF 23years of positive earnings

per share(1) growth

9.2years weighted

average remaining lease term

0.4beta vs. S&P 500 since 1994 NYSE

listing

5.1%median

earnings per share(1) growth

51%of rent from

investment-grade rated tenants

94.2%adjusted EBITDAremargin

Page 5: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Our Approach and 1Q19 Results

5

Acquire well-located commercial properties

✓ ~$519 million in acquisitions1

Remain disciplined in our acquisition underwriting

✓ Acquired ~4% of sourced volume2

Execute long-term net lease agreements

✓ Recaptured 104.7% of expiring rent3

Actively manage portfolio to maximize value

✓ Ended quarter at 98.3% occupancy4

Maintain a conservative balance sheet

✓ Ended quarter with Debt / Adjusted EBITDAre ratio of 5.5x5

Grow per share earnings and dividends

✓ AFFO/sh growth: +3.8% | Dividend/sh growth: +3.2%

Page 6: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Recent Developments

6

Estimated size of the commercial real estate market in Europe is ~$11 trillion, with $30-$35 billion of annual single-tenant transaction volume in our core verticals

~

~

~

Expanding to Europe is a natural extension of Realty Income’s business model, with a focus on long-term triple net leases with annual growth

~

We intend to establish an office in London, and to judiciously grow our portfolio in Europe over time as we have done in the US

~

First International Transaction: Sainsbury’s SLB

✓ AFFO accretion(2): $0.04/sh | Base-case USD IRR(3): 6.6%

Realty Income will expand to international markets starting with strategic sale-leaseback with Sainsbury’s

Realty Income Announces International Expansion:

£429 Million Sale-Leaseback with Sainsbury’s(1)

We believe there is demand from high quality tenants in Europe for sale-leaseback capital on reasonable terms

Realty Income is well-positioned to build an international platform leveraging its scale, size, and sector-leading cost of capital

(1) Expected to close on or around 5/22/19(2) Annualized leverage-neutral AFFO accretion(3) Unlevered IRR. Key assumptions: contractual annual fixed rent increases, residual value at 100% of purchase price, GBP/USD FX curve as of 4/19/19

Page 7: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

7

Europe Presents Compelling Market OpportunityRealty Income’s portable business model, cost of capital and scalability represent core competitive advantages

(1) Property owned for the primary purpose of benefitting from investment returns, as distinct from owner-occupied and non-investment leased real estate (2) Includes owner-occupied and non-investment leased real estate

Sources: CBRE, MSCI, Bloomberg, Realty Income estimates

US vs. Europe Comparison: Estimated Commercial Real Estate Market Value

CRE owned by Real Estate

Companies(1)

All Other Commercial

Real Estate(2)

Total Investable Commercial

Real Estate

US $4 Trillion $4 Trillion $8 Trillion

Europe $3 Trillion $8 Trillion $11 Trillion

US + Europe $7 Trillion $12 Trillion $19 Trillion

~ Ripe for sale-leaseback consolidation: We estimate $11 trillion of commercial real estate stock in the European market, only $3 trillion of which is owned by professional real estate firms

~ Additive to Realty Income’s addressable market: We estimate that corporate-owned commercial real estate stock is 2x greater in Europe than in the US, representing a void for a well-capitalized, sizable and scalable institutional investor like Realty Income to fill

Median EBITDA Multiple Comparisons • Similar to the US, public companies in Europe can unlock trapped RE value through sale-leasebacks

• We expect market-ascribed valuation differentials between real estate and operating businesses to benefit us

• We estimate annualized single-tenant real estate transaction volume in Europe to be between $30 and $35 billion in our target verticals

16.7x14.6x

11.1x6.4x 6.3x

Illustrative SLB

Multiple

(at 6% cap

rate)

Europe Ex-UK

Real Estate

Companies

(~700)

UK-Domiciled

Real Estate

Companies

(~90)

UK-Domiciled

Operating

Companies

(~1,500)

Europe Ex-UK

Companies

(~3,700)

Page 8: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

56.1

76.6 80.7

72.7

31.8 33.0

47.1 44.7 43.8

71.6

82.9

94.6

67.9

85.9 81.3

2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

Estimated UK Commercial Real Estate Annual Investment Volume(1)

USD in billions(2)

Average = 64.7

UK is a Highly Liquid And Logical CRE Market For Our Initial Entry to Europe

Historically, ~$65 billion of CRE has traded on an annual basis in the United Kingdom

8

Global

Financial

Crisis

Post-Brexit

Referendum

(1) Property types include office, shopping centers, retail, industrial, leisure and alternative / mixed(2) Assuming GBP/USD spot rate as of 4/19/19Source: Savills, CBRE, MSCI, Realty Income estimates

Investment volumes

have held steady post-

Brexit referendum

despite political and

economic uncertainty

Incumbent competition is modest:

Enterprise value of the public REIT market in the UK estimated to be approximately $115 billion -- roughly the size of the publicly traded net lease REIT universe in the US

Of the $81 billion of

CRE transaction volume

in 2018, we estimate

$6 - $8 billion of single-

tenant volume in our

core verticals

Page 9: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

9

Sainsbury’s Sale-Leaseback HighlightsAccretive transaction establishes international growth platform with leading UK grocer

£429

million Transaction size(1)

5.3%GBP 1st-year cash

cap rate

5.8%USD-equivalent

1st-year cap

rate(2)

>200 bpsEffective 1st-year

spread to

leverage-neutral

nominal WACC

12Assets acquired

6.6%Base-case

unlevered USD

IRR

15 yearsWeighted-average

lease term

$0.04 per

shareAnnualized

leverage-neutral

AFFO accretion

(1) Excluding acquisition transaction costs of approximately £4.2 million / transaction expected to close on or around 5/22/19(2) Reflects effective 1st-year USD cap rate net of annual cash flow FX hedge

Page 10: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

10

Sainsbury’s Sale-Leaseback: Investment Rationale Realty Income’s first international acquisition represents natural evolution and execution of strategy

Congruent with

existing investment

criteria

Accretive returns,

minimal FX risk

UK is an attractive

market with sizable

opportunity for

strategic growth

~ Tenant operates in defensive, non-discretionary industry

~ “Blue Chip” grocery operator with seasoned and highly-regarded management team

~ Proven strength through multiple economic cycles

~ 15-year triple-net leases, attractive rent growth

~ Annualized AFFO accretion of ~$0.04/sh from Sainsbury’s transaction

~ Base-case 15-year unlevered USD IRR of 6.6% is attractive given tenant, asset quality

