AMZA jumped 158% in two years, but the math behind those $0.34 checks is fragile

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By John Seetoo Published
AMZA jumped 158% in two years, but the math behind those $0.34 checks is fragile

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If you own the InfraCap MLP ETF (NYSEARCA:AMZA) for income, the question is simple: can the fund keep cutting those $0.34 monthly checks? AMZA pays a roughly 7.5% to 8% distribution yield from a concentrated, leveraged basket of energy midstream Master Limited Partnerships, and management just raised the monthly payout from $0.29 in 2025 to $0.34 in 2026. The next 12 to 24 months look well covered, but the structure carries real long-term risk that holders should understand before relying on AMZA as a retirement paycheck.

How AMZA generates its yield

AMZA is an actively managed fund holding 25 to 50 MLPs tied to U.S. pipelines and energy infrastructure. Income comes from three layers. First, the underlying MLPs (Energy Transfer, MPLX, Enterprise Products Partners, Plains All American, Kinder Morgan) pay distributions funded by long-term, fee-based “toll collector” contracts on moving and storing hydrocarbons. Second, InfraCap applies 1.25x leverage, borrowing to buy more units and amplify cash flowing back to shareholders. Third, a covered-call overlay sells options on holdings to harvest premium income.

That stack is why the yield exceeds AMLP’s, but distributions are more sensitive to oil prices, interest rates, and volatility. The fund issues a 1099 instead of a K-1, which is why many retirees pick it over individual MLPs.

The cash flow picture

Conditions for the underlying MLPs are strong. WTI crude is almost $110 a barrel, in the 98th percentile of the past year, after recovering from a December low near $55. High prices alone do not guarantee MLP cash flow (these are volume businesses), but they keep producers drilling and pipelines full. Surging power demand from AI data centers and LNG exports means toll collectors are running at strong utilization.

Monthly payouts have stepped up every year since 2022: $0.22, then $0.24, $0.26, $0.29, and now $0.34. Coverage looks credible enough that InfraCap raised the rate by roughly 17% heading into 2026, and four consecutive months at $0.34 have already been declared and paid.

Where the risk lives

Three issues deserve weight. The expense ratio is 2.75%, more than three times the 0.85% charged by the Alerian MLP ETF (NYSEARCA:AMLP). On a six-figure position, that gap compounds into thousands of dollars a year of lost yield.

Leverage cuts both ways. The same 1.25x that boosts distributions makes AMZA’s NAV swing harder when energy rolls over, and borrowing costs rise with the 10-year Treasury. The fund’s tax accounting is lumpy: in April 2026 InfraCap booked a $6.6 million deferred tax liability reduction worth about $0.68 per share, after an August 2025 accrual of roughly $0.14 per share. Those revisions move NAV unpredictably because they rely on delayed MLP reporting.

Total return reality

Yield without price context can mislead. AMZA shares are at about $46, up 22% over one year and 158% over five years. AMLP, the unleveraged peer, is up 20% over one year and 131% over five. AMZA has earned its higher fee in this cycle. Over ten years, AMZA is up 77% versus AMLP’s 106%, a reminder that leverage and decay erode total return when the cycle turns.

The verdict

The $0.34 monthly payout looks safe through the next handful of quarters. Underlying MLP cash flows are healthy, oil is firm, AI-driven energy demand keeps hydrocarbon volumes elevated, and management is raising rather than trimming. The danger is structural: a sustained drop below $70 oil, a spike in financing costs, or another tax adjustment can pressure NAV faster than distributions. AMZA fits an income investor who wants 1099 simplicity and accepts leverage and a 2.75% fee. Cost-conscious holders who want the same midstream thesis with less drag should weigh AMLP instead.

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About the Author John Seetoo →

After 15 years on Wall Street with 7 of them as Director of Corporate and Municipal Bond Trading for a NYSE member firm, I started my own project and corporate finance consultancy. Much of the work involves writing business plans, presentations, white papers and marketing materials for companies seeking budgetary allocations for spinoffs and new initiatives or for raising capital for expansion or startup companies and entrepreneurs. On financial topics, I have been published under my own byline at The Motley Fool, 247wallst.com, DealFlow Events’ Healthcare Services Investment Newsletter and The Microcap Newsletter, among others.  Additionally, I have done freelance ghostwriting writing and editing for several financial websites, such as Seeking Alpha and Shmoop Financial. I have also written and been published on a variety of other topics from music, audiophile sound and film to musical instrument history, martial arts, and current events.  Publications include Copper Magazine, Fidelity (Germany), Blasting News, Inside Kung-Fu, and other periodicals.

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