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AMLP

Alerian MLP ETF

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r/investingSee Post

3rd year of maxing out my roth ira. How do my allocations look

r/StockMarketSee Post

Looking to invest into AMLP

r/stocksSee Post

Looking to dive into AMLP! :)

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

The case for AMLP, an ETF for the oil and gas midstream sector!

r/stocksSee Post

Question about finding the dividend yield

Mentions

Look into AMLP or MLPX for etf exposure to MLPs. Both will not require a K1 come April. Or if you want to roll with individual MLP... EPD should top of your list. Then look for ROC type ETFs like QQQi or equivalent. Reminder... im mo financial advisor and these are just suggestions. Im 51 with around 2.3m in Roth 401k and Roth IRA. The above mentions are on my dividend list.

Personally, I would dollar cost average. The market value is high right now. We could get big correction. If so, when you see a big downturn, put more in then. On the other hand, there are dividend producing products, like AMLP and UTG that are fairly valued. There are some individual stocks that seem fairly valued. Personally, I’ve been putting money into Micron. If you’re not interested in stock picking and are going ETF’s, right now I would dollar cost average. Good luck.

Mentions:#AMLP#UTG
r/investingSee Comment

Very difficult, I totally agree. One option is a municipal bond fund. I had one recently that paid 4% but there are no federal taxes. Another option is investing for income with ETF’s. I own AMLP, an etf with gas pipelines paying around 8% and UTG-etf based on utilities paying around 6%. I would consider seeing an advisor. I use Morgan Stanley, I’ve been happy. So, you could do income based investments with a small amount in a board market index fund. You can then use the revenue to invest back into the broad market fund. It’s just one idea. It’s nice to get dividend payments.

Mentions:#AMLP#UTG
r/stocksSee Comment

Midstream has been my go-to hedge/balance in energy. It’s a lot steadier than the broad energy ETFs and big oil companies, at least over the past 5 years. I like the Alerian MLP index products — AMLP for straight exposure, or even MLPR (1.5x leveraged) if you want some extra juice. TPYP (North American pipeline ETF) has also held up really well post-2022 and seems less tied to day-to-day oil price swings. If you’d rather pick single stocks, just look at the top holdings of AMLP or TPYP — that’s basically the who’s who of midstream. Solid cash flows, nice distributions, and you don’t have to stress as much about crude bouncing between $60–80.

r/investingSee Comment

I would DCA in. The market is expensive according to the people who would know. I’ve been buying more income. Problem is that you have to pay capital gains on them. One way is a covered call etf. QQQI uses this technique to achieve a 13% annual yield with monthly payouts. It limits downside risk due to continued payouts according to what I’ve read. AMLP is an etf that pays 8%. It’s natural gas pipeline companies, much needed. UTG is based on utilities, 6.5% yield. AMLP and UTG both own “real assets”. They should also limit downside risk. Just some thoughts. It’s hard to know exactly what to do.

r/StockMarketSee Comment

I have some energy stocks and etfs as part of my portfolio, a mix of different sources of energy.  GRID, ICLN, AMLP, VNOM, LNG, NEE and as a higher risk speculative play PROP.  

r/investingSee Comment

I’m an equity investor though recently I’ve been putting into equities with real assets. US natural gas pipeline company ETF named AMLP. It pays an 8% yield. Considering the increased U.S. energy needs for AI, I think it’s a winner. UTG is an ETF of utilities, pays just over 6%. That’s 7% combined obviously. You put 250K at 7%, that’s 17,500 a year. That’s almost 1500 a month. No insurance, repairs, yard work or other hassles. That’s just me though. I’m not sure what housing is like in Norway.

Mentions:#AMLP#UTG
r/stocksSee Comment

AMLP. Mid-stream ETF that pays a great dividend.

Mentions:#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

I would follow your instincts. Split it up into a few broad index funds. Maybe dollar cost average in over time. I like AMLP which pays 8% and UGT which pays 6%. One is in natural gas pipeline companies, UGT is in utilities and other real assets. They worth a look for part of it.