~ ~85% of FX risk on GBP cash flows to be hedged for 15 years through currency swap

~ Limited retail real estate supply per capita, healthy market fundamentals

~ Void of large-scale, pure-play net lease institutional competition

~ Significant demand for expansion capital from UK operators

~ Estimated >$1 trillion potential sale-leaseback market opportunity

Realty Income’s sector-leading cost of capital, size and scale are competitive advantages portable to the UK

Page 11: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Investment Thesis

(1) Consistent Earnings Growth

(2) Predictable Business Model

(3) Track Record of TSR Outperformance

Page 12: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Consistent Annual Earnings Growth Since NYSE ListingPositive earnings growth(1) in 22 out of 23 years as a public company

5.1%

6.8%6.4%

6.0%

1.6%

3.2%

5.4% 5.1% 4.9%

6.0%

9.4%

3.4%

4.4%

-2.1%

0.5%

8.1%

2.5%

17.0%

6.6% 6.6%

5.1%

6.3%

4.2%

1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

(1) AFFO / Excludes earnings from Crest Net Lease, a subsidiary of Realty Income, as earnings do not reflect recurring business operations(2) FFO / Through 2018 / Includes all REITs currently included in MSCI REIT Index with earnings history since 2000 / Source: SNL

Historical Earnings Growth Rates (Median)

Realty Income (1): 5.1%

Current REITs (2): 3.2%

Compares favorably to REIT

median growth rates:

2008: -5.1%

2009: -6.9%

2010: -8.1%

12

Page 13: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

✓ Annual same-store rent growth run rate of ~1.0%

✓ Long lease terms limit annual volatility

1.5%

1.1%1.3%

1.8%

1.5%1.4%1.4%

1.7%

1.4%1.5%

1.1%1.3%1.3%1.4%

1.1%0.9%

1.6%

0.4%

1.0%1.0%1.0%1.0%1.0%0.8%

1.5%

Consistency: Steady Portfolio, Solid FundamentalsFocus on quality underwriting and real estate supports predictable cash flow generation

Consistent Occupancy Levels, Never Below 96%

Steady Same-Store Rent Growth

˃ Careful underwriting at acquisition

˃ Solid retail store performance

˃ Strong underlying real estate quality

˃ Healthy tenant industries

˃ Prudent disposition activity

˃ Proactive management of rollovers

Tenets of Consistency:

13

Page 14: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Investment Spreads Maintain Even with Rising Interest RatesRising interest rates do not pose a significant earnings headwind to the net lease business model

0%

2%

4%

6%

8%

10%

12%

1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

Acquisition Cap Rate

Avg US 10Y Yield

R2 = 0.88

Acquisition cap rates highly correlated to changing interest rates…

…which contributes to strong earnings growth during periods of rising rates

5.1%6.8% 6.4% 6.0%

1.6%3.2%

5.4% 5.1% 4.9%6.0%

9.4%

3.4%4.4%

-2.1%

0.5%

8.1%

2.5%

17.0%

6.6% 6.6%5.1%

6.3%4.2%

1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

Annual AFFO/sh

Growth Rate(1):

(1) Excludes earnings from Crest Net Lease, a subsidiary of Realty Income, as earnings do not reflect recurring business operations14

Page 15: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Snapshot vs. S&P 500 REIT Peers

Tenets of Consistency:

Superior stability: Favorable occupancy, dividend growth, credit rating and total return metrics

98.3%96.6%

93.7%

91.2%

Historical Median Lowest Year-End

Portfolio Occupancy

O S&P 500 REIT Median

0%

4.6%

8%

2.9%

% of Years w/ Negative

Growth

Dividend CAGR

Dividend Growth(1)

O S&P 500 REIT Median

100%

200%

300%

400%

500%

0 10 20 30

Avg. Credit Rating (S&P/Moody’s)

BBB- / Baa3

BBB / Baa2

BBB+ / Baa1

A- / A3

A / A2

● ● S&P 500 REIT Peer

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

# of Years with TSR < -10%(1)

S&P 500 REIT Peer●●

Sources: SNL, Bloomberg | Excludes specialty REITs (i.e. infrastructure, timber, information services)(1) Since 1995. Excludes REITs with fewer years of history than Realty Income 15

Page 16: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Track Record of Favorable Risk-Adjusted Returns to Shareholders Since 1994 NYSE listing, Realty Income shares have outperformed benchmark indices while exhibiting lower volatility

16.9%

10.7% 10.6%9.9% 9.7%

O Equity REIT Index DJIA Nasdaq S&P 500

14.9%16.0%

18.0% 18.4%

28.6%

O DJIA S&P 500 Equity REIT

Index

Nasdaq

Standard Deviation of

Annual Returns Since 1994

Compound Average Annual Total

Shareholder Return Since 1994

Standard deviation of total returns measures deviation from average annual total returns since 1994 16

Page 17: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

-10%

-5%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

0.00.30.50.81.01.31.51.82.02.3

Tota

l R

etu

rn C

AG

R

Beta

Attractive Risk/Reward vs. S&P 500 CompaniesHigher returns and lower volatility than majority of S&P 500 companies since 1994 NYSE listing

Realty Income return per

unit of market risk in the

98th percentile of all S&P

500 companies(1):

Beta: 0.39

Return: 16.4%

(1) n=316 / Excludes companies without trading histories dating to 1994 Beta measured using monthly frequency

Source: Bloomberg

Realty Income return per unit of market risk is in the 98th

percentile of all S&P 500 companies(1)::

Return: 16.9%Beta: 0.38

17

Page 18: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

O

JNJ

WMT

XOM

AAPL

PG

VZ

REITs

MSFT

INTC

S&P 500

JPM

BAC

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

0.00.20.40.60.81.01.21.41.61.82.0

Tota

l R

etu

rn C

AG

R

Beta

Attractive Risk/Reward vs. Blue Chip S&P 500 Equities

Realty Income: Greater

return per unit of

market risk than each

of top 10 largest S&P

constituents(1) since

1994 NYSE listing

(1) Excludes companies without trading histories since 10/18/1994 / Constituents plotted include S&P 500 and FTSE NAREIT US Equity REIT Index

Beta measured using monthly frequency

Source: Bloomberg

Historically, more return per unit of risk vs. the 10 largest S&P 500 constituents

18

Page 19: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Attractive Risk/Reward vs. Blue Chip REITsHistorically, more return per unit of risk vs. S&P 500 REITs

