3 MLP ETFs To Consider Now

 | Jul 18, 2014 05:38PM ET

The market environment has been very challenging for the income investors. Traditional income assets currently produce miniscule yields and some even fail to deliver above-inflation returns. Search for higher yields sometimes lures investors to risky assets.

Many high-yielding investments had positive returns during the first-half of this year, as interest rates plunged despite Fed’s taper. That situation may change if interest rates start creeping up, particularly in view of rising inflation worries. Further, most of these assets now look expensive compared to their growth potential. MLPs represent an attractive investment option for income-focused investors in the current environment.  In addition to high yields (~4% to 6% currently), MLPs have relatively stable cash flows and solid growth potential. Further, research suggests that there is no material correlation between interest rates and MLPs’ performance.

Energy production boom in the US remains the long-term growth driver for MLPs. With their spectacular returns of 366% during the last 10 years (Alerian MLP Index return), it is not surprising that MLPs have surged in popularity in recent years.

However MLPs are complicated structures and investors need to understand them properly before investing.

Why invest in MLPs?

Most MLPs are in involved in processing and transportation of energy commodities such as natural gas, crude oil, and refined products, under long term contracts.  

As such they have relatively consistent and predictable cash flows, unlike exploration and production (E&P) companies, whose profits are highly correlated with commodity prices.

As MLPs are structured as pass-through entities—they do not pay taxes at the entity level and are thus are able to pay out most of their earnings to investors.

Further, MLPs have low correlations with many other asset classes including equities and commodities and thus add diversification benefits to the portfolios.

As the energy industry continues to evolve and grow with revolutionary developments in the field of unconventional energy, MLPs represent a great way to benefit from the growth.

MLPs and Rising Rates

Like all high income products, MLPs also tend to react negatively to rise in interest rates initially. But  ) has returned 59.43% since inception, while the underlying index returned 107.13% during the same period (as of June 30, 2014).

As a result of the adverse tax issues, AMLP’s expense ratio before deferred taxes is 0.85% but gross expense ratio is extremely high at 8.56% currently.

Despite its underperformance relative to the index, investors have continued to pour money into the fund, which has accumulated more than $9 billion in AUM so far. One advantage of investing in AMLP is its lower volatility compared with MLP ETNs. Lower volatility results from its ability to reverse some of deferred tax liabilities when the market is down.

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ETNs typically eliminate some of these complex tax consequences as they do actually not hold any securities. However the investors should remember than ETNs are unsecured debt instruments and carry credit risk.