Mentions:#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

Sorry about your loss, congratulations on the money. About 1/9 th of my taxed brokerage account in in AMLP. Allerian midstream partners. It’s an etf of natural gas pipeline companies. You not gonna get huge gains but it pays around 7.7%. No K-1 tax form either. Just one thought.

Mentions:#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

1. I’m a long term Microsoft owner 2. AMZn-long term holder, just got more on the pullback. 3. AMLP- it’s an etf of Master Limited Partnerships for US natural gas pipelines. You not gonna make a ton on the price but it pays close to an 8% yield. No K-1 tax forms.

Mentions:#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

Yea man, great interest rate and the interest is deductible. I’d stash it. Don’t know where exactly, but here is one suggestion: AMLP- it’s etf of natural gas pipeline companies. It pays close to 8%. I think we gonna keep moving gas around. With 220 that’s 16 K a year, around 13 -14 K after capital gains, that you can roll into an S&P 500 index fund. I’ve owned it for about a year and the share price is up about 5%. Just one idea. It’s 9-10% of my portfolio so if it implodes I’ll be crying with you.

Mentions:#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

Look into an etf called AMLP, pays good dividends. Its hard to say what stock to put in ant any given time. I like AMD, the chipmaker.

Mentions:#AMLP#AMD
r/investingSee Comment

I’ve been investing in an etf called AMLP. It’s an etf of natural gas pipeline companies in the USA. It pays close to 8%. It will likely appreciate some. These are some of the best and safest companies out there.

Mentions:#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

One option is AMLP. Alerian Midstrean partners. It’s an etf paying around approx x. 7.5Z.

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r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

AMLP is paying between 7-8%

Mentions:#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

So... that's a much more complicated question. Funds like AMLP serve a different purpose in a portfolio than a fund like VOO. It really depends on things like your risk tolerance, tax situation, etc. For someone that is seeking income vs growth - a dividend fund like AMLP may make sense. And from a total return perspective - mid-stream infrastructure has done well in the past 5 years. But in the past 10-15 years - pretty flat. So - it kinda just depends on things like your age, need for income, etc. etc.

Mentions:#AMLP#VOO
r/investingSee Comment

The ETF AMLP is a fund. Fund fees are always net of the gains in an ETF. You are not directly paying fund's 0.85 expenses. I am not sure what you mean by dividend and fees. The fund distributes both return of capital and qualified dividends every quarter. You are supposed to be paying taxes on those distributions every year already unless you hold the ETF in a tax advantaged account like an IRA. And your total return gain will depend on whether you are reinvesting dividends or not. Also - this fund is kinda neat in the sense that it is a fund that invests in MLPs (master limited partnerships) but it removes the need to have to file a K-1 every year. The disadvantage is the higher expense ratio for the extra convenience.

Mentions:#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

Can someone help me understand the overall gains from investing in AMLP when weighing in fees, taxes, and dividends? A friend of mine who works in finance suggested it to me years ago as a set and forget stock due to its dividend yield, but I always read its fee structure is prohibitive and so I’m unsure of how valuable it is vs doing something like VOO I know its expense ratio is .85, its dividend yield is 7.89.

Mentions:#AMLP#VOO
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

Oil. Aramco, Oxy, Chevron , AMLP, etc

Mentions:#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

Take the money. Invest the money. then open a brokerage account that provides you a bonus of at least $500 (tastytrade, citi). Then put the money in a diversified ETFs with plenty of income generating stocks in the mix. I used Energy stocks, div growth stocks and in particular AMLP to get dividends on oil/gas. No k1. Then 6-9 months later, move that brokerage account to another brokerage for another $300-500 bonus. In 5 years you could do this multiple times and even go back to earlier ones. Some work but it's also develops your hustle and like PT this is Financial Training to make you stronger with money.