O

PSA

ESS

WELL

FRT

SPGAVB

VTR

EQR

HCP

REG

VNOAIV

KIM

MAC

WY

HST

UDR

MAA

0%

2%

4%

6%

8%

10%

12%

14%

16%

18%

20%

0.00.20.40.60.81.01.21.41.61.82.0

Tota

l R

etu

rn C

AG

R

Beta

(1) Excludes companies without trading histories since 10/18/1994

Beta measured using monthly frequency

Source: Bloomberg

Realty Income: Greater

return per unit of

market risk than S&P

500 REITs(1) since

1994 NYSE listing

19

Page 20: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

PORTFOLIO DIVERSIFICATION

Page 21: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Portfolio Diversification: TenantDiverse tenant roster, investment grade concentration reduces overall portfolio risk

21

Orange represents investment grade tenants that are defined as tenants with a credit rating of Baa3/BBB- or higher from one of the three major rating agencies (Moody’s/S&P/Fitch).

51% of our annualized rental revenue is generated from properties leased to investment grade tenants, including approximately 8% from properties leased to subsidiaries of

investment grade companies.

TOP 20

TENANTS REPRESENT

54%

Of annualized rental revenue

11Different industries

Investment grade rated tenants

6.1%

5.4%

4.7%

4.0%

3.6%

3.4%

3.2%

2.7%

2.4%

2.3%

2.0%

1.9%

1.8%

1.8%

1.7%

1.7%

1.6%

1.5%

1.3%

1.2%

12

Page 22: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Service-Oriented

Non-Discretionary

N/A (Non-Retail Exposure

Portfolio Diversification: IndustryExposure to 48 industries enhances predictability of cash flow (See Appendix for Industry Theses)

Exposure to defensive industries:96% of total portfolio rent is protected against retail e-commerce threats and economic downturns

Non-Discretionary

Service-Oriented

Non-Discretionary, Low Price Point

Low Price Point

❶Convenience Stores: 12.2%Service-oriented

❷ Drug Stores: 9.8%Non-discretionary

❹ Dollar Stores : 7.4%Non-discretionary, Low price point

❸ Health & Fitness: 7.7%Non-discretionary, Service-oriented

❺Quick-Service Restaurants: 6.4%Low price point, Service-oriented

❻ Theaters: 5.2%Low price point, Service-oriented

❼ Grocery: 4.8%Non-discretionary

22

78% of Total Rent:

Retail with at least one of the following components:

Non-Discretionary(Low cash flow volatility)

Low Price-Point(Counter-cyclical)

Service-Oriented(E-commerce resilient)

18%Non-retail

(E-commerce resilient)4% Other

Page 23: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Portfolio Diversification: Property TypeCore exposure in retail and industrial single-tenant freestanding net lease properties

23

RETAIL (82.4%)

Number of Properties: 5,702

Average Leasable Square Feet: 11,400

Percentage of Rental Revenue

from Investment Grade Tenants: 46.3%

OFFICE (4.0%)

Number of Properties: 42

Average Leasable Square Feet: 73,910

Percentage of Rental Revenue

from Investment Grade Tenants: 86.1%

INDUSTRIAL (11.6%)

Number of Properties: 117

Average Leasable Square Feet: 229,000

Percentage of Rental Revenue

from Investment Grade Tenants: 78.3%

AGRICULTURE (2.0%)

Number of Properties: 15

Average Leasable Square Feet: 12,300

Percentage of Rental Revenue

from Investment Grade Tenants: -

Page 24: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Portfolio Diversification: GeographyBalanced presence in 49 states and Puerto Rico

<1

<1

<1

<1

<1

<1

<1

2.1

<1

1.7

<1

<1

<1

1.6

1.6

3.1

1.3

2.6

<1

1.6

1.6 1.8 4.1

2.6

3.0

3.6

1.92.1

2.7

1.4

3.3

<13.1

<1

Puerto Rico <1

<1<1<1

1.1

<1

<1

1.7

<1

1.5

8.7

11.6

6.0

4.9

4.6

5.5

Texas 11.6%

California 8.7%

Illinois 6.0%

Florida 5.5%

Ohio 4.9%

New York 4.6%

Top 6 States

% of Rental Revenue

Figures represents percentage of rental revenue

24

Page 25: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

DEFENSIVE RETAIL PORTFOLIO

Page 26: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Low Price Point

Service / Experiential

Top 20 Tenants Highly Insulated from Changing Consumer Behavior

All top 20 tenants fall into at least one category (Service, Non-Discretionary, Low Price Point Retail or Non-Retail)

Non-Retail

Walmart represented by Neighborhood Markets and Sam’s Club 26

Non-Discretionary

Page 27: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Total % of Rent - Top 15 Tenants 47.0%

Investment Grade % - Top 15 Tenants 32.1%

#1 Industry – Convenience Stores 12.2%

#2 Industry – Drug Stores 9.8%

Total % of Rent - Top 15 Tenants 53.0%

Investment Grade % - Top 15 Tenants 3.2%

#1 Industry – Restaurants 21.3%

#2 Industry – Convenience Stores 17.0%

Top Tenant Exposure: 2009 vs. TodayLess cyclicality and superior credit and diversification vs. prior downturn

27

TOP 15 TENANTS AS OF YE 2009 TOP 15 TENANTS AS OF 1Q 2019

Tenant Industry % of Rent

Hometown Buffet Casual Dining 6.0%

Kerasotes Showplace

TheatresTheatres 5.3%

L.A. Fitness Health & Fitness 5.3%

The Pantry Convenience Stores 4.3%

Friendly’s Casual Dining 4.1%

Rite Aid Drug Stores 3.4%

La Petite Academy Child Care 3.3%

TBC Corporation Auto Tire Services 3.2%

Boston Market QSR 3.1%

Couche-Tard / Circle K Convenience Stores 3.0%

NPC / Pizza Hut QSR 2.6%

FreedomRoads / Camping

WorldSporting Goods 2.6%

KinderCare Child Care 2.5%

Regal Cinemas Theatres 2.3%

Sports Authority Sporting Goods 2.0%

Tenant Industry % of Rent

Walgreens Drug Stores 6.1%

7-Eleven Convenience Stores 5.4%

FedEx (Non-Retail) Transportation 4.7%

Dollar General Dollar Stores 4.0%

LA Fitness Health & Fitness 3.6%

Dollar Tree / Family Dollar Dollar Stores 3.4%

AMC Theaters Theaters 3.2%

Walmart / Sam’s Club Grocery / Wholesale 2.7%

Life Time Fitness Health & Fitness 2.4%

Circle K / Couche-Tard Convenience Stores 2.3%

BJ’s Wholesale Clubs Wholesale Clubs 2.0%

Treasury Wine Estates

(Non-Retail)Beverages 1.9%

CVS Pharmacy Pharmacy 1.8%

Regal Cinemas Theaters 1.8%

Kroger Grocery 1.7%

Bold tenants represent investment-grade rated credit

Page 28: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Differentiated Business Model from “Traditional” Retail REITsLease structure and growth drivers support predictable revenue stream relative to other forms of retail real estate

