ET
Energy Transfer LP (ET)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Mixed quarter: Q3 revenue of $19.95B and basic EPS of $0.28 missed S&P Global consensus ($21.81B revenue, $0.33 EPS), with EBITDA also below consensus; management cited several one-time items and segment-specific headwinds as contributors . Revenue/EPS consensus from S&P Global estimates: $21.81B*, $0.331*, EBITDA $3.97B* (company-reported Adjusted EBITDA was $3.84B) .
- Guidance trimmed: 2025 Adjusted EBITDA now expected to be slightly below the low end of $16.1–$16.5B (lowered from prior stance) and 2025 growth capex reduced to ~$4.6B (from ~$5.0B); 2026 growth capex guided to ~$5B .
- Structural demand tailwinds: data-center and power demand accelerating—ET disclosed multiple long-term Oracle contracts (~900 MMcf/d), >6 Bcf/d of new demand-pull contracts with ~18-year average lives and >$25B of expected firm-transport revenue, and fully contracted 1.5 Bcf/d Desert Southwest pipeline with potential upsizing .
- Strategic optionality: considering converting one Permian NGL pipeline to natural gas service given tighter NGL transport economics vs superior gas transport returns; DAPL/ETCOP initiatives with Enbridge to bring Canadian heavy barrels bolster crude utilization into the 2030s .
- Distribution raised to $0.3325 per unit (annualized $1.33), up >3% YoY; liquidity strong with $3.44B revolver availability at 9/30/25 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Record volumes across multiple assets: NGL transportation (+11%), NGL exports (+13%), NGL/refined products terminal volumes (+10%), midstream gathered volumes (+3%) YoY; strong interstate (+8%) and intrastate (+5%) gas transport .
- Commercial momentum: fully contracted 1.5 Bcf/d Desert Southwest project (25-year terms), Oracle multi-site gas supply (~900 MMcf/d), >6 Bcf/d of new demand-pull capacity signed with >$25B revenue over ~18 years . “These contracts have a weighted average life of over 18 years and are expected to generate more than $25 billion of revenue from firm transportation fees” .
- NGL segment growth: Adj. EBITDA up YoY on higher throughput and terminal fees; LPG export capacity at Nederland ~95% contracted through decade-end; Flexport ramping and ethylene export-ready .
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What Went Wrong
- Headline misses vs estimates: revenue $19.95B vs $21.81B*, EPS $0.28 vs $0.33*, EBITDA (S&P definition) $3.59B vs $3.97B*; management cited several one-time items, including Rover ad valorem tax accrual ($43M) and NGL remediation costs ($17M) .
- Intrastate EBITDA down on lower optimization as business shifts to long-term third‑party contracts; Midstream YoY comp impacted by $70M prior-year business interruption proceeds; Crude pressured by lower Bakken/Bayou Bridge revenue and higher OpEx .
- Guidance tightened: 2025 Adjusted EBITDA now “slightly below” the low end of $16.1–$16.5B range; 2025 growth capex reduced to ~$4.6B (timing deferrals) .
Financial Results
Quarterly trend (Q1–Q3 2025):
Q3 2025 vs prior year and vs estimates:
Notes: EBITDA consensus/actual are S&P Global’s EBITDA metric; company emphasizes Adjusted EBITDA (non‑GAAP) at $3.84B . Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment Adjusted EBITDA ($MM):
Operating KPIs (selected):
Drivers and one-time items:
- Interstate: $43M accrual for prior-period ad valorem tax on Rover; otherwise underlying demand was higher YoY .
- NGL & refined products: +$92M transportation margin and +$11M terminals margin, offset by +$51M OpEx including $17M one-time investigation/remediation costs, lower fractionation throughput due to maintenance .
- Midstream: YoY comp includes $70M business interruption proceeds recognized in 3Q24; current quarter saw higher Permian volumes but higher OpEx and lapped one-time benefit .
- Crude: lower Bakken/Bayou Bridge revenue and higher OpEx, partially offset by Texas system growth .
Guidance Changes
Management also reiterated strong long-term, contracted backlog (Hugh Brinson, Desert Southwest, Bethel storage) and high demand-pull exposure supporting multiyear growth .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We now expect to be slightly below the lower end of [the] guidance range of $16.1–$16.5 billion.”
- “We have entered into multiple agreements with Oracle to supply natural gas to three U.S. data centers…approximately 900,000 Mcf per day.”
- “Within the last year, we have contracted over 6 Bcf per day of pipeline capacity with demand pull customers…weighted average life of over 18 years…more than $25 billion of revenue from firm transportation fees.”
- “We are considering converting one of our NGL pipelines to natural gas service.”
- “We will not proceed with LNG [Lake Charles] until we have secured 80% of equity partners…[and] convert HOAs to SPAs.”
- “Flexport…is now ready for ethylene export service…We expect to have over 95% of all LPG export capacity at Nederland contracted through the end of this decade.”
Q&A Highlights
- Guidance clarification: 2025 outcome “slightly below” the low end excludes any Parkland contribution from Sunoco; capex timing deferrals moved spend into 2026 .
- Data-center economics: Many deals are low capital laterals leveraging existing systems; demand charges and storage-backed reliability create attractive returns; Hugh Brinson could be “the most profitable asset we’ve ever built” .
- NGL-to-gas pipeline conversion: Competitive NGL tariffs and large gas demand could yield “twice the revenue” vs NGL in some scenarios; decision under study .
- Crude strategy: With Enbridge, 100 kbpd Southern Illinois Connector FID and potential 250 kbpd via DAPL align with re-contracting and support long-term utilization with 15‑year agreements .
- LNG FID: Requires 80% external equity and sufficient binding SPAs; capital discipline is paramount .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025 vs S&P Global consensus: Revenue $19.95B vs $21.81B* (miss); EPS $0.28 vs $0.331* (miss); EBITDA (S&P) $3.59B* vs $3.97B* (miss). Company-reported Adjusted EBITDA was $3.84B, pressured by one-time costs (e.g., Rover ad valorem, NGL remediation) and lapping prior-year business interruption proceeds .
- Forward (near-term): Street models step-up in Q4 and Q1 (revenue $26.64B*, $24.75B*; EPS $0.367*, $0.362*; EBITDA $4.19B*, $4.23B*), consistent with Flexport ramp, Permian plant ramp, and partial-year timing of Hugh Brinson . Values marked * retrieved from S&P Global.
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term: Results missed consensus on revenue/EPS/EBITDA; guidance trimmed—expect estimate revisions down for FY25 EBITDA; watch for clarity on 4Q one-time noise vs run-rate .
- Contracted growth: Fully contracted Desert Southwest and high data-center/power demand underpin multi‑year volume growth with long-duration, demand-pull contracts—supportive for multiple re-rating despite short-term misses .
- 2026 inflection: 2026 growth capex ~$5B targeting gas-directed projects; key ramps (Flexport, Frac 9, Permian plants, Hugh Brinson late 2026) should drive step-up in EBITDA .
- Capital discipline: LNG FID remains contingent—limits downside risk from mega-project execution; reaffirms focus on returns .
- Optionality/leverage to AI: Potential NGL-to-gas conversion and storage expansions could unlock higher returns as AI/datacenter-driven power demand scales .
- Income support: Distribution raised to $0.3325/unit; strong liquidity with $3.44B revolver availability .
- Trading setup: Watch catalysts—Desert Southwest upsizing decision, additional data center contracts disclosed as confidentiality eases, Lake Charles equity/SPAs progress, and crude tie-in volumes with Enbridge; these can shift sentiment positively even as FY25 guidance is trimmed .
Additional Relevant Press Releases (Q3 2025 context)
- FourPoint Resources & Energy Transfer to double Price River Terminal export capacity (Utah) with new loading/storage infrastructure; in-service targeted 4Q26—supports Uinta Basin crude takeaway and ET’s downstream connectivity .
- Parkland acquisition by Sunoco (ET holds SUN GP interest) closed Oct 31; management noted FY25 guidance commentary excluded Parkland effects .