Tag Archives: Enterprise Products Partners

1 Pipeline Trend to Watch

By Aimee Duffy and Tyler Crowe, The Motley Fool

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As American oil production continues to increase, pipeline companies are starting to get creative when it comes to connecting producers to the most lucrative markets. Oil gets put on trains, trucks, and barges. In this video, Fool.com contributor Aimee Duffy talks to fellow Foolish contributor Tyler Crowe about the growing trend of midstream companies converting natural gas pipeline to oil, why these companies are making changes, and where it is happening.

The growing production of natural gas from hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling is flooding the North American market and resulting in record-low prices for natural gas. Enterprise Products Partners, with its superior integrated asset base, can profit from the massive bottlenecks in takeaway capacity by taking on large-scale projects. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool’s brand-new premium research report on the company.

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From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/11/1-pipeline-trend-to-watch/

1 Easy Way to Boost Stock Returns

By Aimee Duffy, The Motley Fool

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Everyone knows that the ideal investment strategy is to buy low and sell high, but we also know that it is impossible to time the market. With that in mind, investors should start tracking down quality companies that offer dividend reinvestment programs. In this video, Fool.com contributor Aimee Duffy offers us two energy stocks that do just that, and give investors a 5% discount on shares purchased with dividends.  

One great DRIP opportunity is Enterprise Products Partners. With its superior integrated asset base, Enterprise can profit from the massive bottlenecks in takeaway capacity by taking on large-scale projects, generating solid returns for investors. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool’s brand new premium research report on the company.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Enterprise Products Partners Hikes Dividend

By Eric Volkman, The Motley Fool

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Enterprise Products Partners has increased its quarterly distribution by one cent, or 1.5%. The company will hand out $0.67 for each of its common units on May 7 to unitholders of record as of April 30.

Enterprise pointed out that this constitutes the 44th dividend boost since the company’s IPO, which took place in 1998. It is also said it marks the 35th consecutive quarterly increase.

The new dividend annualizes to $2.68 per share. That yields 4.4% at Enterprise’s current stock price of $60.78.

The firm is scheduled to release its Q1 2013 earnings on April 30, before market open. This will be followed by a conference call with investors and analysts to discuss the results.

The article Enterprise Products Partners Hikes Dividend originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Eric Volkman has no position in Enterprise Products Partners. The Motley Fool recommends Enterprise Products Partners. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Copyright © 1995 – 2013 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

ExxonMobil Reminds Us of the Risks of Pipelines

By Matt DiLallo, The Motley Fool

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Oil giant ExxonMobil is being sued for $5 million after one of its pipelines burst which led to a small oil spill in an Arkansas town.The Exxon pipeline, Pegasus, was carrying Canadian crude oil from Illinois to the refinery hub of the Gulf of Mexico. While the cause of the spill is still under investigation, it’s not believed to have had any major impact on the drinking water supply, though it still caused damage to a handful of houses. Two of those homeowners are now filing suit saying that the rupture has caused permanent damage to area property values. 

While the lawsuit represents just pocket change for Exxon, the incident is a reminder of the risks faced by pipeline operators. An incident like this can come with a high price tag. Whether its cleanup, lawsuits, or lost revenue, these costs have the potential to have a negative effect on the operator’s bottom line. Investors in major pipeline operators like Kinder Morgan Pipeline Partners and Enterprise Products Partners are much better insulated against these risks because of the diversity of their operations as well as their balance sheet strength. However, if you’re considering swapping out for a smaller operator with a higher yield, you might want to think twice before you make that move.

Given that one invests in a pipeline company with one goal in mind – income – you want that income to be as secure as possible. Those distributions could be at risk, if you’re invested in the wrong operator. If a larger portion of the company’s income flows from one asset, you could be exposing yourself to more risk than you realize. 

