Been looking at the midstream space lately and there's actually some solid long-term plays here that don't get as much attention as they should. These pipeline stocks tend to be steady income generators - the kind of thing you buy and forget about for years while the distributions roll in.



Let me break down three that caught my eye. Energy Transfer is probably the most obvious one. They've spent the last couple years cleaning up their balance sheet and now they're back in aggressive growth mode. We're talking $5 billion in capex spending focused mostly on the Permian - new pipelines to handle Texas power demand (a lot of it from AI data centers, which is kind of wild when you think about it), plus expansion into Arizona and New Mexico. The Lake Charles LNG terminal project they've been discussing forever is supposedly close to a final decision. If that goes through, you're looking at locked-in long-term revenues from global LNG demand that's expected to surge over the next decade. Their financial metrics are solid too - leverage is where they want it and most of their EBITDA is backed by fee-based contracts. Nearly 8% yield that's actually sustainable.

Western Midstream Partners is interesting if you're more income-focused. They've got this nice combination of a 9.4% yield, a strong balance sheet (leverage around 2.9), and they're backed by Occidental Petroleum which owns over 40% of the partnership. Their contracts are mostly cost-of-service or have minimum volume commitments, so cash flows are pretty predictable regardless of where commodity prices go. They're also moving into growth mode with water handling and natural gas processing. The Aris Water Solutions acquisition brings dedicated acreage and the Pathfinder project is supposed to be one of the largest produced water systems in the Permian when it comes online in 2027. This is the kind of pipeline stocks play where you get paid well while they grow.

Then there's Genesis Energy - probably the most speculative of the three but potentially the most interesting turnaround. They made some bold moves to fix their balance sheet, including selling off their soda ash business for $1.4 billion and using that to pay down debt. That alone saves them roughly $84 million annually in interest and preferred distributions. The real story though is their ties to those Gulf of Mexico oil projects - Shenandoah and Salamanca. Shenandoah is already doing 100,000 barrels per day with plans to ramp to 140,000 by 2026, and Salamanca should hit 40,000 to 50,000 as it ramps. Once both are fully online, we're talking about $150 million in additional annual operating profit. They're targeting free cash flow generation soon and want to pay off their revolver by end of 2025, which should unlock distribution growth after that.

The common thread with all three of these pipeline stocks is they sit right at the center of the energy infrastructure - they're getting paid stable fees for moving and processing oil and gas. Not flashy, but that's kind of the point. If you're looking to build a position in midstream and hold it, any of these could work depending on your risk tolerance and whether you want growth or income. Genesis has more upside if things go right but also more risk. Energy Transfer and Western Midstream are more established, though Energy Transfer's growth capex could be interesting if you believe in the Permian thesis and AI data center expansion.
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