Initial Length of Lease 15+ Years < 10 Years

Remaining Avg Term ~ 10 Years ~ 5-7 Years

Responsibility for Property Expenses Tenant Landlord

Gross Margin > 98% ~ 75%

Volatility of Rental Revenue Low Modest / High

Maintenance Capital Expenditures Low Modest / High

Reliance on Anchor Tenant(s) None High

Average Retail Property Size / Fungibility 12k sf / High 150k–850k sf / Low

Target Markets Many Few

External Acquisition Opportunities High Low

Institutional Buyer Competition Modest High

Ample external growth opportunities

Unique “net lease” structure drives lower cash flow volatility Shopping Centers

and Malls

Shopping Centers

and Malls

28

Page 29: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Realty Income Not Materially Impacted by Recent Retailer Bankruptcies

Retail Industry # of BK Retailer BankruptcyRealty

Income

Exposure

Apparel 15

True Religion| Wet Seal| BCBG Max Azria| Limited Stores| Rue21|

Gymboree| Vanity Shop| Papaya Clothing| Alfredo Angelo| Styles for

Less | A’gaci | David’s Bridal | Full Beauty | Charlotte Russe |

Diesel USA

0%

Specialty 8Perfumania| Vitamin World | Kiko | Brookstone | Mattress Firm|

Beauty Brands | Innovative Mattress Solutions | Z Gallerie< 1%

Shoe Stores 7Aerosoles | Charlotte Olympia | The Walking Company |

Nine West | Rockport | Payless ShoeSource | LK Bennett< 1%

General Merchandise 5 Gordmans | Bon-Ton | Sears | Shopko | Fallas < 1%

Sporting Goods 5Eastern Outfitters / Bob’s Stores| Gander Mountain| MC Sports|

Remington Outdoor | Advanced Sports< 1%

Grocery 4 Tops Market | Marsh Supermarkets | Southeastern Grocers | Seasons < 1%

Restaurants 5Macaroni Grill | Bertucci’s | RMH Franchise (Applebee’s) |

Taco Bueno | Kona Grill0%

Jewelry / Accessories 3 Charming Charlie| Claire’s | Samuels Jewelers 0%

Consumer Electronics 2 RadioShack | hhgregg 0%

Toy Stores 1 Toys ‘R’ Us 0%

Total Realty Income Exposure (% of Rent) : < 1%

44 of 55 retailer bankruptcies since 2017 associated with companies lacking a non-discretionary, low price point, and / or service-oriented component to their business

Red retailers represent businesses lacking either a non-discretionary, low price point, and / or service-oriented component 29

Page 30: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

ASSET MANAGEMENT &

REAL ESTATE OPERATIONS

Page 31: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Active Real Estate Management: Re-leasing ExperienceSince 1996, Realty Income has achieved 100.3% recapture of prior rent on re-leasing activity

Recapture vs. Prior Rent: (All Re-Leasing Activity)

102.4%

95.6%

95.9%

2013 - Present

2006 - 2012

1996 - 2005

2,975Lease Expirations since 1996

2,586Re-Leased at 100.3% rent recapture(1)

389Sold and proceeds reinvested into higher

quality assets

(1) Reflects cash rent recapture inclusive of tenant improvement spend (immaterial)

31

Page 32: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Actively-Managed Real Estate PortfolioProven track record of value creation, cash flow preservation and risk mitigation

✓ Largest department in the company

✓ Distinct management verticals

✓ Retail

✓ Non-Retail

✓ Leasing & dispositions

✓ Maximizing value of real estate

✓ Strategic and opportunistic dispositions

✓ Value-creating development

✓ Risk mitigation

Healthy Leasing Results

6.9%7.6% 7.3% 7.1%

11.5%11.6% 12.1%

8.5%9.9%

8.1%

2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

Cap Rate on Occupied Dispositions

Unlevered IRR on All Dispositions

32

93.0%

% Re-leased to Existing Tenants

% Re-leased to New Tenants

Blended rent recapture

rate of 104.7% on

expired leases

YTD 2019

Renewal / New Lease Split

Favorable Returns on Dispositions

Asset Management &

Real Estate Operations

Page 33: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

INVESTMENT STRATEGY

Page 34: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Investment Strategy: Key ConsiderationsCost of capital advantage, size, track record represent competitive advantage

34

COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES VS. NET LEASE PEERS

Supports investment selectivity

Drives faster earnings growth (wider margins)

Critical in industry reliant on external growth

Ability to buy “wholesale” (at a discount) without creating tenant concentration issues

Access to liquidity ($3 billion revolver)

Relationships developed since 1969

1

2

3

1

2

3

SIZE AND TRACK RECORDLOWEST COST OF CAPITAL

Page 35: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Investment Strategy: Aim to Exceed Long-Term WACCWACC viewpoint balances near-term earnings per share growth with long-term value accretion

35

Cost of capital information uses illustrative assumptions only (as of 4/30/2019)(1) 7% FCF weight assumes current acquisition guidance ($2.25 billion)

Long-term Weighted Average Cost of Capital “Nominal” 1st-Year Weighted Average Cost of Capital