If that pipeline has a major rupture that causes great environmental and property damage, then it’s impact on operations would be substantial and could be compounded if the company’s business is saddled with a lot of debt. To avoid this risk, invest in a company with a diversified asset base and solid balance sheet. Further, look to see if the company’s largest asset is partnered with another company with an even stronger risk profile. 

For example, Enterprise’s major oil pipeline to the Gulf Coast, Seaway, is partnered with Enbridge . The 500-mile pipeline was recently reversed and is undergoing a major capacity expansion program. This partnership helps both companies mitigate some of the risk should the pipeline ever have a major, long-term disruption.

Enbridge and its affiliates have had its share of pipeline problems over the past couple of years. One of the worst was a 2010 spill in the Kalamazoo River system. In that spill the EPA says more than 1.1 million gallons of oil and 200,000 cubic yards of oil-contaminated sediment and debris were removed. That spill is believed to have cost the company more than a billion dollars to clean up. Given Enbridge‘s size and scale, it was able to absorb those costs. The question you need to ask yourself is if the company you’re considering could do the same. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Is America Losing the Natural Gas Export Game?

By Tyler Crowe and Aimee Duffy, The Motley Fool

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U.S. policymakers have dragged their feet on a definitive answer for liquefied natural gas, or LNG, exports for quite a while, and several countries are taking advantage of the delay. With over $150 billion at stake, companies in Australia, Canada, and Papua New Guinea have made a strong push to build out LNG export terminals to capture the lucrative Asia-Pacific market.

In this video, Fool.com contributor Tyler Crowe explains how the concentration of possible LNG export facilities along the U.S. Gulf Coast will not help the country capture this market, and how there are several companies that are betting on better success on other shores. Investors shouldn’t completely fret, though, because many American companies are the ones setting up shop overseas.

The growing production of natural gas from hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling is flooding the North American market and resulting in record-low prices for natural gas. Enterprise Products Partners, with its superior integrated asset base, can profit from the massive bottlenecks in takeaway capacity by taking on large-scale projects. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool’s brand new premium research report on the company.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Pipeline Construction Screeches to a Halt

By Aimee Duffy and Tyler Crowe, The Motley Fool

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Despite our current natural gas boom, the midstream industry only built 367 miles of natural gas pipeline last year. That’s the lowest total in 15 years, and it’s got some investors worried about the future of natural gas production — and prices. In this video, Fool.com contributor Aimee Duffy takes a look at what this reported figure really means, and how it fits into the greater context of our energy future.

The growing production of natural gas from hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling is flooding the North American market and resulting in record-low prices for natural gas. Enterprise Products Partners, with its superior integrated asset base, can profit from the massive bottlenecks in takeaway capacity by taking on large-scale projects. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool’s brand new premium research report on the company.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

3 Winners for Energy Exports

By Aimee Duffy and Tyler Crowe, The Motley Fool

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At this point, many energy investors know that Cheniere Energy is poised to become the first U.S. company to export liquefied natural gas, or LNG, in significant quantities. Investing in energy exports is a smart move; however, LNG exports won’t become a reality until 2015, while the U.S. is already a net exporter of petroleum products. In this video, Fool.com contributor Aimee Duffy explains why investors should focus on companies that are already making money in the export game, including one company that is behind a whopping 25% of America’s energy exports, and two other companies that are flying under the radar.

Enterprise Products Partners is known best for its processing and fractionating footprint, but this midstream is poised to ramp up exports in 2013. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool’s brand-new premium research report on the company.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Who Wins if Keystone XL Is Approved?

By Arjun Sreekumar, The Motley Fool

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The debate over the controversial northern leg of the Keystone XL pipeline continues to rage.

On the one side are environmentalists and climate change campaigners who argue that the pipeline’s construction would be like a slap in the face to all those who take global warming seriously.

They suggest that green-lighting Keystone would lead to further development in Alberta’s oil sands – a region where oil production emits substantially greater quantities of greenhouse gases than conventional methods. This, they argue, would raise the earth’s temperature to potentially dangerous levels.