Mentions:#AMLP
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

Damn silly me just recently bought some AMLP

Mentions:#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

You can buy government debt, which is investing in taxes.  But anything really boring is a decent inflation hedge. Food, utilities, energy etc. Energy. The biggest x factor on things are like legislation.  Tobacco used to be one, but there legislation is scary. My big holding on that half the annual report is details about laws and such.  I like pipelines in oil sector and natural gas. MLPA, AMLP ETFs to avoid complicated K1s.  But things like a mass hysteria on gas stoves at any moment could upend stability of common sense. That was a scary moment for my portfolio lol. 

Mentions:#MLPA#AMLP
r/StockMarketSee Comment

Trump ruining the market every few weeks is leading to big buying opportunities. Ignore his dumbass rhetoric, focus on fundamentally great stocks and buy the dip. The fundamentals of the American economy are still strong so the people overreacting to Trump and selling are going to regret it in the long term. For example: Look at ET and EPD or AMLP, a number of countries have already mentioned that they will buy more American Nat Gas, there are very simple ways to play that and those stocks are cheap since the drop in the past few days.

Mentions:#ET#EPD#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

One I have is something like JEPI. No guarantees, but it pays around 7%. that is close to what you "need". But it absolutely has risk. It is equity based and subject to market pressures. It is somewhat hedged, but still an equity fund. There are also high dividend payers like MLPs, REITS, I have held AMLP and NLY for years and they have paid big for a long time. AMLP has also up on top of the bif dividend it has paid me. But again, with the return comes risk. I have only a small percentage of my portfolio in these two.

r/investingSee Comment

Increased my AMLP holdings and added JBBB today.

Mentions:#AMLP#JBBB
r/stocksSee Comment

I’m always skeptical to invest in these new LNG names. They always have one issue or another that can tank their price. I was following $NFE for a while last year and never pulled the trigger but they just kept missing deadlines. Price has tanked a lot. That being said, I’m pretty bullish on natural gas for the short term. I’d go $ET for an individual name or $AMLP for an ETF.

r/investingSee Comment

I agree with slowly building a bigger emergency fund and maybe some diversity into lower volatile position as a hedge. Could add some MLPs and REITs on dips, I have positions in AMLP and HYIN for my alts. The fact that high yield bonds haven't flinched means this pullback isn't even taken seriously yet, so I wouldn't go into sell everything mode

Mentions:#AMLP#HYIN
r/stocksSee Comment

If etfs allowed: VDE (energy etf), SGOL (physical gold etf), FLBR (Brazil etf) or AMLP (energy infrastructure etf) can't decide on the latter If no etfs allowed: ExxonMobil, CocaCola, MasterCard

r/investingSee Comment

I hold both plus MLPA they are solid, I would suggest adding something like MLPA or AMLP

Mentions:#MLPA#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

MLPs (Master Limited Partnerships) or PTP (Publicly Traded Partnerships) are a nightmare to deal with at tax time. You need large investments to make these viable for the trade off to having deferred tax benefits of owning these. I accidentally buy one of these here and there and don't realize it til the deed is done. There is always something "new" every year and then if they change the rules after you filed, you have to amend and that's another crazy mess. Most people don't know how to deal with them and depending on what states the MLP/PTP does business in, you are supposed to file State tax returns in those states as well. The Better option: Buy ETF's that own these and you just own the common shares of the ETF and let the fund managers deal with all the tax filings. A good example is: AMLP (ALPS ALERIAN MLP ETF) . Solid returns, and just an easy way to buy those MLPs and still save on the tax return time/money.

Mentions:#MLP#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

Energy, energy infrastructure, US Energy independence... I have a mix of those and they're all doing quite well. Look at SRV, NXG, USAI, ENB, ENFR, HESS and HESM, AMLP, MLPA, MLPX... there's a lot to choose from.

r/stocksSee Comment

Quantitative research still matters, I spotted good chances with TSLA ($200 presplit), MRNA($75), GLD (even though etf $152), PFE at $25 ahead of it. In addition, I also use technicals to spot low price (naturally lot of technical haters) for better appreciation. Recent buy is BRK-B (DCA) at $399, GLD (DCA) at $215 and AMLP (again ETF) At $44.65 Without quantitative and technical research, I do not buy any stocks. There may be many winners that I do not spot, but whatever I pick that I wanted to ensure it is good. I can not think of buying any stock without quatitative and technical research.

