Company Description
Icahn Enterprises L.P. (NASDAQ: IEP) is a master limited partnership and diversified holding company. According to its public disclosures, Icahn Enterprises owns subsidiaries that are engaged in seven continuing operating businesses: Investment, Energy, Automotive, Food Packaging, Real Estate, Home Fashion and Pharma. The partnership structure and multi-segment profile place Icahn Enterprises within the broader category of management of companies and enterprises, with activities that span several sectors of the real economy.
The company states that it conducts substantially all of its operations through subsidiaries. These subsidiaries generate revenues and incur expenses in their respective segments, while Icahn Enterprises, as the parent partnership, reports consolidated financial results. In its segment descriptions and earnings releases, Icahn Enterprises emphasizes the role of its Investment segment and its operating businesses in Energy, Automotive, Food Packaging, Real Estate, Home Fashion and Pharma as the core of its diversified model.
Business Segments
Icahn Enterprises reports that its continuing operating businesses are organized into the following primary segments:
- Investment – activities conducted through private funds and other investment vehicles, reflected in items such as net gain or loss from investment activities, interest and dividend income, and related balance sheet items including investments and due from brokers.
- Energy – an operating segment that contributes a significant portion of consolidated net sales and is exposed to factors such as crude oil and refined product markets, nitrogen fertilizer demand, refining margins and commodity price volatility, as described in the company’s risk factor discussions.
- Automotive – activities tied to the automotive industry, where the company notes exposure to adverse conditions in that industry and references the Chapter 11 filing of an automotive parts subsidiary as a risk factor.
- Food Packaging – operations in food packaging, where the company highlights risks such as competition from better capitalized competitors, supplier reliability for raw materials, and the need to respond to changes in casings technology.
- Real Estate – real estate activities that can be affected by tenant bankruptcies and insolvencies and by changes in the value of underlying properties, as reflected in the company’s discussions of indicative net asset value and segment valuation.
- Home Fashion – home fashion operations that are sensitive to raw material availability and pricing, manufacturing disruptions, and transportation costs and delivery times.
- Pharma – pharmaceutical-related operations included among the continuing operating businesses.
Structure and Reporting
Icahn Enterprises identifies itself as a master limited partnership. Public filings explain that it issues depositary units to limited partners, and that net income or loss attributable to Icahn Enterprises is allocated between limited partners and the general partner. The company notes that distributions are declared on a per-unit basis and that unitholders may elect to receive distributions in cash or additional depositary units, with a mechanism based on the volume-weighted average trading price of the units over a specified period.
The partnership reports consolidated financial statements, including condensed consolidated statements of operations and balance sheets. These disclosures show multiple revenue lines such as net sales, other revenues from operations, net gain or loss from investment activities, interest and dividend income, and gains or losses on disposition of assets. On the expense side, the company reports cost of goods sold, other operating expenses, selling, general and administrative expenses, dividend expense, impairment, restructuring, and interest expense, among other items.
Geographic Focus and Industry Classification
Based on the industry classification information provided, Icahn Enterprises is associated with Offices of Bank Holding Companies within the broader sector of Management of Companies and Enterprises. The company’s disclosures and prior descriptions indicate that its operations and revenues are concentrated in the United States. Its activities span financial, industrial, consumer, and real estate-related areas through the seven operating segments it lists.
Use of Non-GAAP Measures
Icahn Enterprises explains in its earnings materials that it uses certain non-GAAP financial measures, including EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA, to evaluate performance. The company defines EBITDA as earnings from continuing operations before net interest expense (excluding its Investment segment), income tax expense or benefit, and depreciation and amortization. Adjusted EBITDA is defined as EBITDA excluding specified items such as impairment, restructuring costs, transformation costs, certain pension plan expenses, gains or losses on disposition of assets, gains or losses on extinguishment of debt, performance of closed stores including closing costs, and other non-operational or non-recurring charges.
