Crestwood Equity Partners -- A Top Notch High-Yield MLP - YouTube

Channel: The Motley Fool

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Nick Sciple: Let's pivot into your main discussion today, which is pipeline companies.
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The first company we want to talk about is Crestwood Equity Partners.
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Their an MLP pipeline business. They yield a little over 7%.
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Up about 28% year to date.
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They have a fairly well-covered distribution, about a 1.2X distribution coverage ratio.
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When you look at Crestwood Equity, what really stands out to you about that business?
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Matt Dilallo: They've done a lot over the past couple years to turn around.
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I've been watching them for a little while. I actually bought some units earlier this year.
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I saw the turn in their financials, their leverage ratio, which is the amount of debt
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they have to earnings. That's gone from over 5X to around 4X.
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And then, their coverage ratio, as you mentioned, is up 1.2X.
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They were paying out more than they were bringing in for quite a while.
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They sold assets, they cut their distribution a few years ago, they partnered with a bunch
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of companies to bring in cash, but also to help fund grow.
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They've done a lot to turn around, and it's finally starting to show up in their financials.
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Their earnings were up about 8%, which is good for a company that's been steadily declining.
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It was nice to see that turn. And that turn's going to accelerate going forward. They've had success.
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What they do is, their main business is gathering and processing.
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That's taking natural gas from the wellhead. They'll take that and separate out the natural gas liquids.
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It's a business that's very dependent on volume.
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As oil and gas companies are drilling, the volumes go up.
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That's been one of the things that has driven them lately, this uptick and drilling, especially
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in places like the Bakken, where they have a good position.
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They're also in the Delaware Basin, which is part of the Permian, and the Powder River Basin,
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which is out in the Rockies. They've got these three growth engines.
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They're starting to finish up some projects.
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As those projects are coming online, it's allowing companies to drill more wells, complete more wells.
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That's really starting to accelerate their growth, and they're starting to take off.
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Sciple: Let's talk about some of those new pipeline investments that are coming online.
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You mentioned partnering with some other businesses in the Delaware base.
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They're working on their Orla natural gas processing plant and pipeline.
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They've announced a joint venture for the Nautilus Orla pipeline, with Shell Midstream
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Partners for what Shell's doing.
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Similarly, in the Powder River basin, they're partnering with Williams Companies to help
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support the growth of Chesapeake Energy.
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Latching onto these producers they're servicing, what advantages does that give them?
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Does that give them some steadier cash flow opportunities because they're partnered with
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these producers? Give us some color on what that means for the business.
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Dilallo: We'll start in the Powder River Basin, where they're working with Williams Companies
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to support Chesapeake Energy. Chesapeake's one of the bigger drillers out there.
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Chesapeake really sees a lot of growth potential out in that area there.
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Production is up like 100% in the past year off a low base.
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They're putting more rigs out there. That gives Williams and Crestwood visibility.
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They can tell "Okay, Chesapeake's production is going to grow by X%.
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To support that, we need to build these gathering pipelines," which will take the raw production
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from the well to these processing plants, which separate the natural gas from the natural gas liquids.
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They get paid fees as they do this. So, as the volumes go up, the fees go up.
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It's a really good visibility business.
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It is tied to, we call it the supply side versus the demand side. It's really driven by drilling.
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With oil prices recently going up this has been really driving that.
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By working with both Chesapeake and Williams, they have a very good idea of what's going on,
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as far as planning how many wells. And then Williams, they help fund half of it.
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For a company that's paying out with a 1.2X coverage ratio, that's probably over 70% of
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their cash flow, they don't have a lot of retained cash to reinvest.
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So, that's helping them with that. The same thing in the Delaware basin working with Shell.
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Obviously, a massive company.
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They have their own MLP and they're working with them to follow along with what Shell's
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doing so they can time these gathering pipelines coming online.
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You mentioned the Orla plant, that's the first one. They'll probably build a second one there.
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It's really being able to time these plants so they're not building a natural gas processing
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plant on speculation, but they know that the volume is coming, so they can make that return very quickly.
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Sciple: Right. As a result of these investments, Crestwood is projecting a cumulative annual growth
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rate in their cash flow per unit at 15% through 2020.
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They're really thinking that there are some significant growth opportunities.
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We've discussed the Bakken and the Permian in the past, and the real opportunities, once
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we get this infrastructure online, for that growth lever to really get pulled.
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Looking forward for Crestwood over the next few years, if an investor wants to start a
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position or wants to start following the stock to think about maybe starting position in
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the future, what are the things that investors should watch going forward or pay attention
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to what this business?
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Dilallo: One of the things I like about Crestwood is that they're focusing on growing earnings
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per unit, focus on the individual growth as opposed to absolute.
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That's what will create value, more so than, "We're going to double business," but if they're
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issuing a whole lot of new shares to do that, it really doesn't help the investor.
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I like that focus on the per unit.
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That'll make sure that they're able to grow the distribution. This is an income-focused stock.
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As they're able to grow that distribution, they probably won't grow it at 15% per year,
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but they might grow it 5-7% a year, which would be more sustainable.
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That will give them more free cash flow later on to reinvest into new projects.
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I like that it'll be a steady grower. You're not going to see another 30%, I doubt it, in the next year.
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But a good, steady grower with the distribution.