r/stocksSee Comment

Some high yield stuff like JEPI, JEPQ, AMLP (especially in a Roth). SCHD and RSP also very popular. Other stuff in small cap and similar ETFs with low mag 7 exposure. VTSAX is returning 14% yoy last five years while VBTLX is returning 0.2%. I see no reason to have a penny in bonds if you are young.

r/StockMarketSee Comment

You are already decently diverse 40% VOO 25% QQQ for 65% of a portfolio that is very reasonable. Cash position just slap in BIL or sGoV very liquid no risk 5.2% yield monthly dividend if you are worried about market chaos/crash build a larger then normal 'cash' position then sweep in with it buying at discounts, lets say a 10-15% cash position. With the remaining 20-25% of your portfolio use for sector rotations XLU is fine for down turns but will under perform during long bear markets, same with petro, and other energy things like MLPA/AMLP just sort of chug along with dividends fine during bear markets but under perform over long time frames. Bull market more towards finance/banking, REITs, Small caps like Russel 2000. Bear more towards utilities, energy and healthcare. Making high gains in a bear/recession is complex.

r/stocksSee Comment

Head to a dividend sub reddit, my portfolio is about 75% dividends stock average around 6% yield its what a live on. The remainder I value hunt, swing trade/rotate each year. Really not to hard you want a mix of dividends with growth potential, adding higher dividend plays with lower growth potential until you reach desired yearly living expense. SCHD as a base, with a little diversity like DIVO XLU stuff like that etfs. Add in higher dividend lower growth like MO, AMLP/MLPA.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

Dang how did you post an image in comments. Probably helpful to compare PAA to AMLP since that is an ETF basically tracking the midstream. PAA up about 3.7% compared to AMLP over the last month. If you look at the last 3 months they tracked pretty closely until about April

Mentions:#PAA#AMLP
r/stocksSee Comment

List looks solid, question is - which do you overweight/underweight, etc? Also qualified vs ordinary dividends on some of these are something to watch. I continue to like ARCC personally. Also, someone mentioned AMLP if you don't want to mess with K1s on MLPs.

Mentions:#ARCC#AMLP
r/stocksSee Comment

Trust me, I am an idiot. But if you want dividend income from MLPs you might consider this AMLP. I googled the dividend stuff below. Not financial advice! Distributions from the Alerian MLP ETF (AMLP) are considered qualified dividends or returns of capital, and are taxed at long-term capital gains rates or deferred, respectively. Qualified dividends are taxed at more favorable rates than ordinary income. Since its inception, 80% of AMLP's distributions have been tax deferred.

Mentions:#AMLP#MLP
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

Kinda late. But yeah Carl Icahn added AMLP like when it was 30 last year

Mentions:#AMLP
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

AMLP is the etf that holds it

Mentions:#AMLP
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

VGT, VOO, SCHD, some CEF's, Berkshire Hathaway, OBDC, ADX, AMLP, and about 40% T Bills, CD's and SWVXX. And, of course, VOO is pretty SPYish.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

Plus a lot of oil and gas. IXC and AMLP saved me last year.

Mentions:#IXC#AMLP
r/stocksSee Comment

Checking my account this morning, I was surprised to see an extra $980 in cash balance. Then I realized that was my QUARTERLY dividend from the 1000 sh or Altria just distributed yesterday. Yup, Altria has a 9% dividend yield. Also recently bought some JNK that yields 6.6%, was also looking at AMLP with 7.6% for my 401k acct. Point is, if you like dividends, there are perhaps better alternatives than 2% dividend yield.

