Managed Assets
I help people and institutions manage money. My firm is called Guzman Investment Strategies, a Florida-based registered investment adviser, with an office (where I am) in Austin, TX.
Email me if you think I might be able to help you.Click here to sign up to receive Guzman & Company MLP equity research.
Connect
Barefoot Books
Links to My Stuff
Categories
Other Links
Archives
Monthly Archives: January 2012
Your MLP Tax Questions Unanswered
A few months ago, in this post, I was very excited to announce a pending guest blog post by Tim Fenn, in which he would answer your tax questions. It was very gracious of Tim to agree to provide free content to the blog and all of you seemed very excited to get some answers. I was excited to have my first guest post.
Everything looked good to go, but when Tim threw himself at the mercy of the nameless, faceless attorneys of his Ethics Committee to check on whether he could do the post, he was shut down. Apparently, giving legal advice to non-clients is an issue.
(decision came down from on high: there will be no MLP Tax Q&A)
I understand all of that, but I thought since each of you took the time to write out some very good questions, I would list them here and maybe the crowd (or in the case of this blog, small gathering) can source the answers. I will answer a few, but please understand, I am not an attorney or an accountant, so like every genius person on Seeking Alpha that writes about MLP taxes, don’t take my advice, check with a CPA or tax attorney.
Your Questions
UBTI recapture in an IRA? When you sell an MLP in any account, there is ordinary income recapture. But in an IRA, is there anything such as UBTI recapture? In other words, beyond the annual UBTI tax (assuming you are above the $1,000 threshold) is there some cumulative UBTI tax that is triggered when I sell an MLP I have owned for a long time in an IRA?
- When you sell an MLP in a regular taxable account, the difference between your original purchase price and your adjusted basis (adjusted down for distributions, and up for allocated income) is recaptured at ordinary income tax rates. The difference between your selling price and the original purchase price is taxed at capital gains rates.
- When you sell an MLP in a IRA or otherwise tax-exempt account, the part that would have been considered ordinary income recapture above would be taxed at UBTI’s graduated tax rates (for any amount above $1,000). So, there are two components of UBTI: the annual UBTI that gets allocated each year, and there is the UBTI recapture upon sale.
Step up in Basis: What happens to the cost basis of an MLP unit once a holder dies and the unit is passed on to their heirs?
- Stepped up.
Tax Reform and MLPs: What is the general feeling of experts you speak with in regards to any changes in the tax status of MLPs as partnerships? Is there something that might happen in the next 12 months to increase the risk of a change in MLP tax status?
Funds vs. Direct Ownership: Without getting into too much detail could you give a brief description on the difference between owning a closed-end MLP fund and owning the MLP unit directly.
Distribution Reinvestment: If you reinvest distributions each quarter over many years, is your tax basis tracked on a net position basis (i.e. one position per partnership) or for each specific trade of the MLP?
Mineral Depletion: Can you explain the mineral depletion allowance for coal royalty MLPs? What is it, how is it calculated, what does it offset, it is true that depletion (unlike depreciation) does not get recaptured on sale? How does it impact cost basis?
Renewable MLPs: Do you think some day there will be renewable MLPs, like wind or solar energy MLPs? What about water distribution and storage MLPs?
Qualified: You get asked all the time about whether something produces qualifying MLP income, what is the wildest asset class you have been asked about?
Basis: How do you calculate your current tax basis in an MLP from the info provided on a K-1. Do suspended losses add to basis? If so, presumably the suspended losses are “consumed” by distributions, and how does one properly account for that? I think that the whole question of basis is something of a mystery to many people, and a thorough review would be appreciated by all.
C-Corp Purchases by MLP: My question is in relation to the recent MLP deals involving an MLP acquiring C corporations (e.g. Kinder Morgan/El Paso Corporation and Energy Transfer/Southern Union Company) – Obviously, the fact that the underlying assets acquired are within corporate solution minimizes the overall tax efficiency of the MLPs’ traditional operating structure from a tax perspective. Liquidating these C corporations would come at a substantial tax cost, however, do you see this as a possibility with respect to these companies or would you at least expect a distribution of the qualified assets (considering the tax cost of this as well under 311(b)) at some in the future? In other words, does it appear to you that these MLPs intend to maintain the business of the C corporation targets within corporate solution or to migrate them towards more of a traditional MLP flow through structure. Further, do you anticipate that this trend in MLPs acquiring C corporations will continue?
Good questions everyone, feel free to give your own free and unauthorized legal and tax advice in the comments below.
Disclosure: The information in this article is not meant to be financial advice, we are not your financial advisor and I am posting my comments for informational purposes only.
MLP Week Thoughts: Quick Start Before Flashy Friday
MLPs got off to a solid start to 2012, with the Alerian MLP Index finishing the first week up 1.1% and making new all time highs the first 3 trading days, before a dramatic but ultimately small drop on Friday. The MLP Index lagged a bit compared with stocks and gold for the week, each of which seem to move in the same direction these days. The new role for MLPs of late has been a defensive one, so in a week when economic data points are o.k. and stocks are up, MLPs are going to lag.
