Equinix is one of the leading providers of cloud- and carrier-neutral data centers, offering colocation and interconnection services to hyperscalers and businesses. Equinix operates 270 properties in 77 metropolitan areas across 36 countries, serving over 10,000 customers. About 70% of Equinix's revenue comes from renting physical space, which allows hyperscalers and other clients to store servers, data storage, and networking equipment. The other 30% of revenue is generated primarily through interconnection services (20%) and other managed services (10%).
The chart shows the growth of an initial investment of $10,000 in Equinix, Inc. Common Stock REIT, comparing it to the performance of the S&P 500 index. All prices have been adjusted for splits and dividends.
Returns By Period
Equinix, Inc. Common Stock REIT (EQIX) has returned 30.57% so far this year and 33.27% over the past 12 months. Looking at the last ten years, EQIX has achieved an annualized return of 11.66%, underperforming the Benchmark (SPY), which averaged 12.23% per year.
EQIX
1M4.79%
6M28.34%
YTD30.57%
1Y33.27%
5Y7.77%
10Y11.66%
Benchmark (SPY)
1M-3.85%
6M-2.35%
YTD-4.36%
1Y34.06%
5Y9.80%
10Y12.23%
Monthly Returns
The table below presents the monthly returns of Equinix, Inc. Common Stock REIT (EQIX) with color gradation from worst to best to easily spot seasonal factors.
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2026
7.15%
19.36%
2.15%
1.54%
2025
-2.70%
-0.72%
-10.60%
5.42%
2.91%
-10.04%
-1.52%
0.17%
0.74%
8.21%
-10.37%
2.62%
2024
3.37%
7.54%
-6.73%
-13.91%
7.61%
-1.31%
4.48%
5.28%
7.01%
1.46%
7.38%
-2.91%
2023
11.28%
-6.10%
5.29%
1.38%
3.13%
5.49%
4.77%
-2.93%
-7.88%
0.93%
11.67%
-1.37%
2022
-14.28%
-2.34%
4.24%
-3.05%
-4.79%
-4.76%
7.46%
-6.50%
-12.22%
-1.17%
20.55%
-5.75%
2021
3.01%
-12.14%
4.66%
5.11%
2.21%
8.53%
2.48%
2.86%
-5.70%
5.56%
-2.93%
3.72%
2020
1.00%
-3.33%
8.08%
11.02%
4.07%
0.35%
11.73%
1.69%
-3.80%
-4.32%
-5.74%
1.07%
2019
12.80%
7.64%
6.76%
2.51%
7.10%
3.42%
-1.36%
5.06%
3.86%
-1.40%
0.27%
3.34%
2018
0.37%
-13.38%
6.39%
0.40%
-5.69%
8.23%
2.32%
-0.20%
-0.33%
-12.58%
1.44%
-9.01%
2017
7.75%
-2.32%
6.49%
4.18%
5.58%
-2.84%
4.45%
3.57%
-4.69%
3.61%
-0.10%
-2.48%
2016
0.62%
9.33%
7.41%
-3.85%
-1.41%
-2.21%
-0.93%
-5.32%
5.60%
Performance Indicators
The charts below present risk-adjusted performance metrics for Equinix, Inc. Common Stock REIT (EQIX) and compare them to a Benchmark (SPY). These indicators evaluate an investment's returns against its associated risks.
Sharpe ratio
Sortino ratio
Omega ratio
Calmar ratio
Martin ratio
sharpe ratio
The Sharpe ratio helps investors understand how much return they're getting for the level of risk taken. A higher Sharpe ratio indicates better risk-adjusted performance, meaning more reward for each unit of risk.
These values reflect how efficiently the investment has delivered returns relative to its volatility over different time periods. All figures are annualized and based on daily total returns.
The chart below shows the rolling Sharpe ratio of EQIX compared to the benchmark. This view highlights how the investment's risk-adjusted performance has changed over time.