Mentions:#JNK#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

That a very volatile portfolio. By chasing yield you may more principal than you get in income. If you're looking for a low-cost but diversified domestic equity fund for income and growth, look at SCHD and VYM. There's no way I would put something like AMLP or JEPI as 25% of my portfolio.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

AMLP, EPD, ENB (energy infrastructure companies) all pay between 7-8%

Mentions:#AMLP#EPD#ENB
r/investingSee Comment

Oil and Gas are great. AMLP, EPD, XLE good sector index. All kinds of ETFs for metals, Sprott is a good firm....PHLV, PHYS. Also SIL, SGDM. I'm some of these, in cash and waiting for lower prices though. I'd stay clear of individual miners, especially the Juniors, high risk.

r/StockMarketSee Comment

AMLP isnt a semiconductor ETF but thank you for the suggestion. I’m stacking that in my roth

Mentions:#AMLP
r/stocksSee Comment

AMLP isn't a company, it's [Alerian's MLP ETF](https://www.alpsfunds.com/exchange-traded-funds/amlp), so just a basket of your large cap midstream companies (ET, EPD, MMP, PAA, CEQP, etc)

r/stocksSee Comment

ICLN (renewables), XLE (s&p 500 energy sector), IEO (upstream), AMLP (midstream), CRAK (downstream), OSX (oil field services), VPU (power and utilities) enjoy!

r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

The above graph shows the net asset value (NAV) and cumulative return for three different investment vehicles: AMLP, SPY, and a consolidated portfolio consisting of both AMLP and SPY. As you can see, the consolidated portfolio outperforms both individual investments over the given time period. ^^[**Discord**](http://discord.gg/wsbverse) ^^[BanBets](https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/wiki/banbets/) ^^VoteBot ^^[FAQ](https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/wiki/votebot/) ^^[Leaderboard](https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/wiki/leaderboard/) ^^- ^^[**Keep_VM_Alive**](https://www.patreon.com/visualmod)

Mentions:#AMLP#SPY
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

The data you have presented indicates that the net asset value and cumulative return of AMLP significantly outperformed those of SPY over the specified time period. This is an impressive feat, and I believe it speaks to the superior investment strategy employed by the fund managers. ^^[**Discord**](http://discord.gg/wsbverse) ^^[BanBets](https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/wiki/banbets/) ^^VoteBot ^^[FAQ](https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/wiki/votebot/) ^^[Leaderboard](https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/wiki/leaderboard/) ^^- ^^[**Keep_VM_Alive**](https://www.patreon.com/visualmod)

Mentions:#AMLP#SPY
r/stocksSee Comment

AMLP is an ETF with Mainstream Companies in it.

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r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

$AMLP is better for pipelines.

Mentions:#AMLP
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

$AMLP

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r/stocksSee Comment

Correct. As long as the war continues there will be upward pressure on prices. Soon USA/EU plan some sort of price cap on Russian crude. This will take some supply off the market. Long: IXC ( but selling), AMLP, SFL. I have a very small short position in the EUR vs USD.

Mentions:#IXC#AMLP#SFL
r/stocksSee Comment

Going to mention an EFT that you never see mentioned on here... because it has a high yield which scares everyone but do the research into what the holdings are, why they have high distributions, how they positively impact taxes for investors. and you will learn why it is up 15.9% YTD and pays a 7.43% yield AMLP EFT

Mentions:#EFT#AMLP
r/stocksSee Comment

Not all EFTs... check out AMLP EFT +15.9% YTD w/ 7.43% dividend yields.

Mentions:#AMLP#EFT
r/stocksSee Comment

MPLX or ETF AMLP better investment option now ?

Mentions:#MPLX#AMLP
r/optionsSee Comment

AMLP

Mentions:#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

I hold MO and KHC. I trade MO, but won't sell KHC unless it goes to 45. Then maybe I'd sell half. Do not buy shares in individual oil producers. The same dividend is available via ETFs which carry much lower risk such as IXC. If you must live dangerously buy AMLP.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

15% 5yr TIPS (9% dividend) 15% CHK (10% dividend) 15% CWH (9% dividend) 15% AMLP (7.6% dividend) 25% ZROZ 15% cash

r/stocksSee Comment

Just remember that EPD and ET issue k-1s. As a CPA I would generally advise people to stay away from k-1s. DVN is a Corp, so that's OK, as well as AMLP, an mlp fund structured as a Corp rather than a partnership. Look into FANG if you dividends as well.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

When I posted this AMLP was around ~36. All the market has seen in these 3 months has been bloodbath but its at 41.4 now.