But the energy companies have their own agenda and continue to push for Keystone’s approval. Let’s take a look at some of the companies likely to benefit from Keystone’s construction.

Energy companies pushing for Keystone
If constructed, TransCanada‘s 875-mile Keystone XL Pipeline expansion project would transport up to 830,000 barrels per day of crude oil from Alberta’s oil sands to Steele City, Neb. From Nebraska the crude would make its way to Cushing, Okla., from where it would be moved south via Seaway – a major pipeline that runs from Cushing to refineries along the U.S. Gulf Coast and is operated jointly by midstream companies Enbridge and Enterprise Products Partners .

Refiners in particular would benefit tremendously from the pipeline, which would bring them barrel upon barrel of heavy, sour crude – a type of oil for which they currently have to rely on countries like Mexico and Venezuela.

Many are so thirsty for heavy crude oil that they’ve turned to alternative methods like rail and barge to get it. For instance, Valero‘s president, Joe Gorder, announced earlier this month that the company is looking into shipping Canadian crude via rail and barge to two of its plants – its Wilmington refinery in southern California, which would accept crude delivered via rail, and its St. Charles refinery in Louisiana, which would process crude shipped by barge from a delivery point in Illinois.

Similarly, PBF Energy announced in February that, starting next year, it will use rail to ship some 80,000 barrels a day of Canadian crude oil to its Delaware refinery. And Phillips 66 recently announced that its California refineries have now started to accept rail deliveries of heavy Canadian crude.

Another group of energy companies that stands to benefit from Keystone are the oil sands producers themselves. Due to limited outbound infrastructure from Alberta, these companies have languished at the hands of extremely low prices for their product, which, until recently, traded at more than a $30 discount to West Texas Intermediate, the main benchmark for American crude oil. Faced with shrinking margins, many have been forced to curtail spending.

Suncor, Canada‘s largest oil and gas producer by market value, announced in December that it would reduce its capital spending budget for 2013 by C$200 million. And Canadian Natural Resources , another major oil sands player, said that it plans to cut costs related to thermal sand production, a process used to heat …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

The Newest Texas Sweet Spot

By Aimee Duffy and Tyler Crowe, The Motley Fool

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The Eagle Ford Shale play is one of the most important oil-producing regions in the U.S. right now. Located predominantly in South Texas, the northeast corner of this play is called the Eaglebine, and it’s starting to get attention from exploration and production companies. In this video, Fool.com contributor Aimee Duffy talks to Tyler Crowe about which companies are active in the Eaglebine, and what investors can expect from the region in 2013.

Enterprise Products Partners is the midstream outfit with arguably the best asset base in the Eagle Ford Shale. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool’s brand-new premium research report on the company.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Big Oil Wants to Develop Its Own Maritime Fleet

By Taylor Muckerman and Joel South, The Motley Fool

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Due to the costs of gathering natural gas from the ocean‘s depths and transporting it to processing centers on land, big oil companies are starting to develop facilities that will perform these actions out at sea. Royal Dutch Shell was the first to announce that it had begun construction back in October 2012, but its larger rival ExxonMobil is not to be outdone.

Partnering with Exxon will be BHP Billiton . Together, these two companies hope to begin processing millions of tons of liquids, LNG, and condensate by 2020 at the earliest. With that long time horizon, both companies are hoping that such a large investment will still be worth it.

Could this be bad news for pipeline companies with an offshore presence?
The growing production of natural gas from hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling is flooding the North American market and resulting in record low prices for natural gas. Enterprise Products Partners, with its superior integrated asset base, can profit from the massive bottlenecks in takeaway capacity by taking on large-scale projects. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool’s brand new premium research report on the company.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

This MLP Spinoff Will Be Hard to Resist

By Aimee Duffy, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

It’s official: Phillips 66 is going to IPO a master limited partnership before the end of this year. The company announced yesterday it has filed registration paperwork with the SEC. Currently a wholly owned subsidiary, Phillips 66 Partners will trade under the ticker PSXP. Management has yet to decide how many limited partner units will be offered, or how they will be priced, but it intends to raise about $300 million in proceeds from the sale. This could be a great opportunity for investors looking for a stable business to add to their portfolios. With that in mind, let’s take a closer look at the midstream story at Phillips 66. 