January historically has been the best month for MLPs, with a median return of 3.5% over the last 15 years. On an individual retail investor level, you can understand why, beyond annual portfolio rebalancing. There is a tangible benefit to waiting to buy MLPs until the calendar year ends. If you buy an MLP or rotate from one MLP to another in mid-December, you have to fill out an additional K-1 for this year’s tax return. If you wait until January, that additional K-1 (and any tax impact from the sale) gets delayed an extra 12 months.
If you were watching MLPs trading the last few days of December, you could see the pent up demand building. It was easy to buy names like NKA, OXF and BWP as they stumbled into the end of the year, even as the MLP Index and leaders from 2011 marched higher. But all of a sudden this week, the laggards from the last month gapped up. See below 30 day chart for NKA, that looks very similar to the others above.
For the large cap MLPs (and therefore for the MLP Index), this first week was a continuation of the last 90 days (with the exception of Friday, more on that below). After bottoming on October 4th MLPs have been on fire, up nearly 20% as a sector. The chart below highlights how many days have been positive for the MLP Index across various time periods. It shows that in the 65 trading days since October 4th, MLPs have been up 68% of the days.
Above 65% over any substantial amount of time is unsustainably high when compared with the last few years. In 2010 and 2009, the MLP Index was positive around 60% of the trading days, during two very strong (and probably not repeatable) years. The bottom line is don’t expect this euphoric pace to continue for the next 12 months.
Drop and Pop – MLP Mini Crash
At around 11:30 am on Friday, several large cap MLPs began selling off on large volume. Can’t really be sure what happened, but it appears a massive (and possibly erroneous) sell order, potentially in Plains All American, triggered the selloff. PAA dropped more than the other significantly affected MLPs (like EPD, EEP, MMP). That massive sell order triggered stop losses and triggered program sell orders in related MLPs, sending other large caps down sharply for a half hour or so. PAA went from being up 0.2% on the day at 11:30 to down 6.0%, a drop of more than $4.50 per unit in a matter of a few minutes. PAA recovered and finished the day down only 1.3%.
The mini crash received a lot of press for something that happened in the MLP sector, including the two articles below.
- Article at Financial Times with a quote from me – Energy Security Sell-off Worries Traders
- Article at WSJ’s Market Beat - Curse These Sausage Fingers: Plains All American Pipeline Edition
It was fascinating to see the situation unfolding on Twitter and Stocktwits. More people are following the MLP sector than ever before, which becomes very clear when something like this happens, and all of a sudden for a few minutes, everyone is talking about MLPs (or at least more than I thought paid attention or cared). I welcome the ever growing awareness of MLPs in mainstream investing media, but am also wary of too much excitement pushing values up too high too fast…
Related:
Disclosure: The information in this article is not meant to be financial advice, we are not your financial advisor and I am posting my comments for informational purposes only.
MLP Winners and Losers: Strength in Fertilizer and Small Cap MLPs
Starting this week, I’ll be breaking up my weekly post into 2 posts: Winners and Losers and Week Thoughts. Also, I won’t be wrapping up the news of the week in the MLP space anymore, it just seems like a waste of time. If there is an important news item that warrants comment, I’ll comment on it, but I don’t think you are coming here for an inclusive list of what happened in the MLP space. Each week, the goal will be to come out with this recap of winners and losers on Friday, then publish Week Thoughts on Saturday or Sunday. If everyone hates that format, let me know, but the weekly posts were getting unwieldy and it seems like breaking them up will allow me to highlight certain information better.
Winners and Losers
The theme this week was small cap MLPs that were beaten down in 2011. With the exception of ARLP, each of the other 4 best performing MLPs this week were down more than 20% last year. This bounce back for high beta 2011 losers, appears to be a result of investors buying any MLPs that haven’t yet participated in the nearly 20% sector-wide rally off the October 4th lows. Most of the top five this week are not in the Alerian MLP Index, hence the wide disparity between the winners and the index (which tracks the 50 largest MLPs).
On the downside, there appears to have been profit taking or rotation out of some of the highest flying MLPs of the last 3 months. OILT was up 22.7% from October 4th through year end, SXL was up 36.7% during that time, and KMP was up 27.1%. The other two losers (APU and FGP) are propane MLPs that have continued to languish as weather in the fourth quarter was milder than normal, likely leading to lower demand for propane.
Other Notes:
- MLP general partner holding companies had a solid week, with average returns of 2.8%, helped by ATLS gaining 10.5%
- Variable distribution MLPs, particularly fertilizer MLPs, had a great week:
- RNF up 18.5%
- UAN up 11.3%
- TNH up 8.8%
Disclosure: The information in this article is not meant to be financial advice, we are not your financial advisor and I am posting my comments for informational purposes only.





