EP
ENTERPRISE PRODUCTS PARTNERS L.P. (EPD)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 delivered steady growth: EPS $0.74 vs $0.72 YoY, Adjusted EBITDA $2.60B, and DCF $2.16B, powered by record NGL and natural gas volumes across the system .
- Segment mix improved: NGL Pipelines & Services gross operating margin hit a record $1.55B (+12% YoY), while Natural Gas Pipelines & Services rose to $323MM (+13% YoY); Petrochemical & Refined Products declined due to PDH downtime and weaker octane margins .
- 2025 capital plan was fine-tuned upward: organic growth capex raised to $4.0–$4.5B and $6B of major projects expected to enter service (Bahia NGL pipeline, Fractionator 14, Neches River NGL export Phase 1, ethane/ethylene terminal expansions) .
- Distribution increased 3.9% to $0.535 per unit ($2.14 annualized) with 1.8x coverage in Q4 and $985MM DCF retained; buyback flexibility likely increases by 2026 given excess DCF trajectory and leverage at ~3.1x .
- Near-term catalysts: commissioning of 2025 projects and sustained Permian-driven NGL/gas volume growth; medium-term watch items include PDH utilization improvements and commercialization of SPOT crude export project (permit reform backdrop) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Record throughput: NGL pipeline volumes 4.77MMBPD (+12% YoY), NGL marine terminal volumes 1.01MMBPD (+9% YoY), and natural gas pipeline volumes 19.9 TBtus/d (+5% YoY), driving higher cash flow .
- NGL segment strength: NGL Pipelines & Services gross operating margin reached a record $1.55B, aided by higher Permian processing volumes and improved margins in NGL marketing; management emphasized “volume growth across our system” driven by Permian investments .
- Clear 2025 execution pipeline: “We currently have approximately $7.6 billion of major growth capital projects under construction...supported by long-term contracts...visibility to continuing net income and cash flow per unit growth” .
What Went Wrong
- Petrochemicals underperformed: Petrochemical & Refined Products gross operating margin fell to $348MM (from $439MM YoY) due to PDH downtime and weaker octane margins; management noted global oversupply and the need to “run the PDH” plants .
- Crude segment softness: Crude Oil Pipelines & Services gross operating margin decreased to $417MM (from $456MM YoY), with lower sales margins and reduced marine terminal volumes .
- Rockies gas processing headwinds: Gross operating margin declined due to higher costs, lower margins (including hedges), and downtime at the Chaco plant (inlet volumes -156 MMcf/d YoY) .
Financial Results
Segment gross operating margin (Non-GAAP):
Key operating KPIs:
Non-GAAP notes: Q4 2024 includes $9MM non-cash MTM gains; net income includes ~$6MM non-cash asset impairment; definitions and reconciliations provided in exhibits .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our record 2024 financial performance was driven by record volumes across our midstream system...largely attributable to...Permian Basin infrastructure and downstream value chain” – Jim Teague, Co-CEO .
- “We currently have approximately $7.6 billion of major growth capital projects under construction...supported by long-term contracts...visibility to continuing net income and cash flow per unit growth” – Jim Teague .
- “In 2025, $6 billion of major organic growth projects are expected to be completed and begin generating cash flow...Bahia NGL pipeline, Fractionator 14, Neches River NGL export...expansions of ethane and ethylene marine terminals” – Jim Teague .
- “Our leverage target remains 3x plus or minus 25...we ended the year with a consolidated leverage ratio of 3.1x” – Randy Fowler, Co-CEO .
- “We’re not going to give up our LPG export franchise...we will do fees more favorable to our customers than anyone” – Jim Teague .
Q&A Highlights
- 2025 baseline and growth drivers: Management reiterated potential for mid-single-digit cash flow growth near term; larger projects back-half weighted in 2025 .
- Buybacks capital return: By 2026, excess DCF after funding growth capex could support ~$1B in buybacks/debt reduction; leverage near target range .
- PDH operations: PDH1/PDH2 issues being addressed; long-term utilization targeted in upper 90% .
- Exports: Ethane base capacity fully contracted (540kbpd) with debottlenecks; ~85% contracted LPG expansions; significant Asia/Europe contract coverage .
- SPOT project: Detailed permitting challenges; seeking required volumes/fees/terms; will reassess if commercialization targets not met .
- Macro view: Oil prices range-bound; constructive long-term gas demand (LNG, power); Permian rich gas/NGL outlook likely revised up in next forecast .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global Wall Street consensus estimates could not be retrieved due to an API daily request limit. As a result, we cannot provide “vs. consensus” comparisons for Q4 2024 in this recap. We will update the report with EPS, revenue, and EBITDA consensus comparisons once access is restored. (S&P Global data unavailable)
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Volume-led cash flow: Record NGL and gas volumes underpinned Q4 EBITDA and DCF; continued Permian-driven growth should support 2025 cash flow trajectory .
- Capital program escalation: 2025 organic growth capex raised to $4.0–$4.5B and ~$6B of projects entering service—expect step-ups as Bahia, Frac 14, and Neches export Phase 1 come online .
- Distribution discipline: Q4 distribution raised to $0.535/unit with 1.8x coverage and ~$985MM DCF retained; payout remains well-covered amidst growth investments .
- Segment mix positive: NGL and Natural Gas segments strengthening offset crude softness and petrochem headwinds; watch PDH utilization normalization through 2025 .
- Export optionality: Ethane/LPG export platforms are largely contracted with brownfield debottlenecks; management targeting expanded monthly hydrocarbon exports by 2027 .
- Balance sheet flexibility: Net leverage ~3.1x with target 3x±0.25; improving excess DCF could lift buyback capacity by 2026, supporting total shareholder returns .
- Watch risks: Petrochemical market oversupply, crude marketing margins/volumes, Rockies processing downtime, and SPOT commercialization pace amid permitting regime .