Volatility Chart
The current Equinix, Inc. Common Stock REIT volatility is 1.03%, representing the standart deviation of percentage change in the investments's value, either up or down over the past month. The chart below shows the rolling one-month volatility.
Drawdowns Chart
The Drawdowns chart displays portfolio losses from any high point along the way. It shows the maximum percentage drop from a peak to a trough over a specified period, indicating the risk of significant losses. Although chart shows positive values, it represents the percentage drop from the peak, so a value of 10% means the portfolio has dropped 10% from its highest point.
Income Statement
The income statement provides a summary of a company's revenues, expenses, and profits over a specific period. It shows how much money the company earned (revenues) and how much it spent (expenses), leading to the net income or profit. This statement is crucial for understanding a company's financial performance and profitability.
2025
2024
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
Liabilities And Equity (USD)
40.14B
35.09B
32.65B
30.31B
27.92B
27.01B
23.97B
20.24B
18.69B
12.61B
10.36B
7.82B
7.49B
6.13B
5.79B
Temporary Equity (USD)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
123.90M
84.18M
-
Equity Attributable To Parent (USD)
14.16B
13.53B
12.49B
11.51B
10.88B
10.63B
8.84B
7.22B
6.85B
4.37B
2.75B
2.27B
2.46B
2.34B
1.95B
Equity Attributable To Noncontrolling Interest (USD)
With oil prices surging past $100 due to Middle East tensions and the Fed holding rates steady, AI investors should shift focus from speculative growth stocks to physical infrastructure plays. The article recommends prioritizing companies with contracted capacity, zero debt, and physical assets over software-dependent or highly leveraged positions that are vulnerable to sustained high interest rates and energy costs.
The Motley Fool•Micah Zimmerman
AI Insight
Data center REIT exposed to multiple headwinds: capital-intensive, rate-sensitive, and facing rising energy input costs. Behaves like leveraged utility when rates and power costs spike, making it vulnerable in current macro environment.
Dutch pension fund PDN sold 133,600 shares of LXP Industrial Trust (worth $6.4 million) in Q4 2025, reducing its stake to 1.09% of AUM. Despite a recent revenue decline and underperformance versus the S&P 500, the article suggests LXP remains attractive for income investors due to its 5.91% dividend yield and 97% occupancy rate, making the current lower valuation a better buying opportunity than selling.
The Motley Fool•Robert Izquierdo
AI Insight
Second-largest holding of Pensionfund PDN with $9.97 million (6.6% of AUM), demonstrating institutional investor confidence.
Equinix (EQIX), a real estate investment trust specializing in data center properties, is positioned as an attractive investment to capitalize on the AI-driven data center infrastructure boom. With projected capex reaching $602 billion this year and a potential $3 trillion infrastructure investment supercycle by 2030, Equinix offers steady recurring revenue, 11 consecutive years of dividend increases, and strong fundamentals including $9.2 billion in revenue and 10% projected growth for 2026.
The Motley Fool•Matt Hunter
AI Insight
Positioned as the top stock to play the data center boom with strong fundamentals, 11 consecutive years of dividend increases, recurring revenue model, and critical role in meeting AI infrastructure demand. Trading at all-time highs with 29% YTD gains.
Nebius Group has secured approximately $49 billion in contracted backlog from major AI spenders including Nvidia ($2B investment), Meta ($27B deal), and Microsoft ($17.3-19.4B deal), positioning neoclouds as essential infrastructure providers. The article outlines five investment plays on the neocloud boom, including direct neocloud bets and data center REITs, while acknowledging execution risks and potential cannibalization as hyperscalers build proprietary capacity.
Investing.com•Jaachi Mbachu, Aciarb
AI Insight
World's largest data center operator with 270 properties across 36 countries positioned to benefit from AI infrastructure buildout. Q4 MRR grew 10% YoY, analyst consensus is 'Buy' with target near $1,000, and offers 2.1% dividend. Lower execution risk but lower upside ceiling than neoclouds.
