HomeBusiness3 Midstream Stocks to Buy with $5,000 and Hold Forever

3 Midstream Stocks to Buy with $5,000 and Hold Forever

If you’re an investor looking for investments with high returns and solid upside potential, there may be no better place to look than the energy midstream space. Stocks in this sector tend to have attractive yields, while the sector as a whole is trading below historical multiples.

The sector has undergone a transformation over the past decade, with midstream companies reducing debt and being more disciplined when it comes to financing growth projects. Generally, the companies structured as Master Limited Partnerships (MLPs) have also eliminated their IDRs (incentive distribution rights), which essentially acted as a tax paid to their general partners whenever they increased their distributions.

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Despite the companies being in better financial shape today than under the old MLP model, the shares trade at a discount to the 13.7 multiple at which midstream MLPs traded between 2011 and 2016.

Against that backdrop, let’s take a look at three great MLPs: Partners for business products (NYSE:EPD), Energy transfer (NYSE:ET), and Western Midstream (NYSE: WES) – Investors might consider buying and holding forever. All three stocks trade well below the MLP average for the 2011-2016 period.

If you’re looking for consistency, there may be no better option in the midstream space than Enterprise Products Partners, which has expanded its distribution for 26 years in a row across all types of economic and energy environments, and has maintained consistent performance over the years delivered. . The midstream MLP currently has a forward yield of approximately 6.5%.

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The company’s excellent track record can be attributed to its largely fee-based model and the company’s conservative nature in terms of leverage and capital expenditure (capex). It has a well-covered distribution based on distributable cash flow (DCF), which consists of operating cash flow minus maintenance investments. Based on that benchmark, it had a benefit coverage ratio of 1.7 times in the past quarter.

Meanwhile, Enterprise is starting to ramp up its growth projects after pulling back during the pandemic. Enterprise has also said it is one of the best-positioned companies to benefit from increased demand for natural gas and energy due to the artificial intelligence (AI)-driven data center buildout, given its pipeline and storage resources.

Despite perhaps having one of the most attractive integrated midstream footprints in the US, Energy Transfer’s shares are among the cheapest in the sector. That’s partly because the company ran into trouble during the pandemic and decided to cut its distribution in half to reduce debt and improve its balance sheet (which it has achieved).

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