• Drives investment decision-

making at the property level

• Considers required “growth”

component of equity returns

• Long-term WACC is the hurdle

rate (no spread required) for

acquisitions

• Focus on higher long-term

IRR discourages risk-taking

• Used to measure initial

(year one) earnings accretion

• Higher stock price (lower cost)

supports faster growth

• Spread on short-term WACC

required to generate accretion

• Unwilling to sacrifice quality

to generate wider spreads

Key Assumptions & Calculation – Nominal 1st-Year WACC

58% Equity: AFFO Yield (Midpoint of 2019 guidance) 4.7%

7% Free Cash Flow(1): Free cash flow reinvested 0%

35% Debt: 10-year, fixed-rate unsecured 3.6%

Nominal 1st-Year WACC 4.0%

Key Assumptions & Calculation – Long-Term Cost of Equity

Historical Beta (vs. S&P 500) 0.38

Assumed long-term 10-year U.S. yield 4.0%

Equity market risk premium 4.7%

Long-Term Cost of Equity (CAPM methodology) 5.8%

Dividend yield 3.8%

Compound average annual dividend growth since 1994 listing 4.6%

Long-Term Cost of Equity (Yield + Growth methodology) 8.4%

Long-Term Cost of Equity (Average of two methodologies) 7.1%

Key Assumptions & Calculation – Long-Term WACC

65% Weight: Long-Term cost of equity 7.1%

35% Weight: Cost of debt (10-year, fixed-rate unsecured) 3.6%

Long-Term WACC 5.9%

LOW NOMINAL WACC LONG-TERM WACC

supports ability to spread invest with high-quality acquisitions

considers growth requirements of equity and supports focus on

residual value of acquisitions

Page 36: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

1.5%

1.8%

2.1%

2.4%

2.7%

2.9%

3.2%

3.5%

3.8%

4.1%

4.4%

4.7%

5.0%

5.3%

0%

1%

2%

3%

4%

5%

6%0 b

ps

25 b

ps

50 b

ps

75 b

ps

100 b

ps

125 b

ps

150 b

ps

175 b

ps

200 b

ps

225 b

ps

250 b

ps

275 b

ps

300 b

ps

325 b

ps

An

nu

alize

d A

FFO

/sh

Gro

wth

Investment Spread vs. Nominal 1st-Year WACC

Lower cost of capital

Wider spreads

Higher growth

rate

Higher stock price

Investment Strategy: Benefits of Low Cost of CapitalLow cost of capital is the most important competitive advantage in the net lease industry

Assumptions and Footnotes:

1) Assumes $2.25 billion in acquisition volume

2) Assumes ratable timing of acquisitions over next 12 months

3) Growth based on TTM AFFO/sh ($3.22/sh)

4) Growth rates include organic same-store rent growth of ~1.0% (unlevered)

Cost of capital information uses illustrative assumptions only

Reduces need to pursue lower-

quality, higher-yielding investments

to generate growth

36

Page 37: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

5.0%

5.5%

6.0%

6.5%

7.0%

7.5%

8.0%

4.0

0%

4.2

5%

4.5

0%

4.7

5%

5.0

0%

5.2

5%

5.5

0%

5.7

5%

6.0

0%

6.2

5%

Acq

uis

itio

n C

ap

Ra

te t

o A

ch

ieve

15

0 b

ps S

pre

ad

s

Nominal 1st-Year WACC

Lower cost of capital allows Realty

Income to invest in higher quality

opportunities to derive the same spread

“High Quality” Investment Characteristics (lower cap rates):

• At or below-market rents

• Strong credit / proven sponsors & tenants

• Above-average rent coverage

• Flexible alternative use

• Long lease terms

• Stable industries

Investment Strategy: Utilizing Low Cost of Capital AdvantageLow cost of capital allows Realty Income to acquire the highest quality assets in the net lease industry

Cost of capital information uses illustrative assumptions only 37

“High Yield” Investment Characteristics (higher cap rates):

• Above-market rents / financially-engineered cap rates

• Poor credit or limited credit availability and track record

• Thin industry-specific rent coverage

• Poor real estate (low residual value)

• Short lease terms

• Volatile industries

Higher cost of capital forces

companies to invest in riskier

investment opportunities to

derive 150 bps of spread

Page 38: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Investment Strategy: The Importance of Market RentsRealty Income avoids lease structures with above-market rents, which can inflate initial cap rates

38

Illustrative Sale-Leaseback ExampleAssumptions

Annual EBITDAR (000s) $8,500 Replacement cost (psf) $200

Total square footage (000s) 175 Market rent (psf) $15

Assuming identical real estate portfolio, consider two different lease structure scenarios….

Buyer and Seller Motivations:

Higher Risk & Cap Rate Lower Risk & Cap Rate

1. Maximize proceeds for seller 1. Maximize EBITDAR rent coverage

2. Maximize cap rate for buyer 2. Match purchase price w/ replacement cost

Implied Sale Price (000s) $42,000 $35,000

Implied Cap Rate 7.5% 6.5%

Implied Rent (000s) $3,150 $2,267

Implied Rent (psf) $18.00 $12.95

Premium/(Discount) to Market Rent 20% (14%)

Implied EBITDAR rent coverage 2.7x 3.75x

Implied premium to replacement cost 20% 0%

Lower cap rates often imply:

✓ Lower purchase price

✓ Lower risk

✓ Higher residual value

✓ Higher IRR

• Above-market rents

• Lower rent coverage

• Lower residual value

• Higher default risk

• Lower long-term IRR

• Below-market rents

• Higher rent coverage

• Higher residual value

• Lower default risk

• Higher long-term IRRResults

Page 39: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

$12.8 billionin property-level acquisition volume

$5.4 billionin non-investment grade

retail acquisitions

84%of volume associated with

retail properties

55%of volume leased to

Investment grade tenants

Investment Strategy: Disciplined ExecutionConsistent, selective underwriting philosophy on strong sourced volume

2010 2011 20122013

(Ex-ARCT)2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

YTD

2019

Investment Volume $714 mil $1.02 bil $1.16 bil $1.51 bil $1.40 bil $1.26 bil $1.86 bil $1.52 bil $1.80 bil $519 mil

# of Properties 186 164 423 459 507 286 505 303 764 105

Initial Avg. Cap Rate 7.9% 7.8% 7.2% 7.1% 7.1% 6.6% 6.3% 6.4% 6.4% 6.7%

Initial Avg. Lease Term

(yrs)15.7 13.4 14.6 14.0 12.8 16.5 14.7 14.4 14.8 17

% Investment Grade 46% 40% 64% 65% 66% 46% 64% 48% 59% 31%

% Retail 57% 60% 78% 84% 86% 87% 86% 95% 96% 99%

Sourced Volume $6 bil $13 bil $17 bil $39 bil $24 bil $32 bil $28 bil $30 bil $32 bil $12 bil

Selectivity 12% 8% 7% 4% 6% 4% 7% 5% 6% 4%

Relationship Driven 76% 96% 78% 66% 86% 94% 81% 88% 89% 81%

Key Metrics Since 2010 (Excluding $3.2 billion ARCT transaction):