Midstream at PSX
Phillips 66 has a significant midstream business, and reorganizing into an MLP makes plenty of sense. The assets that will fall under the Phillips 66 Partners entity include:

  • Clifton Ridge crude oil pipeline
  • Terminals and storage in Louisiana, Illinois, and Texas
  • Sweeny to Pasadena refined products pipeline
  • Hartford Connector refined products pipeline
  • 3 NGL fractionators: 130,000 bpd capacity 

Phillips 66 also holds a 50% interest in DCP Midstream, the parent company of DCP Midstream Partners . Spectra Energy holds the other 50% stake. DCP specializes in natural gas gathering systems, and is also one of the largest producers and marketers of natural gas liquids in the U.S. The company produced 400,000 bpd of NGLs, and contributed EBITDA of $1.1 billion to Phillips 66 in 2012. .

Room to run
Phillips 66 Partners will IPO in the second half of this year, but don’t expect this MLP to sit still for very long. Management sees compelling growth opportunities ahead, especially in exports, and is looking to significantly increase full-year EBITDA from the current level of about $180 million.

Both Phillips 66 and DCP Midstream have a strong asset footprint on the Gulf Coast, which makes it easy to target export growth. PSXP will focus on international markets for petrochemicals and heating, specifically aiming to increase exports of liquefied petroleum gas and NGLs.

DCP Midstream is also targeting growth, and it expects to grow its NGL production by 25% over the next five years.

Foolish takeaway
I encourage Fools interested in this IPO to take a long look at the prospectus, once it becomes available on the SEC website. Specifically, look for an indication of what level of commodity risk PSXP will be exposed to. NGL prices have wreaked havoc on the industry in the past, and by Phillips 66’s own calculation, a $0.01 change in NGL prices causes a $4 million change in net income.  If PSX structures fee-based contracts with the new MLP, this IPO will be hard to resist.

Enterprise Products Partners is another midstream company targeting export growth. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool’s brand new premium research report on the company.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Ignore This Pipeline Statistic

By Aimee Duffy, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

The Energy Information Administration, or EIA, announced earlier this week that there were only 367 miles of natural gas pipelines built across the U.S. last year. As demand for natural gas climbs, keeping up our infrastructure is incredibly important. Today I’ll take a closer look at what investors really need to pay attention to when it comes to building out our pipeline network.

A brief construction history
Over the past 15 years, we’ve built a considerable amount of natural gas pipeline. Construction really dropped off last year, however, after a massive build out in 2008 and 2009:

Source: EIA

In 2011, we spent nearly $10 billion adding just shy of 2,500 miles of new pipeline. With the exception of six projects smaller than 100 miles each, that construction occurred outside of the Northeast region.

Though we built less than 400 miles of pipeline in 2012, most of that construction was in the Northeast, a region that is particularly wanting for infrastructure as production booms in the Marcellus Shale.

The more important number
This year, the EIA expects operators to bring on line more than 1,000 miles of natural gas pipeline projects. More importantly, capacity additions should reach 15 billion cubic feet per day, after failing to crack 5 bcfd in 2012.

It is important to distinguish between capacity and miles when we attempt to reconcile this construction growth. Capacity can be added by increasing pressure at compressor stations, or more obviously, by using bigger pipes. Taking a look at our next two charts really hammers home this point.

First we have the number of miles constructed in the Northeast from 1997 to proposed miles in 2015:

Source: EIA

Far and away the biggest growth year was 1999. Now let’s look at capacity additions over the same period:

Source: EIA

Right away the difference is striking. There is very little correspondence between miles constructed and capacity added. The easiest comparison to make is between 2012 and 2013. Construction miles in the Northeast are expected to increase slightly this year, but capacity will jump through the roof.