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r/SPACsSee Comment

Its bound to stop working, but oil is my only equity long left. In AMLP/Oxy.

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r/stocksSee Comment

Some are saying we're in a 'stock picker's market' after a few years in a bull run that caused most stocks to continually rise. I think there's a lot of truth in this; inflation, the war in Ukraine, covid lockdowns in China, supply chain bottlenecks are all causing stocks to swing wildly and out of sync with each other. If this is a recession (I remain unconvinced) then that is merely another reason why it is more important to pay attention to the actual business and financials underlying any stock you invest in. I've made money in the past few months - as the war in Ukraine began to look inevitable I moved heavily out of tech. ABBV; MRK; ZIM; MATX; ADM all have done really well. ETFs like AMLP; MOO; XLP; VTV all have done well. Pharmaceuticals seem to have largely valued at this point, though - but shipping stocks are extremely volatile and recently plunged (good time to buy). Agribusiness is going to benefit from the horrid food situation arising from the Russian war in Ukraine. There are companies that are truly solid, who are in it for the long haul, have long-term plans and are prepared for economic turbulence. Some - namely those in consumer staples, utilities, energy and some healthcare & industrials - will thrive in a recession, because it is a recession. Others will bounce back quickly - and many will be a shadow of their former selves.

r/StockMarketSee Comment

Yea we are talking about potential. The rate of USO growth in recent weeks has trumped even the price of oil’s growth meaning that a lot of the run up is alreayd priced in the USO. Also I think AMLP is hedged a bit more. USO you have potential for a major fall either with the market or with a decrease in price of oil

Mentions:#USO#AMLP
r/StockMarketSee Comment

It’s already way overpriced. I would look into oil and gas pipelines etf instead namely AMLP. Midstream segment hasn’t seen the same run up yet but it’s only a matter of time as volumes increase and contracts get renegotiated. USO would have been an amazing buy 2 months ago but in the past few weeks it really has seen a huge run ip

Mentions:#AMLP#USO
r/investingSee Comment

So midstream encompasses many different subsectors. I'd personally lean towards pure play refiners (PSX for instance). However, if you're looking for energy infrastructure/transfer/equipment, AMLP looks fine. I would likely stay away from pure play service companies like equipment maintenance, as that's very cyclical in nature.

Mentions:#PSX#AMLP
r/WallstreetbetsnewSee Comment

Good to know. I tend to avoid them and just go with AMLP and ENB and KMI for pipeline exposure without the K1s. I have been thinking about the bonds of some pipeline companies, though. I cannot get a straight answer on whether they get treated as just corporate bonds or if the interest payments get a K1 as well. I had spotted a PBF midstream issuance with a solid discount and food yield that was interesting, but haven't made a move.

r/stocksSee Comment

I’m long $XOM, $CVX and $AMLP. I’m a dividend investor and I sell calls. I do think CVX is run better but XOM is evolving. AMLP provides income from MLPs without the pain of K-1 and was beat down.

Mentions:#XOM#CVX#AMLP
r/stocksSee Comment

I'm not the person to ask about income funds, since I don't believe that income generation is important in investing. All I care about is total return; it doesn't matter how we get there. Even for retirees, selling stock isn't any tougher than cashing out dividends/distributions. Fixed income is pitched to retirees because it's less risky than equities. Risk management is not the same as yield chasing. Income doesn't matter. Dividends are irrelevant because they adjust the stock/option prices for dividends, so it's as if they never happened and your account value doesn't go up at the time of payment. It stays flat. For this reason, I pick income-bearing instruments because of their stability and uncorrelated returns, not because they have a yield. If the bonds in my portfolio had only capital appreciation instead of interest payments, I'd actually be happier. If you really want to yield chase, there are some great opportunities in alternatives and bonds in the market, some of which are more correlated than others. Look at mREITs (ex: $MORT), energy LPs (ex: $AMLP), junk bonds (ex: $HYG), and muni funds (ex: $HYD) for instance. That's not even including international exposure like sovereign EM bonds (ex: $EMHY) or corporate EM bonds (ex: $CEMB). If you're a CA or NY resident, their munis are typically high quality and will be tax-free on both the federal and state level if you live in that state. All munis are federally tax-free. I'm in the 22% Federal tax bracket, so that means that the yield on these is substantially higher than other income funds since I get to keep that 22% that I would normally have to pay the IRS. That's not including the 9% CA income tax I pay too, so distributions and non-qualified dividends are taxed at 31%. That eats at yield that capital gains taxes don't.