39Low selectivity metrics reflect robust opportunity set, disciplined investment

parameters, and cost of capital advantage

Page 40: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

CAPITAL STRUCTURE &SCALABILITY

Page 41: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Conservative Capital StructureModest leverage, low cost of capital, ample liquidity provides financial flexibility

Common Stock: 76%

Debt: 24%

Common Stock: $22.4 billion – 76%

• Shares/Units outstanding – 304 million

Debt: $7.0 billion – 24%

• Unsecured Notes/Bonds - $5.4 billion

• Unsecured Term Loans - $500 million

• Mortgages - $297 million

• Revolving Credit Facility - $838 million

Total Capitalization: $29.4 billion

Unsecured Debt Ratings: Moody’s A3 | S&P A- | Fitch BBB+

41Numbers may not foot due to rounding

Page 42: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Well-Laddered Debt Maturity ScheduleLimited re-financing and variable interest rate risk throughout debt maturity schedule

Key Metrics

• 88% fixed rate debt

• Weighted average rate

of 3.94% on debt(1)

• Staggered, 8.5-year weighted

average term for notes/bonds

• Ample liquidity with $2.16 bil

available on revolver (L+77.5bps)

• Free cash flow of ~$170mm/yr

4.5%

3.2% 5.7%

3.4%

3.9%

3.9%

3.9%

4.1%3.0%

3.7%

5.0%

$0

$200

$400

$600

$800

$1,000

$1,200

$1,400

$1,600

$1,800

2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029+

Unsecured Notes Mortgages Revolver Term Loan

Weighted average interest rate(1)

Deb

t M

atu

riti

es (

$m

m)

(1) Weighted average interest rates reflect variable-

to-fixed interest rate swaps on term loans and

revolver interest rate as of 3/31/2019

42

Page 43: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Scalability as a Competitive AdvantageLeaders in the net lease industry in efficiency and ability to buy in bulk

5.8%

4.5%

G&A as % of Rental Revenue(1)

(1) G&A excludes $18.7 million severance to former CEO paid in 4Q18 | percentage of rental revenue calculation excludes tenant reimbursements

64 bps

38 bps

G&A as % of Gross RE Book Value (bps)

92.4%94.2%

Adjusted EBITDAre Margin

Larger Size Drives Superior Overhead Efficiency

43

Larger Size Provides Growth Optionality

$100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $1,000

$200 3% 6% 9% 12% 14% 25%

$400 2% 3% 5% 6% 8% 14%

$600 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 10%

$800 1% 2% 2% 3% 4% 8%

$1,000 1% 1% 2% 3% 3% 6%

$1,300 1% 1% 2% 2% 2% 5%

Transaction Size & Impact(2) to Rent Concentration

Current

Rent

Size allows Realty Income to pursue large sale-

leaseback transactions without compromising prudent

tenant and industry diversification metrics

(2) Assumes 6.5% cap rate

in millions

Current Net Lease Peer Median: 9.0%

Current Net Lease Peer Median: 88.5%

Current Net Lease Peer Median: 77 bps

Page 44: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

DEPENDABLE DIVIDENDS

Page 45: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Dependable Dividends That Grow Over TimeSteady dividend track record supported by inherently stable business model, disciplined execution

$0.90 $0.91 $0.93 $0.95 $0.98 $1.04

$1.09 $1.12 $1.15 $1.18

$1.24

$1.35

$1.44 $1.56

$1.66 $1.71 $1.72

$1.74 $1.77

$2.15 $2.19

$2.27

$2.39

$2.53

$2.65 $2.71

1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019

YTD

Strong Dividend Track Record

86 consecutive quarterly increases

101 total increases since 1994 NYSE listing

82% AFFO payout (based on midpoint of 2019 AFFO guidance)

4.6% compound average annualized growth rate since NYSE listing

One of only five REITs included in S&P High Yield Dividend Aristocrats® index

Data is as of April 2019 dividend declaration (annualized) 45

Page 46: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Summary

˃ Long term-focused business strategy

˃ Diversified and actively managed portfolio

˃ Proven and disciplined relationship-driven acquisition strategy

˃ Conservative capital structure able to withstand economic volatility

˃ Precedent of outperforming S&P 500 and REITs since 1994 listing

˃ Attractive risk/reward vs. other REITs and blue chip equities

˃ Dependable monthly dividends with long track record of growth

46

Page 47: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

APPENDIX

47

Page 48: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

SUPERIOR PERFORMANCE DURING GREAT RECESSION

Page 49: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

14.7%

-28.3%

2007-2009 Total Return

49

Superior Earnings Growth and TSR During Great Recession1 of 2 S&P 500 REITs with positive earnings growth, dividend growth, and TSR during Great Recession

9.0%

-20.6%

2007-2009 Dividend Growth

Realty Income S&P 500 REITs

2.1%

-2.3%

2007-2009 Earnings CAGR(1)

(1) FFO/sh or operating FFO/sh (if available) used as proxy for earnings growth(2) Median of S&P 500 REITs, excludes non-property REITs AMT, CCI, WY, EQIX, IRM, PCL

All data is for the period between 1/1/2007 and 12/31/2009

Source: Bloomberg, SNL

(2)

1 of only 11 S&P 500 REITs with

positive earnings growth

1 of only 9 S&P 500 REITs without a

dividend cut

1 of only 5 S&P 500 REITs with

positive total shareholder return

Page 50: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

-45%

-30%

-15%

0%

15%

30%

45%

Jan-07 Jun-07 Nov-07 Apr-08 Sep-08 Feb-09 Jul-09 Dec-09

Historical Premium / (Discount) to NAV

Realty Income S&P 500 REITs

50

NAV Premium Persisted Through Great RecessionCost of capital advantage (measured by premium to NAV) remained stable during recession

(1) Median premium / (discount) of S&P 500 REITs, excludes non-property REITs AMT, CCI, WY, EQIX, IRM, PCL

Source: SNL

Realty Income’s median NAV premium was 10% during the downturn

(1 of only 6 S&P 500 REITs trading at a premium to NAV during this time period)

(1)

Page 51: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

5.7x

5.2x

3.1x

0.7x

S&P 500 REIT

Median

Realty Income

Leverage(1) Ratio Range (2007-2009)

Min Leverage Spread

51

Stable Leverage and Coverage Ratios During DownturnLower credit metric volatility during Great Recession relative to other blue-chip REITs

5.9x

8.8x

Max Leverage

(1) Calculated using year-end debt and preferred equity for leverage, and annual EBITDA(2) Median of maximum and minimum ratios of S&P 500 REITs, excludes non-property REITs AMT, CCI, WY, EQIX, IRM, PCL