Why this matters
Our world is full of numbers, but not all of them matter. In the pipeline game, capacity and connections to valuable markets are much more important than mileage.

Take for example, Enterprise Products Partners‘ ATEX Express pipeline. It’s a long line that will travel from the Marcellus Shale down to the Gulf Coast, and it will certainly increase the company’s overall mileage statistics, but that doesn’t matter at all. What matters is that it will add 190,000 barrels per day of capacity to a region that desperately needs it. Chesapeake Energy has gone on record saying that it will not increase its liquids production in the Marcellus until this pipe comes on line. Range Resources is also counting on the project to deliver production to the Gulf.

Foolish takeaway
Whether or not …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

4 Opportunities in Pennsylvania's Gas Boom

By Aimee Duffy, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Last week, the Energy Information Administration, or EIA, reported that Pennsylvania‘s natural gas production climbed an astounding 69% between 2011 and 2012. The state sits above the Marcellus Shale, and exploiting that formation has likely catapulted Pennsylvania into the ranks of the top five natural gas producing states. Let’s take a closer look at this story, and what opportunities it may provide for investors.

Rapid growth
Pennsylvania‘s transformation from gasless laggard to methane monster happened seemingly overnight. In 2008, the state produced less than 1 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd) of natural gas. That was the first year producers started drilling horizontal wells in meaningful numbers. The results are impressive:

Source: EIA

In a mere four years, Pennsylvania‘s natural gas production has climbed from 1.0 bcfd to reach 6.1 bcfd in 2012. You can see how much of an impact shale drilling has had, given the rapid decline of non-horizontal wells in blue, and the corresponding rise of horizontal wells in brown.

Perhaps the more important take away from the graph above, is that this growth came at a time when drilling slowed overall. Between 2011 and 2012, there were about 750 fewer wells drilled, yet production increased 69% over that same period. Let’s take a look at how this happened, and at two key opportunities that came out of it for investors.

Fewer rigs, but more gas?
There are two reasons that drilling rig counts dropped but production increased. The first is that because of a lack of pipeline capacity in the Marcellus, many rigs were drilled and never turned on. Capacity grew in 2012, and will grow even more in 2013, and again in 2014. This will allow producers to move more gas, which should drive the price up, much the way additional pipeline capacity in Texas has boosted the price of oil.

The second reason is that producers are much more efficient at drilling wells now. Improved techniques contribute to not only shorter drilling times, but higher production rates per well. The average horizontal well drilled in the Marcellus costs about $3 million-$4 million. Obviously, any company that improves drilling efficiency has the opportunity to cut costs as well.

Companies to consider
Given what we know about what is behind the growth in Pennsylvania, it makes sense to search for pipeline operators and efficient drillers in the Marcellus Shale. Here are four companies to get your research started:

  • Kinder Morgan Energy Partners is the nation’s leading natural gas transporter and naturally has a stake in the Marcellus. It is expanding its Tennessee Gas Pipeline system in several places, which should increase takeaway capacity by more than 8.0 million cubic feet per day by the end of November 2013.
  • Enterprise Products Partners is bringing online one of the region’s most anticipated pipeline projects, the ATEX Express. Chesapeake Energy said in its last investor presentation that its wet gas production isn’t going to …read more
    Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Double-Digit Distribution Growth at This MLP

By Matt DiLallo, The Motley Fool

EPD Dividend Chart

Filed under:

A master limited partnership that can grow its dividend tends to reward investors to a much more than those that don’t grow the payout. Take a look at the following chart of top MLPs Enterprise Products Partners and Energy Transfer Partners :

EPD Dividend data by YCharts

Do you notice that in the past two years Enterprise’s distribution and units have been rising steadily? Do you also see that Energy Transfer‘s distribution has been steady but its units have fallen? That’s why income-seeking investors are best served by investing in MLPs that offer a growing income stream.

