New York, May 17, 2026, 05:31 EDT
- Dorchester Minerals closed Friday up 1.6% at $27.66, even as U.S. stocks moved lower.
- Unitholders voted in favor of three board nominees at the May 13 annual meeting, according to the latest company filing.
- Oil’s big rally is giving a lift to the royalty-stock trade. Inflation, interest rates and swings in commodities still loom large for the group.
Dorchester Minerals, L.P. units climbed going into the weekend. The oil-and-gas royalty partnership settled at $27.66 Friday, wrapping up a week that saw crude prices move higher and the company post results from its annual-meeting vote.
Nasdaq is closed for the weekend, so investors will have to wait until Monday to react to DMLP with new data: oil looks supportive, but concerns over inflation and bond yields grew this week. Dorchester units traded up from $26.50 on Monday to $27.66 at Friday’s close.
Wall Street finished lower Friday as inflation concerns grew, boosted by stronger crude and Treasury yields, according to Reuters. DMLP bucked the trend, with shares climbing as traders looked for mineral and royalty exposure during the oil price rally.
Holders elected Allen D. Lassiter, A. Troy Sturrock, and Sarah N. Wariner to the Board of Managers and put them on the Advisory Committee, according to the company’s latest filing posted May 15. Grant Thornton is set to stay on as auditor for 2026. The non-binding executive pay vote passed.
Oil led the move, not the governance update. Brent finished Friday at $109.26, and U.S. West Texas Intermediate at $105.42. Reuters reported Brent up 7.84% for the week, WTI up 10.48%, as the market stayed focused on risk in the Strait of Hormuz, a major Gulf shipping route.
Dorchester Minerals (DMLP) fits right into this. The company doesn’t drill—Dorchester holds mineral, royalty, and net-profits stakes. Basically, it gets paid when oil and gas come out of the ground on properties run by someone else. So actual oil and gas prices and output levels matter a lot here.
Dorchester’s first quarter numbers put some numbers on that sensitivity. Operating revenue came in at $58.9 million, net income at $29.1 million, or 59 cents per common unit. Last year those figures were $43.2 million and $17.6 million. According to its 10-Q, sales from royalty-property oil reached $36.6 million. Natural gas sales dropped to $4.3 million.
Cash numbers slipped. Net cash from operating activities dropped 28% on the year to $23.9 million, mostly due to lower revenue receipts from royalty properties and weaker net-profits-interest receipts. That’s the key bit for a partnership that relies on cash distributions, even if it doesn’t grab attention.
Dorchester made its first-quarter cash payout of $0.475036 per common unit on May 14 to unitholders who were on record by May 4. The company said that distributions may not match earnings due to timing and depletion, which is the accounting cost for pulling oil and gas from the ground.
Peers offered a look at the space. Black Stone Minerals finished Friday up at $14.01, Kimbell Royalty Partners closed at $15.44, and Viper Energy at $48.98. All posted gains for the day. They aren’t one-to-one stand-ins for DMLP, but all trade in the same royalty and income stream patch of energy, where moves usually come down to oil and payout forecasts.
Supply concerns kept analysts quoted by Reuters on edge. Vandana Hari at Vanda Insights said attention is turning toward “a blockaded Strait of Hormuz.” Phil Flynn from Price Futures Group said the market’s “margin for error is shrinking rapidly.” Reuters
But risk can break either way. If oil drops, if Hormuz shipping picks up sooner than some worry, or if rising oil prices end up lifting Treasury yields and inflation bets even more, DMLP could give back gains from last week. The partnership’s filing points to price swings, geopolitics, tariffs, OPEC+ moves, and rule changes as possible hits to results too.
Market holiday is not due until Memorial Day, May 25, so DMLP is expected to trade a normal schedule starting Monday, May 18, unless something disrupts trading. Investors are looking to see if royalty stocks get a lift from Friday’s move in oil, or if the risk-off mood in markets drags them lower.