3 Midstream Dividend ETFs Yielding Over 5% That Are Also Beating the Market


  • Midstream dividend ETFs have outperformed classic income vehicles with double the yield.

  • Volume-based fee structures insulate pipeline operators from daily energy price volatility.

  • Top midstream ETFs currently yield between 5.65% and 7.73%.

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Midstream dividend ETFs are an underrated way to derive income from the stock market, mainly because Wall Street is still overlooking them. ETFs like the Alerian MLP ETF (NYSEARCA:AMLP), USCF Midstream Energy Income Fund (NYSEARCA:UMI), and Global X MLP ETF (NYSEARCA:MLP) have outperformed most classic income vehicles, and have sometimes done so with double the yield.

Midstream energy companies include pipeline operators and storage facility owners that transport oil and natural gas from production sites to refineries and end users. These companies are not exposed to the day-to-day swings of energy prices and instead operate on volume-based fees. This business model has allowed them to maintain generous dividend payments even during volatile energy markets while still delivering returns that have outpaced broader indexes.

North American midstream companies are becoming very successful post-2022 as the U.S. has turned into Europe’s largest source of energy. There’s plenty of oil flowing through pipelines, and the demand is sticky.

The following three midstream dividend ETFs are exactly why this sector deserves a closer look from income-focused investors.

The Alerian MLP ETF pays the highest yield among major midstream ETFs and is one of the largest funds in the sector. It is a capped, float-adjusted, capitalization-weighted index of energy infrastructure Master Limited Partnerships. These companies get most of their cash flow from midstream businesses.

AMLP has historically been a poor investment, especially in the 2010s, as energy businesses faced headwinds across the board. However, it has started the 2020s on a very strong note.

Its top 6 holdings get ~13% of the fund each, and all of them have performed well. The top holding is Energy Transfer LP (NYSE:ET), which is up 9.7% in just the past month alone.

AMLP’s strongest suit is the income. You get a 7.73% dividend yield. The expense ratio is 0.85%, which is on the higher end, but the yield more than makes up for it. Keep reinvesting that near-8% yield, and you could see your portfolio snowball significantly. There’s one drawback, though. The dividend payout frequency is quarterly.



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