r/wallstreetbetsOGsSee Comment

Any dividend boomers in here? What do you think of AMLP? All time chart is ugly but I think energy is going to be a multi year bull market from here.

Mentions:#AMLP
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

chaikin analytics likes it. Also CNQ. I personally like AMLP If you want to own a bunch of pipelines and not get a K-1 in your taxes.

Mentions:#CNQ#AMLP
r/optionsSee Comment

That's a great example of spreads not matching the underlying. An example of a thinly traded ETF with high dividends would be AMLP. It has multi-year options with few holders and low volume, but the mid point of the spreads is above market rate. The two year January 32 is priced at a $38.15 break even at the midpoint, which is a 9% upside on a 7.85% dividend stock. Your break even is 27, which is a 14% decline. Doing a market order on thinly traded options is a great way to get ripped off. I've had my orders filled at the ask price when the underlying doesn't move much for a few days. If someone has an axe and there are few offers, they will take what reasonable offers they can get. You may have a limit order open for a few days, but as the writer, you determine the price.

Mentions:#AMLP
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

XOP, XLE, OIH are all good ways to go at it. AMLP or pipeline stocks if you want yields. I'm not as excited about USO because I think the oil stocks have more room to rise than the price of oil. Also you have to deal with volatility chewing up USO (not noticeable when it has gone up so much). You would also be losing some due to contango, but firstly we're in backwardation (they are still predicting oil prices to go down???), and secondly, USO holds futures ranging over a year so it's not as affected by short term variation.

r/optionsSee Comment

A conservative way to beat the market I have established a universe of 53 ETF's that approximately replicate the global market (sectors, indexes, regions and fixed income) and hold 5 positions at all times. \---- There is almost no time that at least 1/3 of these tickers are not positive \---- I assess the momentum of RSI and % p/l over the past 4 months weekly, and enter/exit only on Mondays based entirely on RSI and % performance momentum \--- I enter using short puts normally, but occasionally buy stock and immediately sell covered calls \--- I have preestablished exits in place for every position \--- My only mid week trades are when an exit triggers \--- I do not trade bearish except for covered calls for cash flow or when I elect to exit a position \--- Current holds AMLP, OIH, EWZ, XLF and RPV \--- ON the average, I exit about one holding a week. I have been doing this for about 12 months with a portion of my investable assets with the result beating SPY by about 20% (for periods SPY is up 8%, these holding would be up 9.6%) . One of the major down periods was the sector rotation that occurred last week.

r/investingSee Comment

I am considering investing cash from my portfolio into High Yield ETFs, but I am having hard time wrapping my head around the inflation speculation and the pending interest rate hikes. Can anyone provide an ELI5 on how the inflation and interest rest hikes would impact my investments and my returns? I am considering instruments like $SDIV, $SPYD, $AMLP.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

I’m heavy in AMLP shares as my savings account Thing about ET is it’s high dividend MLP which means you get a K-1 if you ever own the shares (pain in the a$$) and it’s not going to move much because it’s a dividend play

Mentions:#AMLP#ET#MLP
r/stocksSee Comment

Pipelines are great dividend paying stocks (not much volatility or stock price growth). Unfortunately, they are structured as Master Limited Partnerships which need extra tax paperwork. If you can invest in them through a Roth, you skip that headache. Everyone talks about Kinder Morgan but I prefer $EPD. But even better, there is an ETF called $AMLP which holds a variety of companies, so you don't have to choose.

