UPDATE: Enterprise Products 1Q Profit Soars; Duncan Net Down 9% Amid Charge
10 Mai 2011 - 6:21PM
Dow Jones News
Enterprise Products Partners LP's (EPD) first-quarter profit
soared as its pipeline moved more petroleum products.
Enterprise said it has $5 billion worth of expansion projects
slated for upcoming years as it seeks to take advantage of growing
U.S. onshore oil and gas production. The company is adding a fifth
fractionation unit at its natural gas liquids processing plant in
Mont Belvieu, Texas, and plans to expand pipeline capacity in key
oil and gas producing fields.
"As we continue to move forward in time, we keep seeing more and
more opportunities," Enterprise Chief Operating Officer Jim Teague
said during a conference call with investors. "So that (expansion
project) number will continue to build."
One of its more closely watched projects is a joint venture with
Energy Transfer Partners (ETP) to build a pipeline connecting the
oil storage hub Cushing, Okla., to the U.S. refining center of
Houston, Texas. The pipeline, expected to open in December 2012,
would help alleviate an oil supply glut that has been distorting
the price of U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate.
Enterprise reported a profit of $420.7 million, or 49 cents a
unit, up from $69.9 million, or 33 cents a unit, a year earlier, as
the number of units outstanding more than quadrupled. Revenue
jumped 19% to $10.18 billion.
Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters most recently forecast a
profit of 44 cents on $8.86 billion in revenue.
Operating margin narrowed to 6.1% from 6.5%.
Enterprise's recent results improved partly thanks to its $3.3
billion merger with Teppco Partners LP in late 2009, which created
one of the U.S.'s largest pipeline companies. Since the deal, the
company has increased its focus on developing onshore pipeline
projects serving shale gas fields.
Meanwhile, Enterprise's sister company Duncan Energy Partners LP
(DEP) reported a 9% decline in earnings as an insurance deductible
weighed on the bottom line.
Enterprise is in the midst of a planned $2.5 billion acquisition
of Duncan, which the suitor's parent company had spun off in 2006
as a separate entity holding interest in certain of Enterprise's
mid-stream assets. The two are entwined in a structurally complex
relationship--Enterprise now owns Duncan's general partner and
about 58% of its common units.
Duncan, meanwhile, posted a profit of $19.3 million, or 33 cents
a unit, down from $21.2 million, or 37 cents a unit, a year
earlier. The partnership's share of an insurance deductible related
to a February natural-gas liquids release cut the latest result by
6 cents. Revenue slid 2.5% to $283.2 million.
Wall Street expected a 38-cent profit on $285 million in
revenue.
Common units of Enterprise and Duncan traded Monday at $41.80
and $41.67, respectively.
-By Ben Lefebvre, Dow Jones Newswires; 713-547-9201;
ben.lefebvre@dowjones.com; Matt Jarzemsky, Dow Jones Newswires;
212-416-2240; matthew.jarzemsky@dowjones.com
Duncan Energy Partners L.P. (NYSE:DEP)
Graphique Historique de l'Action
De Déc 2024 à Jan 2025
Duncan Energy Partners L.P. (NYSE:DEP)
Graphique Historique de l'Action
De Jan 2024 à Jan 2025