Master Limited Partnerships: Victims of Success

Great returns and high yields have brought MLPs a lot of attention. But the spotlight may have a negative impact on the group's performance.

Master limited partnerships -- relatively obscure, high-yielding investments that flourished over the past decade while the rest of the stock market stagnated -- are attracting a lot of attention. Maybe too much of it, in the view of some of their fans. Reports of double-digit total returns and 6%-plus current yields are all over the investing blogs, and a flurry of new MLPs are on the way. The first mutual funds -- and an exchange-traded fund -- focusing on MLPs launched this year, and an increasing number of institutional investors are getting into the game. Longtime MLP watchers wonder whether the category is destined to crumble beneath a landslide of greed.

Their concerns are valid. The situation reminds me of how real estate investment trusts and cargo-shipping stocks, two other high-yielding niche categories, busted after their booms attracted a rush of capital. And MLPs have indeed boomed. Over the past ten years through September 3, the Alerian MLP index, which tracks 50 energy MLPs (a few MLPs are not related to energy), returned a stunning 18.5% annualized. Over the same period, Standard & Poor's 500-stock index lost 1.3% a year. The Alerian index currently yields 6.7%.

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Jeffrey R. Kosnett
Senior Editor, Kiplinger's Personal Finance
Kosnett is the editor of Kiplinger's Investing for Income and writes the "Cash in Hand" column for Kiplinger's Personal Finance. He is an income-investing expert who covers bonds, real estate investment trusts, oil and gas income deals, dividend stocks and anything else that pays interest and dividends. He joined Kiplinger in 1981 after six years in newspapers, including the Baltimore Sun. He is a 1976 journalism graduate from the Medill School at Northwestern University and completed an executive program at the Carnegie-Mellon University business school in 1978.