- Brendan Conway, June 22, 2012, 11:16 A.M. ET
The popular exchange-traded note whose share issuance was capped last week by J.P. Morgan Chase (JPM) is already trading at a premium. Investors who hold the JPMorgan Alerian MLP Index exchange-traded note (AMJ) can either cash out now with unexpected profits or they can ride the note’s unusual mechanics higher in hopes of even bigger gains.
But the outcome behind Door #2 is unpredictable. Nobody wants to be holding the bag if JPM suddenly reopens new shares. J.P. Morgan hasn’t said whether it will take that step. But if it does, the investment’s premium, which resembles what you see in closed-end funds, would collapse in a hurry. That’s a risk that investors will bear if they stick with this tracker of rich-yielding master limited partnerships.
The crux of the issue is that AMJ is no longer just a bet on master limited partnerships. It’s also a bet on what other investors who hold or want to hold the same J.P. Morgan note will do.
At the moment, there’s a 45-cent premium in AMJ’s market price versus the underlying assets, or about 1.2%. It will get bigger if more investors pile in.
“This is a free gift. But how long do you watch the premium build before you sell the shares out? It’s a question that the owners of AMJ have to ask themselves,” Chris Hempstead, a director at WallachBeth Capital tells Barrons.com.