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Oil And Gas As A Real Asset Strategy

4 December 2025

The following commentary comes from Dax Atkinson . He serves as chief investment officer of Rockport Companies. The editors are pleased to share this material and we hope it stimulates conversations. To comment, email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com and amanda.cheesley@clearviewpublishing.com

Real assets remain an important part of diversified portfolios, offering inflation protection, income generation, and tangible value that traditional financial assets cannot easily match. Within this category, investors often focus on real estate and infrastructure – but oil and gas, when managed with discipline and operational control, can provide a unique mix of steady cash flow, tax efficiency, downside protection, and long-term wealth preservation. Oil and gas also remain the backbone of modern society, supporting transportation, manufacturing, agriculture, logistics, and national security. Demand is structurally resilient, and the inventory of high-quality oil and gas assets has continued to shrink, creating scarcity value for select projects that remain attractive and worth developing.

The Rockport Energy Fund applies this model by turning upstream oil and gas projects into high-quality, income-producing real assets. Through strong operating expertise and an institutional approach to capital allocation and risk management, the fund seeks to convert well-designed oil and gas projects into durable cash flow and long-term value for investors.

Reframing oil and gas as a real asset, not a commodity bet
Many investors still view oil and gas through the narrow lens of commodity price speculation. Upstream oil and gas – particularly when structured around development-ready, lower-risk projects – has more in common with infrastructure or real estate than with short-term trading. Successful wells generate predictable, repeatable cash flows once on production, with decline curves and operating costs that can be modeled with remarkable precision. Particularly when sufficient subsurface and offset data exists, underwriting becomes a statistical exercise, allowing well results to be modeled mathematically with probability-weighted outcomes guiding expected performance. These assets are grounded in geologic reality, reservoir physics, and engineering principles, not market hype.

A real asset strategy emphasizes durability, yield, and capital preservation. Upstream projects, when executed by a capable operator with technical and financial discipline, provide:
-- Inflation-linked income, directly tied to real-world demand for energy; 
-- Tangible intrinsic value in the form of reserves and producing wells; 
-- Stable, multi-year cash distributions with hedges protecting cash flows and an asset that is self-liquidating; 
-- Tax-advantaged returns, particularly through intangible drilling costs and depletion; 
-- Low correlation to traditional financial assets; and
-- Potential for upside capital appreciation through commodity price increases and discount rate compression.

Rockport’s vertically integrated model, track record of success, and drill-ready inventory sharpen these advantages and make the strategy accessible to institutional and sophisticated private investors who demand governance, transparency, and repeatability.

Rockport’s position in the real asset landscape
Rockport Energy Partners has a track record of operating across the full lifecycle of upstream development – sourcing, engineering, operating, and monetizing projects. This vertically integrated structure provides unique control and visibility over project economics, allowing Rockport to systematically reduce risk and enhance value. Rockport focuses on development-ready, lower-risk, self-liquidating oil and gas projects with line-of-sight to early cash flow.

The Fund’s design fits squarely within the goals of real asset investing:

1. Income generation and current yield
Producing oil and gas wells creates immediate and ongoing cash flow. Rockport’s development program targets three-year paybacks with meaningful yield beginning shortly after wells come online. These distributions, protected by commodity hedges, resemble rental income in real estate or toll income in infrastructure – steady, real-world cash flow tied to essential services.

2. Inflation protection
Energy prices are inherently linked to inflation. As the cost of goods and services rises, so does the value of energy and the revenue streams from hydrocarbon production. In contrast to bonds or equity income strategies vulnerable to interest-rate cycles, oil and gas revenues maintain purchasing power during inflationary periods. 

3. Tangible, intrinsically valuable assets
Reserves in the ground and producing wells are physical, measurable, and appraisable. They cannot be digitally diluted, and their value is tied to long-term, essential-use demand. These assets represent commodities stored in the ground and embody the core real-asset principle of durable, intrinsic value.

4. Diversification and low correlation
Upstream oil and gas returns are fundamentally different from equities, fixed income, or private credit. Their correlation to traditional markets is low, and their return drivers – geology, engineering, reservoir quality, and operating efficiency – are unique. Because wells generate high current yield and naturally self-liquidate as reserves are produced, the asset class reduces reliance on future exit events. This makes oil and gas an attractive diversifier within a real asset sleeve.

The Rockport Energy Partners advantage: Institutional discipline, technical rigor, and operational control
Rockport is not a financial sponsor outsourcing operation. It is a veteran-owned, vertically integrated operator and asset manager with decades of experience in drilling, completing, and operating wells on behalf of institutional investors, family offices, and private equity firms. This operational DNA transforms upstream assets into dependable real assets.

1. Proprietary, drill-ready inventory
Rockport has a significant pipeline of drill-ready opportunities. These are not speculative wells; they are engineered, derisked, and ready for development with geological, operational, and midstream considerations fully vetted.

2. Development over exploration
Rockport’s projects are structured around development, not exploration. Exploration creates binary risk; development creates recurring cash flow. Rockport’s projects are characterized by proven reservoirs, existing well control and extensive subsurface data, clear visibility into type curves and decline profiles, and established takeaway infrastructure. This enables consistent underwriting and predictable outcomes.

3. Tax efficiency through IDCs
Upstream real assets also offer meaningful tax efficiency. Intangible drilling costs flow through to investors as immediate deductions, which can materially enhance after tax returns. This makes upstream oil and gas among the most tax-efficient real asset classes available.

4. Risk management through technical excellence
Rockport’s approach focuses on realistic production assumptions, strong engineering standards, and tight control over costs. Every project is budgeted carefully with built-in cushions for unexpected expenses. We also use hedging tools to help stabilize the first years of cash flow. The portfolio is spread across different regions and project types to avoid concentration risk. Altogether, this disciplined model lowers risk and supports steady, predictable returns.

Conclusion: Rockport’s blueprint for a dependable real asset allocation
Rockport reframes oil and gas investing from a speculative exercise into a disciplined, repeatable, real-asset strategy. By focusing on drill-ready development, engineering excellence, operational control, and institutional quality capital allocation, Rockport delivers the attributes investors seek in real assets.

About the writer

Dax Atkinson’s 25 years’ industry expertise spans sourcing, structuring, and managing complex investments across private equity, distressed credit, and real assets. Atkinson served as chief financial officer of Independence TX LLC, a family office with holdings in the energy services industry. Before joining Independence TX, he spent over six years at Castlelake LP as managing director in the Special Situations Group, where Atkinson managed the firm's oil and gas portfolio. Earlier in his career, he held senior investment roles at CarVal Investors LLC and Deephaven Capital LLC, where he focused on distressed credit and special situations across multiple sectors, including oil and gas exploration, energy services and shipping. Atkinson began his career in investment banking at Piper Jaffray, where he supported M&A and capital markets transactions for financial institutions. Atkinson holds a bachelor of science with distinction and honors in finance from Iowa State University and is a CFA charterholder.