---
title: "Energy Income Partners Q1 2026: A Pure Pipeline Book"
type: research
slug: energy-income-partners-q1-2026-midstream-utility-income
canonical_url: https://13finsight.com/research/energy-income-partners-q1-2026-midstream-utility-income
published_at: 2026-05-23T17:35:12.492Z
updated_at: 2026-05-23T17:35:15.285Z
author: Marcus Chen
author_title: Senior Market Analyst
author_url: https://13finsight.com/authors/marcus-chen
word_count: 664
locale: en
source: 13F Insight
---

# Energy Income Partners Q1 2026: A Pure Pipeline Book

> Energy Income Partners' $6.2B book is built entirely on midstream pipelines and regulated utilities - Enterprise Products, Energy Transfer, MPLX - a pure energy-income strategy.

Most institutional 13Fs are dominated by technology and megacap growth. Energy Income Partners is a pure exception: its $6.22 billion book is built almost entirely on energy infrastructure and utilities, with midstream pipeline operators and regulated power companies filling its entire top tier. There is not a single technology name near the top — just the pipelines, processors, and utilities that move and deliver energy and pay out the cash flows the firm is built to capture. For income-focused investors, it is one of the cleanest sector-specialist filings in the data. The strategy is in the name: income. Energy Income Partners targets the steady, distribution-heavy cash flows of midstream master limited partnerships and regulated utilities. Its first-quarter 2026 filing shows that thesis intact, with the book growing 12.6% to $6.22 billion and most top holdings held roughly flat — a manager collecting yield, not chasing momentum. A midstream pipeline core The top of the book is a roster of the largest energy-infrastructure operators. Enterprise Products Partners leads at $519.6 million (8.36%), trimmed 8%, with Energy Transfer ($486.5 million) and MPLX ($294.3 million) close behind, both held flat. Kinder Morgan and Plains GP Holdings round out the midstream core. These are the toll-road businesses of energy — pipelines and processing assets that earn fee-based revenue moving oil, gas, and natural gas liquids regardless of commodity prices, and that distribute most of their cash flow to holders. Holding them flat reflects a buy-and-collect approach: the appeal is the durable, high-yield distribution stream, not quarter-to-quarter trading. Regulated utilities for ballast Alongside the pipelines sits a sleeve of regulated utilities. National Fuel Gas ($243.3 million), Southern Company ($165.7 million), PPL Corporation ($153.4 million), and Entergy all feature in the top tier, with pipeline operator ONEOK as well. Regulated utilities provide the income strategy's ballast — predictable, rate-base-driven earnings and reliable dividends that complement the higher-yielding but more cyclical midstream names. The combination is a coherent income portfolio: fee-based pipeline distributions plus regulated utility dividends, diversified across roughly 87 energy and power names. It is exactly what a yield-focused energy specialist should look like. A steadily growing book Energy Income Partners' reported value has climbed consistently. The reported 13F value has risen from about $4.49 billion in mid-2024 to $6.22 billion, a steady upward path with the latest quarter up 12.6% and the position count holding near 87. For an income strategy, that growth typically reflects a mix of inflows, reinvested distributions, and the appreciation of energy-infrastructure names as the sector has come back into favor. The smooth climb, with no dramatic dips, fits a disciplined, lower-turnover income approach. What it signals For investors who track institutional positioning, Energy Income Partners' first-quarter filing is a clean map of where a dedicated energy-income manager puts its capital: midstream pipelines for high, fee-based distributions and regulated utilities for stable dividends. The actionable takeaway is the specialization itself — for anyone seeking income or energy-infrastructure exposure, this filing is a curated list of the sector's largest, most cash-generative names, assembled by a manager that does nothing else. FAQ What does Energy Income Partners invest in?Energy infrastructure and utilities, focused on income. Its book is built on midstream master limited partnerships — pipeline and processing operators — and regulated utilities, with no significant technology or megacap exposure. What are its largest holdings?Enterprise Products Partners ($519.6 million), Energy Transfer ($486.5 million), and MPLX ($294.3 million) lead — all midstream pipeline operators — followed by Kinder Morgan, National Fuel Gas, and regulated utilities like Southern Company and PPL. Why does the fund hold midstream pipelines and utilities together?Midstream MLPs earn fee-based cash flow and pay high distributions, while regulated utilities provide stable, rate-base-driven dividends. Combining them creates a diversified income portfolio with both yield and ballast. Did Energy Income Partners trade much in Q1 2026?Little. Most top holdings were held flat, with a modest trim of Enterprise Products. Reported value rose 12.6% to $6.22 billion, consistent with a buy-and-collect income approach rather than active trading.

## FAQ

### What does Energy Income Partners invest in?

Energy infrastructure and utilities, focused on income. Its book is built on midstream master limited partnerships - pipeline and processing operators - and regulated utilities, with no significant technology or megacap exposure.

### What are its largest holdings?

Enterprise Products Partners ($519.6 million), Energy Transfer ($486.5 million), and MPLX ($294.3 million) lead - all midstream pipeline operators - followed by Kinder Morgan, National Fuel Gas, and regulated utilities like Southern Company and PPL.

### Why does the fund hold midstream pipelines and utilities together?

Midstream MLPs earn fee-based cash flow and pay high distributions, while regulated utilities provide stable, rate-base-driven dividends. Combining them creates a diversified income portfolio with both yield and ballast.

### Did Energy Income Partners trade much in Q1 2026?

Little. Most top holdings were held flat, with a modest trim of Enterprise Products. Reported value rose 12.6% to $6.22 billion, consistent with a buy-and-collect income approach rather than active trading.

---

Source: 13F Insight — https://13finsight.com/research/energy-income-partners-q1-2026-midstream-utility-income
Author: Marcus Chen — https://13finsight.com/authors/marcus-chen
Last updated: 2026-05-23T17:35:15.285Z