PaulS
Touchdown! Greaser!
Anybody know anything about them???
Thanks, that was exactly what I was looking for. So oil is at a low now, would this be a good time to buy? How is the liquidity determined? Do they have a term? Complete neophyte here, trying to figure this out.
some mistakes in the posts above
the whole point of an MLP is that it acts like a partnership but it IS publicly traded. I also acts like sort of a tax-deferred investment. The distributions that you receive every quarter and not taxed as capital gains, but your basis in the shares (like shares but called "units") are reduced. If you keep the units a long time (long after the basis is reduced to zero) you come out ahead on taxes. If you sell in the short term, your reduces basis may mean your total tax bill is quite a big chunk of the distributions.
a MLP (master limited partnership) is a specific thing, it was originally dreamed up as a way to make it easier to raise money for extremely capital intensive, long-paying enterprises. That's why you mostly see them owning things like pipelines, property with stands of timber, etc. One of the ways to qualify to be an MLP is for the partnership to derive most of it's income directly from natural resources.Okay we are talking about two different things. I was assuming that the OP was referring to closed investments (S corps or limited partnerships.) I see there is a type of partnership that is publicly traded. I do not have experience with those.
you are talking about one very narrow incarnation, when an oil company created a separate MLP to own a well. That's but one of thousands of uses of a MLP. Many MLP's are stand-alone businesses that simply choose to organize as an MLP instead of as a corporation, for tax purposes.I have no idea about the tax consequences of the investment.
I will say that from an oil company perspective, what gets sold to the MLPs are quite often non-operated interests which is typically a very weak position in terms of ownership. The non-op interest owner typically has no say and can exert very little influence on day-to-day operations which means the operator makes all spending decisions and the non-op gets to pay. Typically there is a voting system on major expenditures so the non-op gets some say in that spending.
Anyway, back to the day-to-day stuff. How a well or group of wells is operated has a huge influence on the value. If the operator makes a bad choice or simply neglects a property it's value can go to zilch really quick. There is no guarantee that a well will perform like someone in an office in Houston or Dallas or New York says.
Long story made short, if the MLP doesn't have an excellent track record with a very stable management team with oil industry experience, stay away.
you are talking about one very narrow incarnation, when an oil company created a separate MLP to own a well. That's but one of thousands of uses of a MLP. Many MLP's are stand-alone businesses that simply choose to organize as an MLP instead of as a corporation, for tax purposes.
could be anything. ETP, EEP, etc certainly don't fit your description. I would (and do) own them before any oil majors. They make money all the time regardless of oil prices.Thread title?
could be anything. ETP, EEP, etc certainly don't fit your description. I would (and do) own them before any oil majors. They make money all the time regardless of oil prices.