A name income investors might want to take a look at is Crosstex Energy  and its publicly traded general partner Crosstex Energy Inc. . Since 2010 both have offered double-digit-income growth as you can see from the chart below:

Source: Crosstex Investor Presentation

The company has several exciting growth projects in the pipeline which should keep that income flowing even higher in the future. Among them, Crosstex has several projects serving the Gulf Coast petrochemical market including phase one of its Cajun-Sibon expansion. The project, which is expected to be completed in the middle of this year, includes expanding the capacity of its Eunice natural gas liquids fractionator as well as a new natural gas liquids pipeline. Once complete the project will add $40 million-$45 million in adjusted EBITDA, which is a nice boost for a company that generated just $214 million in adjusted EBITDA last year.

Phase two of the Cajun-Sibon expansion should be in service by the second half of 2014. This project will add another $75 million-$85 million in adjusted EBITDA. Crosstex has other smaller projects nearing completion which include finishing phase two of its Riverside Crude Terminal. Once complete by the middle of this year both phases of that project will add about $10 million in fee-based cash flow.

That fee-based cash flow is important for investors, as it’s not sensitive to commodity price volatility. In 2010, 30% of Crosstex’s cash flows were subject to commodity prices. By the end of 2014 just 13% of its cash flow will be sensitive to commodities. By the end of 2014 the company will have spent more than a billion dollars to transform its business. That’s money well spent; it not only grows Crosstex’s income, but it makes that income more secure.

Looking even further ahead, Crosstex has several additional expansion opportunities that represent another billion dollars in potential capital investments. Among these opportunities are phases three and four at Cajun-Sibon, a third phase at Riverside, and multiple opportunities at its Ohio River Valley assets serving the emerging Utica Shale.

That’s the recipe for continued distribution growth for Crosstex investors. Even better, all that growth comes with a current distribution yield of nearly 7.5%. While that’s in line with what Energy Transfer investors are getting today, it is a lot more than the 4.7% new investors would get by …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

This Little Energy Stock Just Got Bigger

By Aimee Duffy, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Typically when the Permian Basin makes it into the news, the focus is on one of the fields in West Texas — but not today. Today New Mexico is in the spotlight, as growing production in the Permian across the border has allowed midstream MLP Holly Energy Partners to expand its crude oil capacity by 100,000 barrels per day.

The deal
Earlier this month, Holly Energy announced its plan to convert a refined products pipeline to crude oil service, and construct several new pipelines segments. It will also expand an existing pipeline and build truck unloading stations and crude storage capacity. Capital expenditures are expected to reach $35 million-$40 million, and the line should be in service no later than 2014.

Beyond higher volumes, there is significant upside here. The deal expands Holly Energy‘s customer base outside of its general partner, HollyFrontier . The refiner currently contracts 100% of Holly Energy‘s capacity through fee-based agreements. The fact that outside shippers have already committed enough volumes to get this project off the ground is important because it diversifies Holly Energy‘s income.

The familial bond remains intact, of course, not only because HollyFrontier owns a 44% stake in the MLP, but because there is a good chance that some of the oil will end up at its Navajo refinery in Artesia, N.M. The capacity of that refinery is 100,000 barrels per day, so it would be virtually impossible for HFC to take absorb it all.

Another look at the Land of Enchantment
Let’s get back to New Mexico for a second. Most of our “top oil-producing states” lists stop at five, which means the sixth-largest oil producer doesn’t get much attention. It is also the seventh-largest producer of U.S. natural gas.

The Energy Information Administration estimates that in November 2012, the most recent data available, New Mexico produced around 7.4 million barrels of oil, leaving it just shy of Oklahoma’s 8 million barrels.

As of 2011, the most recent full-year data that the state itself provides, Concho Resources and Occidental Petroleum were the largest oil producers, cranking out 13.7 million barrels and 6.2 million barrels of oil, respectively, in 2011.

