In This Article:
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Adjusted EBITDA: $754 million attributable to Plains.
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Crude Oil Segment Adjusted EBITDA: $559 million, impacted by winter weather and refinery downtime.
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NGL Segment Adjusted EBITDA: $189 million, benefited from higher frac spreads and NGL sales volumes.
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Adjusted Free Cash Flow: Approximately $1.1 billion, excluding changes in assets and liabilities, reduced by $635 million for acquisitions.
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Acquisitions: $55 million for Black Knight Midstream and remaining 50% equity in Cheyenne Pipeline.
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Bolt-on Acquisitions: $1.3 billion deployed over several years.
Release Date: May 09, 2025
For the complete transcript of the earnings call, please refer to the full earnings call transcript.
Positive Points
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Plains GP Holdings LP (NASDAQ:PAGP) reported a solid first quarter performance with an adjusted EBITDA of $754 million.
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The company continues to execute on its efficient growth strategy, generating significant free cash flow and maintaining a highly flexible balance sheet.
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PAGP's NGL segment remains largely insulated from lower commodity prices, with approximately 80% of its estimated C3+ Spec products sales hedged for 2025.
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The company successfully deployed approximately $1.3 billion into bolt-on acquisitions over the last several years, enhancing its asset base.
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PAGP's transition to more fee-based earnings continues with the completion of a 30,000 barrel a day fractionation bottleneck project at Fort Sask.
Negative Points
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Ongoing uncertainty on trade tariffs is weighing on economic forecasts and creating significant market volatility.
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Dissension among OPEC members and prospects of incremental supply have resulted in lower commodity prices than anticipated.
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First quarter crude oil segment adjusted EBITDA was impacted by winter weather and higher-than-expected refinery downtime, driving volumes below expectations.
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The company's Permian growth outlook could be in the lower half of the respective ranges if the $60 to $65 WTI environment persists.
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Volatile markets create challenges in price discovery for potential M&A deals, although PAGP remains focused on capital discipline.
Q & A Highlights
Q: Given the current volatility in the unit price, is there any shift in capital allocation strategy towards more buybacks versus distribution growth? A: Al Swanson, Executive Vice President and CFO, stated that there is no change in their view. The focus remains on distribution growth as the primary method for returning cash to shareholders. Unit repurchases are a component of their capital allocation, but they remain opportunistic and market dislocation-driven.