Investor appetite for master limited partnerships (MLPs) has grown steadily for the past several years. Drivers include the hunt for yield in a low-yield environment and the search for businesses that can profit in a plodding U.S. economy. Wall Street continues to fuel this appetite for MLPs with products that promise to make life easier with features like Form 1099 tax reporting and daily liquidity. These products include closed-end funds, open-end mutual funds, exchange-traded notes and exchange-traded funds.
The number of MLP-dedicated products has grown from 13 products totaling $6 billion at the end of 2009, to 59 products with aggregate market cap of over $55 billion at the end of 2013, a staggering 900% increase in three years. While the aggregate market cap of MLPs also grew during this period from $160 billion to $590 billion, the percentage of MLPs held in publicly traded products grew from 3.7% to 9.3%. This report will examine the costs and benefits of each in an attempt to help investors determine which option is most suitable for their portfolio. The focus will be on midstream energy-infrastructure-dedicated MLP investment options.
MLP Investment Options
The investment appeal of the MLP asset class is easy to understand. Historically, MLPs have generated cash flows that are paid to investors quarterly and have grown faster than the rate of inflation. Since its inception in 2006, the Alerian MLP Index has had an average annual return of 15.6% versus 7.3% for U.S. equities (S&P 500 Index) and 5.2% for U.S. investment-grade bonds (Barclays Aggregate Bond Index). However, many investors are reluctant to invest in MLPs due to administrative and tax considerations. MLPs are publicly traded partnerships that trade on an exchange, but typically generate a schedule K-1 rather than a Form 1099 for tax reporting. An investor receives one K-1 for each MLP owned, so a well-diversified portfolio of 15 individual MLPs will generate 15 K-1s. In addition, most MLPs generate unrelated business taxable income (UBTI), which some IRA and other tax-exempt investors prefer to avoid.
A key selling point of the new wave of publicly traded MLP investment options is the issuance of a tax form 1099 (instead of K-1s). Several of the structures also transform UBTI to other forms of income, and all provide daily liquidity. The fundamental challenge is to determine if the benefits of these structures outweigh the costs, which may include added fees and expenses, and an additional layer of taxes on the investment return. We will first look at traditional MLP investment options, and then at this new breed of investment vehicles.
Traditional MLP Investment Options
Investors seeking professional MLP management prior to the formation of the newer MLP products have historically relied on two options: separately managed accounts and MLP investment partnerships.
A separately managed account (SMA) preserves the tax benefits of MLP investing while also facilitating active, professional management. The key benefits of this structure are the full flow-through of MLP tax benefits, daily liquidity, professional management, and fees and expenses typically lower than other actively managed investment options. Conversely, investors receive multiple K-1s and may have to file tax returns in multiple states. SMAs often generate UBTI and may not be appropriate for qualified accounts or tax-exempt investors. Minimum investment requirements are typically around $250,000.
The other option, a commingled investment partnership, offers the benefits of a diversified portfolio and professional management, and adds the benefit of a consolidated K-1. Instead of receiving 15 K-1s in an SMA, for example, the investor receives a single K-1. As a partnership, this structure provides for the full flow-through of the tax benefits of MLPs. Any state tax filing requirements are handled within the partnership, but UBTI may still be generated. Fees and expenses on this type of structure vary widely depending on the strategy. Investors in a partnership are typically offered monthly or quarterly liquidity, and investment is limited to either accredited investors or qualified purchasers with relatively high investment minimums.
New MLP Investment Options
As the popularity of MLPs has grown, so has the demand for investment options with simplified tax requirements, such as mutual funds, ETFs and ETNs. The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 reduced the barriers to MLP investing for mutual funds and registered investment companies (RICs), but also stipulated that RICs could not invest more than 25% of fund assets in publicly traded partnership securities (i.e., MLPs) to maintain their preferential tax status. MLP-focused mutual funds, closed-end funds and exchange-traded funds have two choices: invest entirely in K-1-issuing MLPs, forgo RIC tax status and trigger a fund-level tax; or limit investment in K-1-issuing MLPs to 25% and retain RIC tax status (no fund-level tax). In the latter scenario, the question then becomes, how do you invest the other 75% of fund assets?