Source: SNL

(2)

2.2x

2.5x

0.9x

0.5x

S&P 500 REIT

Median

Realty Income

Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio Range (2007-2009)

Min FCCR Spread Max FCCR

(2)

3.0x

3.1x

Tighter metric

ranges reflect:

1) Inherently stable net

lease business model

2) Disciplined capital

allocation

3) Responsible balance

sheet management

Page 52: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

52

Superior Relative Volatility Metrics vs. A-Rated REITs During Recession2007 – 2009 relative rankings

0.3% 0.3% 0.4%

7.4%

0.1x 0%

0.2%0.7%

3.1%

3.7%

4.0%

4.2%

9.7%

0.5%

1.1%

1.4%

1.7%

1.7%

9.4%

0.6%

0.6%

3.8%

4.3%

5.7%

9.7%

31.9%

0.8%

1.3%

2.0%

2.2%

20.3%

0.3x

0.5x

2.2x

1.5x

2.2x

3.3x

2.2%

2.0%

1.2%

1.5%

2.8%

4.9%

0.3%

0.3%

0.7%

0.1%

3.4%

N/A(3)

Rental Revenue(1) Gross Margin(1) EBITDA(1) EBITDA Margin(1) Debt/EBITDA(2) Unsecured/Total Debt(1) Occupancy Rate(1)

Mo

re V

ola

tile

L

ess V

ola

tile 1

2

3

4

5

6

7

Realty Income; Other colored ovals represent REITs that currently have at least two A-/A3 credit ratings or better

(1) Downside Volatility calculated as the standard deviation around zero of quarterly percentage changes in each metric shown, where positive changes are replaced with zero(2) Upside Volatility calculated as the standard deviation around zero of quarterly percentage changes, where negative changes are replaced with zero(3) Company did not report consolidated quarterly portfolio occupancy during 2007-2009

Source: SNL

Rank

Page 53: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

TOP INDUSTRIES OVERVIEW

Page 54: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Convenience Stores (12.2% of Rent)Quality real estate locations with strong store-level performance

Industry Considerations

(1) Strong performance independent of gas sales: ~70% of

inside sales are generated by customers not buying gas(1)

(2) Larger-format stores provide stability: Larger format stores

(average size ~3,200 sf) allow for increased food options

which carry higher margins

(3) Electric vehicles’ market penetration presents minimal risk

• EVs = Only 1% of all vehicles in US and 2% of new sales(2)

• Cost, limited infrastructure/range present headwinds

$31.1 $45.8

$63.3 $78.1 $15.7

$23.5

$26.0

$31.9

2001 2006 2011 2016

Convenience Store Gross Profit(3)

(in billions)Fuel (4.8% CAGR since 2001)

Merchandise Sales (6.3% CAGR since 2001)

70% of gross profit generated from inside sales which is generally not impacted by gasoline demand

(1) Realty Income estimates based on industry component data(2) US Energy Information Administration, InsideEVs(3) National Association of Convenience Stores

54

Page 55: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Drug Stores (9.8% of Rent)Industry tailwinds, high barriers to entry, key real estate presence

Industry Considerations

(1) Consumer preference skews towards physical drug stores:

Prescription volumes have shifted away from mail order

(2) Positive brick-and-mortar fundamentals: 23 of 24 quarters

of positive pharmacy SS sales growth for Walgreens(2)

(3) High barriers to entry: Difficult for new entrants to achieve

necessary scale and PBM partnerships to compete on price

(4) Bundled service partnerships and vertical integration

among incumbents insulates industry from outside threats

(5) Real estate presence matters: Estimated 80% of U.S.

population lives within 5-mile radius of Walgreens or CVS(2)

21% 21%12%

3%

(33%)Chain

Drugstores

Mass

Merchants

Supermarkets Independent

Pharmacies

Mail

Pharmacies

Δ in 30-day Prescriptions by Pharmacy Format

(2012 – 2017)(1)

(1) Source: Pembroke Consulting(2) Source: Company Documents

2.0%

6.4%

7.2%

5.8%

6.3%

7.8%

8.1%

9.7%

9.1% 9.3%

9.3%

3.7%

6.0%

5.0%

2.0%

4.2%

5.8%

5.6%

7.4%

5.1%

0.0%

1.3%

2.8%1.9%

3Q

13

4Q

13

1Q

14

2Q

14

3Q

14

4Q

14

1Q

15

2Q

15

3Q

15

4Q

15

1Q

16

2Q

16

3Q

16

4Q

16

1Q

17

2Q

17

3Q

17

4Q

17

1Q

18

2Q

18

3Q

18

4Q

18

1Q

19

2Q

19

Walgreens: 23 of 24 Quarters of Positive

Same-Store Pharmacy Sales Growth(2)

55

Page 56: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Drug Stores: Challenges Facing E-Commerce DisruptorsPharmaceutical supply chain carries significant barriers-to-entry

56

50%

72%90%

Drug Stores Pharmacy Benefit Managers Wholesalers

Combined Market Share of Top 3 Incumbents(1)

Source: IQVIA, Pembroke Consulting, RBC Capital Markets(1) Drug store market share by Rx dispensed

PBM market share by total equivalent Rx claims managed

Wholesale market share by drug distribution and related revenues

23.6%25.9%

28.4% 29.9%34.0%

2013 2014 2015 2016 2021E

Prescription Mix with $0 Copay

+ Heavily concentrated market share

+ Efficient supply chain & logistics

+ Captive pricing model

+ 30% of the market has no out-of-

pocket responsibility, thereby limiting

the value proposition of an

E-commerce operator

21%33%

47%

2012 2017 2022E

Specialty Drugs Are a Growing Component of the Market+ High-margin specialty drugs (i.e.

oncology, hormonal therapy, immune

deficiencies, etc.) are heavily regulated

+ Network distribution is highly

concentrated with the top PBMs

Page 57: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Health & Fitness (7.7% of Rent)E-commerce resilient supported by favorable demographic trends

Industry Considerations

(1) Favorable consumer trends and demographic tailwinds:

Growing market as consumers increasingly value health / Baby

Boomer age group has the highest attendance frequency

(2) E-Commerce resilient: Service-oriented business model

makes the core real estate essential to operations

(3) Attractive margin of safety, top operators: Average CFC of

portfolio(1) allows for 40% sales drop to breakeven. Top

exposure is with #1 operator (L.A. Fitness) and premium

provider that performed well during recession (Life Time

Fitness)