Foolish takeaway
Both HollyFrontier and Holly Energy Partners have a significant presence in New Mexico. While Texas may get all the attention right now, expect to see production ramp up west of the border as well. The two Hollys and Occidental Petroleum are just a few of the companies that will benefit as producers hone their expertise in the Permian.

Enterprise Products Partners is much bigger than Holly Energy, but still offers stable distribution growth. With its superior integrated asset base, Enterprise can profit from the massive bottlenecks in takeaway capacity by taking on large-scale projects. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool’s brand-new premium research report on the company.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

With Financing Cheap, Share Buybacks Reach the Billions

By Russ Krull, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

New issues in U.S. corporate bond markets topped $43 billion last week, with foreign-based borrowers taking down more than half the total. Here’s a look at who’s doing the borrowing and what they’re doing with the money.

The biggest dose of borrowing came from GlaxoSmithKline , with three-, 10-, and 30-year prescriptions totaling $3 billion. The SEC filing didn’t provide many details, reading: “We intend to use the net proceeds for general corporate purposes, which may include the refinancing of existing indebtedness. We may also invest the net proceeds in marketable securities as part of our liquidity management process.”

Enterprise Products Partners piped $2.25 billion of fresh cash through its operating subsidiary with 10- and 30-year paper. The midstream partnership will use the money to repay maturing notes and pay down a credit facility and commercial paper.

Goldcorp dug up $1.5 billion spread over five- and 10-year notes. Most of the new money will be used to repay maturing convertible notes, with the rest going for capital expenditures or working capital.

Discovery Communications found some buyers for $1.2 billion split between 10- and 30-year channels. The possible uses for the money listed in Discovery’s press release include “the acquisition of companies or businesses, repayment and refinancing of debt, working capital, capital expenditures and the repurchase by the Company of its capital stock.”

Union Pacific loaded up $650 million between 10- and 30-year tranches. The money will be used to repurchase stock under the company’s share repurchase program.

Viacom entertained the bond market with 10- and 30-year notes totaling $550 million. The money will go toward paying down debt and share repurchases.

DCP Midstream Partners energized its cash levels by selling $500 million of 10-year paper through its operating subsidiary. The money will be used to finance the drop-down of a bigger piece of its Eagle Ford joint venture, announced in the company’s quarterly earnings last month.

Refinancing and share buybacks continue to be popular reasons for companies to tap credit markets, and there’s no sign of the cheap money supply drying up.

The growing production of natural gas from hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling is flooding the North American market and resulting in record-low prices for natural gas. Enterprise Products Partners, with its superior integrated asset base, can profit from the massive bottlenecks in takeaway capacity by taking on large-scale projects. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool’s brand-new premium research report on the company.

var FoolAnalyticsData = FoolAnalyticsData || []; …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Why Are These MLPs Spinning Off C-Corporations?

By Tyler Crowe and Aimee Duffy, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

MLPs are all the rage in the energy sector, and several companies want to get into the game by spinning off assets into an MLP strucutre. But Fool.com contributor Tyler Crowe sees a few companies trying their hand at the other direction and spin off some of their assets into C corporations. Linn Energy was one of the leading companies to try its hand at spinning off a C-corp with its IPO of LinnCo back in October. Now some others are looking at it as well.

In this video, Tyler and Aimee Duffy discuss how these moves not only help companies raise more capital, but how they also provide a vehicle for institutional investors to get in the game and facilitate acquisitions. Investors should keep a sharp eye on upstream MLPs like these — not only because of share dilution, but also because some of the risks the upstream sectors has that could pose a larger threat to an MLP.

The growing production of natural gas from hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling is flooding the North American market and resulting in record-low prices for natural gas. Enterprise Products Partners, with its superior integrated asset base, can profit from the massive bottlenecks in takeaway capacity by taking on large-scale projects. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool’s brand-new premium research report on the company.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

We Already Export Natural Gas, So What's the Fuss?