Mentions:#EPD#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

AMLP is an ETF for the biggest MLP's and no K1.

Mentions:#AMLP#MLP
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

You should buy AMLP instead. This ETF actually owns the companies that move the said commodities around the country, plus it pays you 7% a year to wait for inflation to start!

Mentions:#AMLP
r/wallstreetbetsOGsSee Comment

AMLP has basically replaced my savings account

Mentions:#AMLP
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

My friend you are in the wrong forum go to r/investinf. What part of WallstreetBETS dont you understand? But I will answer your question. For a beginner: buy QQQ and SPY etfs and if you want dividends SPHD or COWZ. If you want a bit more dividendss with slightly more risk buy AMLP- its like 8% dividends but is only in the oil sector

r/investingSee Comment

You can buy an ETF that invests in MLPs such as AMLP or MLPA. However be careful because these are subject to corporate taxes compared to Registerd Investment Companies (RIC).

Mentions:#AMLP#MLPA
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

I prefer AMLP over WKHS

Mentions:#AMLP#WKHS
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

MLP's are the one area that isn't overpriced to the balls, but this area gets little investor enthusiasm. But I'm with you with a few surprisingly cheap AMLP LEAPS calls. If you become a millionaire, I will be right with you as a ten-thousandaire.

Mentions:#MLP#AMLP
r/investingSee Comment

Check out AMLP Growing and pays big dividends

Mentions:#AMLP
r/stocksSee Comment

AMLP

Mentions:#AMLP
r/stocksSee Comment

you can always calculate the dividend yield yourself. companies don't pay dividends as a percentage, they pay out a flat amount. just looked at AMLP, and their dividend structure is well... [a giant mess](https://www.nasdaq.com/market-activity/funds-and-etfs/amlp/dividend-history) so i'll use [T as an example](https://www.nasdaq.com/market-activity/stocks/t/dividend-history). they pay $2.08 per year as a dividend. it doesn't matter if the share price is $25 (8.3% yield) or $35 (5.9% yield), that's what the stock is going to pay out.

Mentions:#AMLP#T
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

I recommend LEAP options with a Jan 2023 Expiration...I invested heavily in November 2020 at $16 strike prices in ERX and $40 in XLE. The Jan 2023 expiration gives you enough time to look longer term and be less concerned about daily moves. MLP’s are another undervalued sector....AMLP has a 10% divvy that will only rise.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

Don't wanna distract from GME, but hear me out. There is an ETF called Amlp which is an ETF on MLPs. This shit pays 10 percent dividends, is deeply depressed relative to pre covid levels and has little liquidity. For newbies to this etf, this etf is like any other normal etf. You do not get a k1 for investing in it and you can invest through your retirement account. Up 5 pct just yesterday. AMLP TO THE MOON!!

r/investingSee Comment

I am bullish on SHLX and other bargains in the MLP bin. I also like AMLP and its holdings.

r/stocksSee Comment

I am too, except cruise lines, and prefer my airlines via JETS and oil via BP, RDS.B., FILL, IXC, AMLP, etc.

r/investingSee Comment

I am all over MLPs right now; best value in the market in my opinion (growth opportunity plus dividends). The whole sector is on sale. If you are not a US resident, you should not by any publicly traded partnerships and only buy MLPs that are taxed as C Corporations to avoid UBIT and K-1s (and the associated tax headaches). AMLP is an ETF that is taxed as a C Corp. KMI is also a C Corp (not technically an MLP) but great stock. I own AMLP and KMI and I am long AMLP calls and KMI calls.

Mentions:#AMLP#KMI#MLP
r/stocksSee Comment

All the time. I have MSFT, AAPL, and GOOGL in various holding sizes. I'm sure there are plenty of others that compete against each other in various ways (IE also own Nintendo, which competes with Microsoft XBox). I've owned ARKF and XLF at the same time. I currently have small amounts of AMLP and CVX along with LIT (and other ETFs that own Tesla as well).

r/investingSee Comment

XOM, OXY, AMLP

Mentions:#XOM#OXY#AMLP