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Market Impact: 0.15

Ex-Dividend Reminder: Eversource Energy, Camden Property Trust and VICI Properties

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Ex-Dividend Reminder: Eversource Energy, Camden Property Trust and VICI Properties

Eversource Energy (ES), Camden Property Trust (CPT) and VICI Properties (VICI) go ex-dividend on Dec. 17, 2025 with quarterly payouts of $0.7525 (paid 12/31/25), $1.05 (paid 1/16/26) and $0.45 (paid 1/8/26), respectively; based on recent quotes these distributions imply theoretical one-day price declines of roughly 1.10% for ES, 1.01% for CPT and 1.57% for VICI. If the recent dividends continue, they annualize to estimated yields of about 4.42% (ES), 4.03% (CPT) and 6.28% (VICI). Stocks were trading modestly higher intraday (ES +0.9%, CPT +0.1%, VICI +1.9%), but investors should price in the ex-dividend impact and review dividend history and sustainability when assessing relative value.

Analysis

Eversource Energy (ES), Camden Property Trust (CPT) and VICI Properties (VICI) will trade ex-dividend on 12/17/25; the announced quarterly payouts are $0.7525 (ES, payable 12/31/25), $1.05 (CPT, payable 1/16/26) and $0.45 (VICI, payable 1/8/26). Based on the article's recent quote for ES at $68.11, the theoretical one-day price adjustments are ~1.10% for ES, ~1.01% for CPT and ~1.57% for VICI when markets open on 12/17/25, all else equal. If these dividends continue at current levels, the annualized estimated yields are 4.42% for ES, 4.03% for CPT and 6.28% for VICI; intraday moves reported in the article show ES +0.9%, CPT +0.1% and VICI +1.9% ahead of the ex-div date, which could be largely offset by the mechanical ex-div price reduction. The piece includes dividend-history charts and explicitly cautions that dividends track company profits over time, so historical stability should be examined to assess sustainability. Market-impact and sentiment signals in the data are neutral to modest (sentiment neutral, market impact score 0.15), implying these ex-dividend events are likely to be idiosyncratic price adjustments rather than catalysts for broader sector moves. Investors should therefore treat the announced yields and theoretical price drops as short-term technical effects while performing fundamental checks on payout coverage and profit consistency before changing long-term positions.