The company states that it presents EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA on a consolidated basis and net of the effects of non-controlling interests. It notes that these measures are used by management and, in its view, by investors and securities analysts to assess core operating performance without the effects of interest (with respect to most segments), taxes, depreciation and amortization, and certain other items. At the same time, Icahn Enterprises emphasizes that EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA are not measures of financial performance under U.S. GAAP and should not be considered in isolation or as substitutes for GAAP results, highlighting limitations such as the exclusion of capital expenditure requirements, working capital needs, and cash requirements for servicing debt.
Indicative Net Asset Value
In its earnings releases, Icahn Enterprises also discusses indicative net asset value as an additional method for considering the value of the company’s assets. The company reports changes in indicative net asset value across periods and attributes those changes to factors such as performance in the Investment segment, changes in the value of positions in specific holdings, and changes in the estimated fair value of certain Real Estate segment assets. It notes that indicative net asset value is a supplemental measure and that the calculation reflects management’s estimates and assumptions.
Capital Structure and Debt
Icahn Enterprises’ SEC filings describe its use of senior notes and other debt instruments. The company and its financing subsidiary, Icahn Enterprises Finance Corp., have issued Senior Secured Notes due 2029 under an indenture, with guarantees by Icahn Enterprises Holdings L.P. and security interests in substantially all of the assets directly owned by the issuers and the guarantor, subject to customary exceptions. The company has also disclosed plans and actions to use proceeds from these notes to partially redeem existing 6.250% Senior Notes due 2026, including the issuance of notices of conditional partial redemption.
Filings describe customary covenants and events of default in the indenture, including limitations on additional debt, affiliate transactions, liens, and restricted payments. The company notes that certain borrowings and subsidiary-level obligations may restrict dividends, distributions or loans to Icahn Enterprises, which can affect the partnership’s ability to pay distributions on its depositary units or service its own indebtedness.
Risk Considerations
Icahn Enterprises’ public disclosures outline a range of risks that can affect its business segments and consolidated results. These include:
- Economic downturns, substantial competition and rising operating costs.
- Risks related to investment activities, including the use of leverage through options, short sales, swaps, forwards and other derivative instruments, and declines in the fair value of investments.
- Risks associated with compliance with covenants in senior notes and the possibility of foreclosure on assets securing those notes.
- Risks related to being deemed an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940 or being taxed as a corporation, and risks related to short sellers and associated litigation and regulatory inquiries.
- Segment-specific risks, such as commodity price volatility and demand fluctuations in Energy, industry conditions and restructuring in Automotive, supplier and technology risks in Food Packaging, tenant and valuation risks in Real Estate, and raw material and logistics risks in Home Fashion.
- Broader macroeconomic and geopolitical risks, including conflicts, export controls, sanctions, inflation, interest rate increases, supply chain issues, labor shortages, and political and regulatory uncertainty.
Headquarters and Legal Organization
According to its SEC filings, Icahn Enterprises L.P. is organized under the laws of Delaware. The company lists its principal executive offices in Sunny Isles Beach, Florida. The Commission File Number in its Exchange Act reports is 1-9516, and the partnership’s Internal Revenue Service employer identification number is disclosed in its filings.
IEP Units and Distributions
Icahn Enterprises’ public materials show that it has depositary units representing limited partner interests outstanding. The company reports basic and diluted income or loss per limited partner unit and the number of weighted average units outstanding for each reporting period. It also discloses distributions declared per limited partner unit and describes a process under which unitholders can elect to receive distributions in cash or in additional depositary units, with a default election into units if no timely election is made. For unitholders electing (or deemed to elect) units, the number of units issued is based on the volume-weighted average trading price of the units over a specified five-day trading period, and fractional units are settled in cash.
Position Within the Capital Markets
Icahn Enterprises L.P. trades on the NASDAQ under the ticker symbol IEP. Through its diversified segment structure, use of non-GAAP performance measures, and disclosure of indicative net asset value, the partnership presents itself as a multi-segment holding entity with exposure to investment activities, energy, automotive, food packaging, real estate, home fashion and pharmaceutical operations. Its SEC filings and earnings releases provide detailed information on segment performance, capital structure, and risk factors for investors evaluating IEP units.