No, I don't think this is right.
First off, nobody actually does calculations in GR using SI units. The normal way you would work would be to use geometrized units, in which G=c=1, finish the calculation, and then at the end if you had a result where you needed to plug in numerical data, reinsert the factors of G and c.
The next thing to realize is that it's often natural to use coordinate systems where different coordinates have different units, e.g., spherical coordinates in which r and t have units of distance, but the the angles are unitless. When you write out a tensor in terms of its components, in this type of mixed-unit coordinate system, the different components of the tensor can all have different units. Therefore it doesn't always make sense to talk about what units a tensor has.
But suppose we're using a coordinate system such that all the coordinates have units of distance. Then the metric is unitless. The Christoffel symbols are derivatives of the metric, so they have units of distance^-1. The Riemann tensor can be expressed in terms of derivatives of the Christoffel symbols, so it has units of distance^-2. So does the Ricci tensor. Therefore in geometrized units, the stress-energy tensor also has units of distance^-2. This makes sense because the stress-energy tensor can be thought of in the Newtonian limit as a mass density, and mass has units of distance in geometrized units, so mass density is distance/distance^3=distance^-2.
This means that the units of the stress-energy tensor in SI can't be Newtons, because Newtons are unitless in geometrized units.