Quick Read
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EMLP paid $0.30 per share in Q1 2026 and has delivered 75% over five years, pairing a high-2.8% yield with capital appreciation.
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ENFR offers a higher headline yield with more crude-price sensitivity, while EMLP’s regulated utility holdings cushion against commodity swings.
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The First Trust North American Energy Infrastructure Fund (NYSEARCA:EMLP) just paid investors $0.2993 per share for the first quarter of 2026, continuing a string of distributions that have run between roughly 29 and 31 cents for the past two years. EMLP is the actively managed pipeline-and-utility fund a lot of income investors reach for when they want exposure to North American energy infrastructure without the K-1 paperwork of owning MLPs directly. At about $43 a share, that distribution pencils out to a yield in the high 2% range, and the real question is whether EMLP can keep funding it as oil swings and natural gas demand reshape the underlying cash flows.
How the fund actually pays you
EMLP is an actively managed product. Management hand-picks holdings across MLPs, Canadian income trusts, pipeline corporations, and regulated utilities, then collects the dividends and distributions those companies pay and passes them through to shareholders quarterly. The utility sleeve is the key structural choice. Regulated utilities throw off steady, rate-base-backed cash flow that does not lurch with the price of crude, which is why EMLP has historically held up better than pure-play midstream funds when energy prices roll over.
The tradeoff is fees. EMLP carries a higher expense ratio than passive peers like the Alerian Energy Infrastructure ETF (NYSEARCA:ENFR), and that drag matters because every basis point of fees comes directly out of the distribution and total return investors actually pocket. Management discretion is the thing you are paying up for, so the value of EMLP comes down to whether the team’s stock selection earns back the fee.
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What the cash flow picture looks like
The macro backdrop for the income stream is supportive. WTI crude is sitting at $95.96 per barrel, in the 82nd percentile of its trailing 12-month range. High oil prices boost associated natural gas production, which pumps more volume through the pipelines EMLP owns, and that is exactly what is happening: the EIA forecasts U.S. marketed natural gas production at 121.8 Bcf/d in 2026 rising to 126.8 Bcf/d in 2027, with Permian output growing 6%. More throughput means more fee-based revenue for midstream operators, and electricity demand growth reinforces the utility holdings.