By Tyler Crowe and Aimee Duffy, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Export. Don’t export. There are plenty of very valid arguments on both sides of the natural gas debate, but there’s one small caveat we aren’t talking about, and that is that the U.S. already exports natural gas. Be it the 12 million tons of natural gas to Mexico every year, or the smaller amount of LNG to Japan, the U.S. has sent natural gas all over the world. In this video, Fool.com contributor Tyler Crowe talks with Aimee Duffy to shine a little extra light on this topic and explain how perhaps the debate about LNG exports is much ado about nothing.

The growing production of natural gas from hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling is flooding the North American market and resulting in record-low prices for natural gas. Enterprise Products Partners, with its superior integrated asset base, can profit from the massive bottlenecks in takeaway capacity by taking on large-scale projects. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool’s brand new premium research report on the company.

var FoolAnalyticsData = FoolAnalyticsData || []; FoolAnalyticsData.push({ eventType: “TickerReportPitch”, contentByline: “Tyler Crowe and Aimee Duffy“, contentId: “cms.23706”, contentTickers: “NYSE:DOW, NYSE:EPD, NASDAQ:WPRT, NASDAQ:CLNE, NYSEMKT:LNG“, contentTitle: “We Already Export Natural Gas, So What’s the Fuss?”, hasVideo: “True”, pitchId: “98”, …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Enterprise Products Partners to Present at Howard Weil Energy Conference

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Enterprise Products Partners to Present at Howard Weil Energy Conference

HOUSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Enterprise Products Partners L.P. (NYS: EPD) today announced that Michael A. Creel, chief executive officer of Enterprise’s general partner, is scheduled to present at the Howard Weil 41st Annual Energy Conference in New Orleans, Louisiana on Monday, March 18, 2013 at 4:10 p.m. CDT.

A copy of the presentation will be available the day of the event and may be obtained from the Enterprise website at www.enterpriseproducts.com under the Investors tab.

Enterprise Products Partners L.P. is one of the largest publicly traded partnerships and a leading North American provider of midstream energy services to producers and consumers of natural gas, NGLs, crude oil, refined products and petrochemicals. Our services include: natural gas gathering, treating, processing, transportation and storage; NGL transportation, fractionation, storage, and import and export terminals; crude oil gathering and transportation, storage and terminals; offshore production platforms; petrochemical and refined products transportation and services; and a marine transportation business that operates primarily on the United States inland and Intracoastal Waterway systems and in the Gulf of Mexico. The partnership’s assets include approximately 50,000 miles of onshore and offshore pipelines; 200 million barrels of storage capacity for NGLs, petrochemicals, refined products and crude oil; and 14 billion cubic feet of natural gas storage capacity. Additional information can be found on the Enterprise website.

Enterprise Products Partners L.P.
Randy Burkhalter, 713-381-6812 or 866-230-0745
Investor Relations
or
Rick Rainey, 713-381-3635
Media Relations

KEYWORDS:   United States  North America  Louisiana  Texas

INDUSTRY KEYWORDS:

The article Enterprise Products Partners to Present at Howard Weil Energy Conference originally appeared on Fool.com.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Are MLP Spinoffs One-Trick Ponies?

By Aimee Duffy and Tyler Crowe, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

There has been a rash of announcements about refiners and exploration and production companies spinning off their midstream assets into publicly traded master limited partnerships lately. In this video, Motley Fool contributor Aimee Duffy talks about the advantages and disadvantages that come with these newer midstream outfits, and how investing in them compares to investing in more traditional companies like Enterprise Products Partners .

Enterprise Products Partners, with its superior integrated asset base, is one of the most diverse midstream outfits in the game today. The partnership has worked to grow its fee-based revenue, and that can pay off in a big way for unitholders. To help investors decide whether Enterprise Products Partners is a buy or a sell today, click here now to check out The Motley Fool‘s brand-new premium research report on the company.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance