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NGL Energy Partners LP (NGL)·Q3 2021 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 FY2021 revenue was $1.462B, down 34% year over year, with a net loss of $380.5M driven by non‑cash impairments tied to the Extraction settlement .
- Adjusted EBITDA was $125M for the quarter; management reinstated FY2021 Adjusted EBITDA guidance at $500M (including a ~$45M Extraction impact) and guided FY2022 to $570–$600M .
- Grand Mesa volumes fell to ~69 kbpd (vs ~134 kbpd a year ago) as the contract transitioned to a new Supply Agreement with a crude price adder above $50/bbl; no MVCs under the new structure .
- Liquidity was extended via $2.05B senior secured notes and a new $500M ABL; common and preferred distributions are suspended until Total Leverage ≤4.75x, a key catalyst tied to deleveraging pace .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Water Solutions efficiencies: Operating expense averaged $0.27 per barrel and disposal fees $0.61 per barrel; total produced water volumes were ~1.4M bbl/d, aided by Poker Lake pipeline deliveries .
- Liquids & Refined Products resiliency: Segment delivered $42M Adjusted EBITDA; propane benefited from seasonal cold snaps and improving product pricing .
- Strategic contract outcome: New Supply Agreement with Extraction retains barrels on Grand Mesa and adds a price adder above $50/bbl—“If crude exceeds $50 a barrel, we get to share in that increase” (CEO) .
What Went Wrong
- Impairments and Grand Mesa volume pressure: NGL recorded a $145.8M intangible impairment (rejected transportation contract) and a $237.8M goodwill impairment in Crude Oil Logistics; Grand Mesa volumes averaged ~69 kbpd vs ~134 kbpd last year .
- Consolidated results: Revenue declined to $1.462B (from $2.227B) and net loss was $380.5M, reflecting impairments and extraction-related write-offs .
- Distribution suspension and higher interest costs: Distributions are restricted until Total Leverage ≤4.75x; refinancing moves maturities to 2026 but raises interest expense near term .
Financial Results
Consolidated Performance
Segment Revenues
KPIs
Adjusted EBITDA (Total)
Notes:
- Q3 Adjusted EBITDA by segment: Crude ~$26M, Water ~$66M, Liquids ~$42M .
- Non-GAAP definitions and reconciliation are discussed by management on the call .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “If crude exceeds $50 a barrel, we get to share in that increase… With higher crude oil prices, we anticipate increasing volumes.” — CEO on new Extraction supply agreement and price adder .
- “This refinancing pushed $2.0 billion of maturities… out to February 2026… distributions will be temporarily suspended until our leverage is reduced.” — CFO on refi and payout constraints .
- “Adjusted EBITDA guidance remains at $500 million… Fiscal ’22 EBITDA is expected to be $570 million to $600 million.” — CEO on outlook .
- “Total produced water volumes averaged 1.4 million barrels per day… disposal fee $0.61 per barrel… operating expenses averaged $0.27 per barrel.” — CFO on water KPIs .
Q&A Highlights
- Strategic focus: NGL is not pursuing a water JV now post-refinance (RBC) .
- Distributions: Must be below 4.75x Total Leverage; preferred must be addressed before common; long‑term leverage goal <4x (RBC) .
- Preferred accrual: ~$85–$90M per year if unpaid (TPR) .
- Grand Mesa volumes: Deferred barrels returning in current quarter as Extraction emerges; recovery will take time (Aurelius) .
- Sequential EBITDA drivers: Return of some Grand Mesa volumes, water volume growth, seasonal propane margins (Aurelius) .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q3 FY2021 could not be retrieved due to an API limit; comparisons versus consensus are unavailable at this time. Management reported Q3 Adjusted EBITDA of $125M and reiterated FY2021 guidance at $500M and FY2022 at $570–$600M .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Deleveraging is the gating factor for payout resumption; distributions are contractually restricted until Total Leverage ≤4.75x, making debt reduction and EBITDA growth the central equity catalyst .
- Water Solutions remains the earnings anchor with improving unit economics (OpEx $0.27/bbl) and rising pipeline volumes (Poker Lake), supporting FY2022 guidance .
- Grand Mesa’s transition to a price‑linked supply agreement removes MVCs but introduces volume sensitivity; higher crude prices and DJ basin activity could lift throughput and earnings via the price adder .
- Refinancing materially reduced near‑term maturity risk and improved liquidity, albeit with higher interest expense; use of excess cash flow and potential note repurchases will influence the pace to the leverage threshold .
- Non‑cash impairments reset carrying values; focus should be on forward cash generation (Water, Liquids recovery, crude price lever) rather than backward‑looking GAAP charges .
- Watch for FY2022 execution: capex discipline ($100–$125M), water dedications/DUC completions, and volume recovery on Grand Mesa to bridge to the $570–$600M Adjusted EBITDA guide .