Company Description
SandRidge Mississippian Trust I (SDTTU) was a Delaware statutory trust that held royalty interests in oil and natural gas properties. The trust’s units traded on the over-the-counter market under the symbol SDTTU and represented beneficial interests in the trust. According to the trust’s public disclosures, it owned royalty interests in oil and natural gas properties and was entitled to receive proceeds from the sale of production attributable to those royalty interests for a defined period.
The trust’s interests related to oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids production. As described in its reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the amount of quarterly cash distributions to unitholders fluctuated over time based on actual production volumes, realized prices for oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids, and the amount and timing of the trust’s administrative expenses, among other factors. All trust unitholders shared in distributions on a pro rata basis.
Under the governing trust agreement, SandRidge Mississippian Trust I was required to dissolve and begin winding up its business and affairs if cash available for distribution for any four consecutive quarters, on a cumulative basis, fell below a specified threshold. The trust reported that this dissolution trigger was met for the four consecutive quarters ended September 30, 2020, which required the trust to commence winding up as of the close of business on November 13, 2020. In connection with the winding up, the trustee was required to sell all of the trust’s assets and distribute the net proceeds to unitholders after payment, or reasonable provision for payment, of all trust liabilities.
In April 2021, SandRidge Mississippian Trust I entered into a purchase and sale agreement for the sale of all of the overriding royalty interests held by the trust to a subsidiary of SandRidge Energy, Inc. The transaction closed with an effective date of April 1, 2021. Because the purchaser was entitled to revenues from oil and natural gas production attributable to the royalty interests from that effective date, the trust stated that it would not receive further proceeds from such production and therefore would not make any further regular quarterly cash distributions to unitholders.
Following the asset sale, the trustee withheld the net proceeds and other cash as part of cash reserves to provide for the trust’s expenses and potential liabilities, including potential liabilities related to securities litigation described in the trust’s SEC filings. The trust communicated that any remaining cash reserves, after payment or provision for remaining expenses and liabilities and completion of the winding up process, would be distributed to unitholders.
Subsequent announcements reported developments in the securities litigation styled Duane & Virginia Lanier Trust v. SandRidge Mississippian Trust I. In September 2025, the trust disclosed that a court had granted summary judgment in favor of the trust and that the plaintiff had a deadline to appeal. In October 2025, the trust announced that no appeal or post-judgment motion had been filed by the court’s deadline and that the securities litigation had therefore been concluded.
With the litigation resolved, SandRidge Mississippian Trust I announced a final distribution to trust unitholders reflecting the release of the net proceeds from the sale of the trust’s royalty interests and the remaining cash reserves, less an amount reserved for remaining winding up expenses. The trust stated that this payment would be the final distribution to be made to trust unitholders and that, following the payment of the final distribution, the trust units would be removed from trading and cancelled.
The trust further indicated that it would remain in existence only until the filing of a certificate of cancellation with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware after completion of the winding up process. As a result, SandRidge Mississippian Trust I functions as a historical entity for investors researching its past operations, distributions, and legal proceedings, rather than as an ongoing royalty trust with continuing production-based cash flows.
Business model and distributions
According to its public disclosures, SandRidge Mississippian Trust I’s business model centered on holding royalty interests in oil and natural gas properties and distributing cash received from those interests, net of expenses, to unitholders. The trust’s quarterly distributions depended on production volumes, commodity prices for oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids, and administrative and other trust expenses. The trust did not operate the underlying properties; instead, it held interests that entitled it to a share of proceeds from production.
The trust agreement also allowed the trustee to establish and maintain cash reserves to provide for known, anticipated or contingent expenses or liabilities, including potential litigation-related obligations. Beginning in 2019, the trustee disclosed that it was withholding a portion of funds that would otherwise have been distributed in order to build such reserves. During the winding up period, these reserves played a central role in determining the timing and amount of final distributions.
Winding up and termination
Once the dissolution trigger was met, the trust’s focus shifted from ongoing distributions based on production to the sale of its assets and the orderly winding up of its affairs. The trustee engaged an advisor to assist with the marketing and sale of the trust’s royalty interests, and, consistent with the trust agreement, SandRidge Energy, Inc. exercised a right of first refusal to purchase those interests.
After the sale closed, the trust no longer received production-based cash flows. Instead, it held cash from the asset sale and other sources, which was used to pay expenses, fund reserves and, ultimately, support a final distribution to unitholders after resolution of the securities litigation. The trust has stated that its units will be removed from trading and cancelled following the final distribution and that the trust will be terminated through the filing of a certificate of cancellation upon completion of the winding up process.
Role within the energy and royalty trust space
SandRidge Mississippian Trust I was structured as a royalty trust focused on crude petroleum and natural gas extraction interests. Its disclosures emphasize that distribution levels were sensitive to commodity prices and production volumes, and that the trust had a finite life defined by its governing agreement and economic thresholds for dissolution. For investors and researchers, the trust provides an example of how royalty trusts can transition from active distribution vehicles to wind-down entities when production declines and distribution thresholds are not met.
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No SEC filings available for Sandridge Missis.