Welcome to our dedicated page for Brookfield Infrast Partners Lp SEC filings (Ticker: BIP), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. filings document the regulatory reporting of a Bermuda-based foreign issuer and limited partnership with global utilities, transport, midstream and data infrastructure operations. Form 6-K reports furnish quarterly interim reports, earnings releases, annual filing notices and other current disclosures under the Exchange Act, often incorporating exhibits by reference into Form F-3 registration statements.
The filing record covers audited and unaudited consolidated financial statements, funds-from-operations discussion, segment results, partnership capital, distributions and governance certifications under Canadian law. Capital-structure disclosures include LP Units, preferred limited partnership units, normal course issuer bids, shelf registration materials and equity distribution agreements, including disclosures coordinated with Brookfield Infrastructure Corporation.
Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. director Jeffrey M. Blidner filed an initial ownership report showing his holdings in the partnership and related exchangeable shares. He reports 717 Class A Exchangeable Subordinate Voting Shares held directly and 873 held indirectly, which are exchangeable into Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units on a one-for-one basis or their cash equivalent at Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P.’s election. He also reports 4,305 Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units held directly and 5,244 held indirectly, with the indirect interests held through Jeffrey Blidner Limited. The filing reflects existing positions rather than new market purchases or sales.
Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. director Anne C. Schaumburg filed an initial ownership report on Form 3. The filing lists indirect holdings of Class A Exchangeable Subordinate Voting Shares and Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units held through a managed account, an IRA, and a SEP IRA. The Class A exchangeable shares of Brookfield Infrastructure Corporation are exchangeable into Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units of Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. or their cash equivalent on a one-for-one basis, with the form of payment elected by Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. The filing reports existing positions and does not reflect new open‑market purchases or sales.
Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. director William John Cox filed a Form 3 reporting his initial ownership. He directly holds 705 Class A Exchangeable Subordinate Voting Shares of Brookfield Infrastructure Corporation, which are exchangeable on a one-for-one basis into Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units or their cash equivalent, and 15,378 Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units of Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. This filing records holdings only and does not show any recent purchases or sales.
Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. director Daniel Muniz Quintanilla reported initial ownership of 5,400 Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units. These units are held as a direct, non-derivative position. The report does not reflect a new purchase or sale, but establishes his beneficial holdings in the partnership units.
Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. director Kelly Roslyn Jane has filed an initial Form 3 reporting beneficial ownership of 15,663 Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units. These units are reported as held directly, and the filing does not disclose any recent purchase or sale activity, only the existing position.
Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. filed an initial insider ownership report for Malcolm Jack Lorne Cecil-Cockwell, who is identified as a director of the partnership. This Form 3 does not list any transactions or specific holdings, serving only to register his status as a reporting insider.
Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. director Rajeev Vasudeva filed an initial ownership report showing 4,750 Class A Exchangeable Subordinate Voting Shares of Brookfield Infrastructure Corporation. These shares are exchangeable on a one-for-one basis into Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units of Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. or their cash equivalent at the partnership’s election. The filing reflects existing holdings rather than a new purchase or sale.
Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. director Suzanne P. Nimocks filed an initial ownership report showing she holds 4,000 Class A Exchangeable Subordinate Voting Shares of Brookfield Infrastructure Corporation. These shares are exchangeable on a one-for-one basis into Non-Voting Limited Partnership Units of Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P. or a cash equivalent at the partnership’s election. The filing reflects current holdings rather than a new stock purchase or sale.
Brookfield Infrastructure has filed its 2025 annual reports on Form 20-F, including audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2025, with U.S. and Canadian securities regulators. The reports are available on EDGAR, SEDAR+, and the Brookfield Infrastructure websites, with hard copies offered free to unitholders and shareholders on request.
Brookfield Infrastructure Partners L.P., a Bermuda-based limited partnership listed on the New York and Toronto stock exchanges, files its annual report for the year ended December 31, 2025. It owns and operates global utilities, transport, data and midstream infrastructure through a complex partnership and corporate structure closely tied to Brookfield.
The report notes 460,488,788 Limited Partnership Units and multiple preferred series outstanding as of December 31, 2025, plus listed subordinated notes. Financial statements are prepared under IFRS Accounting Standards, while management emphasizes non‑IFRS measures such as FFO, AFFO, Adjusted EBITDA, Invested Capital and net debt to assess performance and leverage.
Extensive risk disclosures highlight exposure to commodity demand, construction and capital needs, environmental and climate regulation, cyber-security, joint ventures, political and legal uncertainty in multiple jurisdictions, high leverage, re‑contracting risk, and strong dependence on Brookfield and its service affiliates for sourcing deals and day‑to‑day management.