Land & Buildings Investment Management acquired 229,146 additional shares of Centerspace, increasing its stake to 9.19% of the fund's assets. The position is valued at $55.27 million following the $14.4 million purchase. Centerspace, a Midwest and Mountain West apartment REIT, offers stable rental income through its regional focus on affordability and consistent occupancy rather than aggressive rent growth.
The Motley Fool•Eric Trie
AI Insight
Listed as third-largest holding of Land & Buildings fund ($44.37 million, 7.4% of AUM) but no specific news or transaction activity mentioned in the article.
The Vanguard Real Estate ETF (VNQ) offers broad exposure across 158 U.S. REITs with a lower expense ratio (0.13%) and higher dividend yield (3.63%), while the iShares Select U.S. REIT ETF (ICF) concentrates on 30 large-cap REITs with a higher expense ratio (0.32%) and lower yield (2.6%). Despite higher costs, ICF has outperformed VNQ over five years, with $1,117 vs. $1,003 growth on a $1,000 investment, driven by its focus on sector leaders in data centers, cell towers, and healthcare properties.
The Motley Fool•Eric Trie
AI Insight
Equinix is mentioned as a top holding in both funds, indicating its significance in the REIT sector, but no specific performance commentary is provided.
FlexShares Global Quality Real Estate Index Fund (GQRE) and Vanguard Real Estate ETF (VNQ) offer different approaches to real estate investing. GQRE charges higher fees (0.45% vs 0.13%) but provides greater global diversification, higher dividend yield (4.3% vs 3.6%), and outperformed VNQ over the past year (7.6% vs 1.6% return). VNQ offers lower costs, superior liquidity, and focuses on U.S.-listed REITs. The choice depends on investor priorities: cost-conscious investors favor VNQ, while income-focused investors seeking global exposure may prefer GQRE.
The Motley Fool•Andy Gould
AI Insight
Mentioned as a top holding in VNQ (0.35%); included for portfolio composition reference only.
Vanguard Real Estate ETF (VNQ) and iShares Global REIT ETF (REET) are compared as diversified real estate investment options. VNQ offers larger assets under management ($69.6B), slightly lower fees, and higher dividend yield (3.7%), making it ideal for income-focused investors. REET provides broader global diversification with 325 holdings across developed and emerging markets, delivering superior one-year returns (6.5% vs 1.3%), appealing to growth-oriented investors seeking international exposure.
The Motley Fool•Jake Lerch
AI Insight
Identified as a top position in both funds; mentioned descriptively without performance or sentiment commentary.
RWR and RWX are two State Street real estate ETFs with distinct strategies: RWR focuses on U.S. REITs with lower fees (0.25% expense ratio) and $1.8B in AUM, while RWX offers international real estate exposure at higher cost (0.59% expense ratio) with $310.5M in AUM. RWR delivered smaller drawdowns over five years, while RWX posted higher one-year returns. The choice depends on whether investors prioritize cost-efficiency and domestic focus (RWR) or geographic diversification (RWX).
The Motley Fool•Sara Appino
AI Insight
Mentioned as a top holding in RWR (over 24% of assets combined with other top holdings), but no specific sentiment is expressed about the company itself.
The article compares two U.S. REIT ETFs: RWR and ICF. RWR offers broader diversification with nearly 100 holdings, a lower expense ratio (0.25% vs. 0.32%), and a higher dividend yield (3.4% vs. 2.6%), making it more suitable for most long-term investors. ICF is more concentrated with 30 holdings and heavier exposure to large-cap REITs like Equinix and Welltower, appealing to investors seeking conviction in top names but with higher volatility and costs.
The Motley Fool•Andy Gould
AI Insight
Mentioned as a top holding in both ETFs, representing a dominant large-cap REIT. No specific performance judgment is made; it's noted as a major component of concentrated portfolios.