Illustrative Gym Rent Coverage Sensitivity Life Time Fitness: Same-Center Revenue Growth Thru Downturn(2)

7.7% 7.3%6.1%

2.8%

(3.1%)

5.0% 5.1%4.3% 4.0%

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

For stores open 13 months or longer

Modest revenue volatility during

economic downturns provides

ample margin of safety to landlord

57(1) Average CFC of portfolio based on locations that report sales(2) Life Time Fitness 10-K

Page 58: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Dollar Stores (7.4% of Rent)Counter-cyclical protection and E-commerce resilient

Industry Considerations

(1) Consistent long-term performance: 29 and 13 consecutive

years of positive same-store sales growth for Dollar General and

Dollar Tree / Family Dollar, respectively

(2) E-commerce resilient:

• 75% of US population lives within 5 miles of a Dollar General

• Average basket size is $11 - $12

• Dollar store consumers primarily pay with cash

(3) Well-performing locations: Average CFC of dollar store

portfolio is above total portfolio average

0.9%

7.3%

5.7%

4.0%

3.2%

2.0%

3.3%

2.1%

9.0%

9.5%

4.9%

6.0%

4.7%

3.3%

2.8%2.8%

0.9%

2.7% 3.2%

20

00

20

01

20

02

20

03

20

04

20

05

20

06

20

07

20

08

20

09

20

10

20

11

20

12

20

13

20

14

20

15

20

16

20

17

20

18

Dollar General: 29 Consecutive Years of Positive

Same-Store Sales Growth

5.7%

0.1%

1.0%

2.9%

0.5%

-0.8%

4.6%

2.7%

4.1%

7.2%

6.3%6.0%

3.4%

2.4%

4.3%

2.1%1.8% 1.9%

1.7%

20

00

20

01

20

02

20

03

20

04

20

05

20

06

20

07

20

08

20

09

20

10

20

11

20

12

20

13

20

14

20

15

20

16

20

17

20

18

Dollar Tree / Family Dollar: 13 Consecutive Years

of Positive Same-Store Sales Growth

Recession

Counter-cyclical sales growth trends supports portfolio during recessionary periods

Source: Company Filings 58

Page 59: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Quick-Service Restaurants (6.4% of Rent)High-quality real estate, reliable sales growth

Industry Considerations

(1) Consistent demand: Approximately 75 million Americans

eat fast food every day(1) / positive trend of same-store sales

growth supported by value-seeking consumers

(2) Fungibility of real estate: Positive re-leasing results on QSR

locations due to convenience of real estate location and

modest space footprint

(3) Less volatility than higher price point concepts: Weakness

during economic downturns limited due to “trade down” effect

from casual dining consumers

0.2%

-3.0%

1.1%

5.1%

3.1%

6.3%

2.3%

0.4%

0.7%

-0.4%

-6.6%

2.2%3.3%

1.6%

2.3%

-0.5%-2.0%

1.7%

QSR SSS Growth

Casual Dining SSS Growth

Same-Store Sales Growth Trends: QSR Industry Exhibits Lower Downside Volatility, Stronger Growth vs. Casual Dining(2)

(1) Source: Statista(2) Represents average same-store sales growth for constituents in each group ; Source: Restaurant Research LLC, FactSet

59

Page 60: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Theaters (5.2% of Rent)Stability throughout economic cycles / Experiential component supports e-commerce resiliency

Industry Considerations

(1) Historical U.S. box office receipts illustrate stability: 3.8%

CAGR since 1981 / no year worse than -7.0%

(2) High variable cost structure limits rent coverage volatility:

Theaters in our portfolio require ~40% drop in sales to reach

breakeven on rent coverage

(3) Premium video on demand (PVOD) threat is minimal:

• Studios hesitant to cannibalize theatrical window

• Concentrated industry preserves negotiating leverage

• 95% of box office revenue made within 45 days of release(1)

• PVOD offering lacks experiential component of theaters

7.9%

16.4%

9.1%

7.0%

-7.0%

0.8%

12.6%

4.8%

12.9%

-0.2%

-4.4%

1.4%

5.8%4.7%

1.8%

7.6%7.7%9.2%

7.2%

2.9%

9.8%8.8%

0.9%1.5%

-5.8%

4.2%4.9%

-0.3%

10.0%

-0.3%

-3.7%

6.5%

0.8%

-5.2%

7.4%

2.2%

-2.7%

7.4%

Annual Growth in U.S. Box Office Receipts: Stability through economic cycles

Growth During Recession Record U.S.

box office

(1) Based on top 20 movies in 2018

Source: Box Office Mojo as of December 31, 2018 60

E.T.

BatmanIndiana Jones

Titanic

Harry Potter

Lord of the Rings

Spider-Man

Star Wars Episode II

Avatar

Transformers Star Wars

Jurassic World

➢ Industry is structurally healthy / Strong content drives annual growth

Black Panther

Avengers

Incredibles 2

Page 61: FIRST QUARTER 2019 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION€¦ · Statements in this investor presentation that are not strictly historical are "forward-looking" statements. Forward-looking

Grocery (4.8% of Rent)

Exposure to top operators in a largely e-commerce resistant industry

Industry Considerations

(1) Stable, necessity-based industry: Total food expenditure

accounts for 12.3% of US average spending and has been

growing at 3% annually for the past decade(1)

(2) Resiliency to Economic Downturns: Flat Food At Home

expenditure during Great Recession (2009)(1)

(3) Partnership with top operators:

• Top two tenants (Walmart Neighborhood Markets and

Kroger) are the two leading operators with differentiated

business models

• Both operators are major omni-channel players (MRQ online

sales up 43% at Walmart & 60% at Kroger)

Walmart,

25%

Kroger,

13%

Costco, 8%

Albertsons, 7%

Ahold,

6%

Amazon,

2%

Other, 39%

Walmart Neighborhood

Markets:17 consecutive

quarters of same-store sales

growth > 5%

Kroger:Strong

“experiential” component,

particularly with Mariano’s concept

U.S. Grocery Market Share(2)

Realty Income’s

top two grocery

tenants control

over 1/3 of U.S.

grocery market

share

(1) U.S. Census Bureau(2) Wall Street Research, Company filings

61

64%

35%

24%20%

9%3%

Media Consumer

Electronics

Sporting

Goods

Apparel Home

Goods

Grocery

Grocery E-Commerce Market Share

Remains Modest(2)