Busy Building in the Bakken
Enbridge Energy Partners (NYSE: EEP) yields 7.2 percent, and owns 61 percent of the current Bakken pipeline export capacity (the rest is primarily privately-owned). Plains All American Pipeline (NYSE: PAA) will add 40,000 bpd in 2014 with its Bakken North pipeline. PAA currently yields 4.8 percent.
Oneok Partners (NYSE: OKS), which yields 5.5 percent, has a natural gas liquids (NGL) pipeline that exports unfractionated liquids from the Williston Basin. OKS is also the largest independent natural gas gatherer and processor in the Williston Basin. However, this partnership is somewhat exposed to commodity prices (undesirable from the standpoint of many MLP investors), as its natural gas processing contracts are primarily compensated via a percentage of the product sale proceeds. This may not be the safest haven for those seeking shelter from potential market volatility.
Oneok Partners’ natural gas gathering and processing investments in the Williston Basin
In October, Crestwood Midstream Partners (NYSE: CMLP) finalized its merger with Inergy Midstream. Following the merger, Crestwood announced the acquisition of Arrow Midstream for $750 million, which gave it 150 miles of crude gathering lines, 160 miles of natural gas gathering pipes and 150 miles of water pipes in the heart of the Bakken formation. According to Crestwood the deal will allow the partnership to process 18 percent of the Bakken’s crude production.The partnership also owns the COLT Hub — an open-access rail terminal serving producers, refiners and marketers — which it inherited from Inergy. The hub has 720,000 barrels of crude oil storage and two 8,700-foot rail loops, and can accommodate 120-car unit trains with a capacity of more than 120,000 barrels per day by rail (and is currently being expanded to 160,000 bpd).
Wells Fargo upgraded Crestwood Midstream to Outperform on Oct. 11. Units currently yield 6.6 percent.
In January Targa Resources Partners (NYSE: NGLS) completed a major acquisition giving it a footprint in the Bakken with the $950 million purchase of Saddle Butte Pipeline, LLC’s interests in its Williston Basin crude oil pipeline and terminal system, along with natural gas gathering and processing operations. The acquired business was renamed Targa Badlands and has combined crude oil operational storage capacity of 70,000 barrels, including the Johnsons Corner Terminal with 20,000 barrels of storage capacity (expanding to 40,000 barrels) and the Alexander Terminal, with storage capacity of 30,000 barrels. The business also includes approximately 155 miles of crude oil gathering pipelines, 95 miles of natural gas gathering pipelines and a 20 thousand cubic feet per day (MMcf/d) natural gas processing plant with an expansion underway to increase capacity to 40 MMcf/d.Targa Resources units are up 41 percent year-to-date. The annualized yield is presently 5.7 percent. The coverage ratio for the third quarter — that is, the partnership’s definition of distributable cash flow (DCF) divided by the amount of cash returned to unit holders — was 1.08.
Summit Midstream Partners (NYSE: SMLP) has assets that include more than 175 rigs operating in the Williston Basin. The partnership is targeting crude oil production from both the Bakken and Three Forks formations. The partnership also gathers and compresses associated natural gas, which it forecasts will be a major growth area due as drillers seek to limit the significant volumes of natural gas currently flared — i.e., wasted — in North Dakota.The partnership owns 259 miles of low-pressure polyethylene pipeline and 70 miles of high-pressure steel pipeline with an average natural gas throughput of 16.8 MMcf/d in the most recent quarter and a capacity of 22 MMcf/d at six compressor stations. The partnership is presently expanding compression capacity to increase total system capacity to 30 MMcf/d. The partnership’s low-pressure gathering services are provided primarily under fee-based contracts.
SMLP units have been on a tear this year, returning more than 72 percent year-to-date. Even a recent earnings miss didn’t have much impact on the unit price. Units have advanced another 4 percent since the miss was announced, even as many MLPs were showing signs of weakness. At the current unit price, the annualized yield is 5 percent.For those interested in IPOs, Enable Midstream is a Delaware limited partnership formed by affiliates of CenterPoint Energy (NYSE: CNP), OGE Energy (NYSE: OGE) and ArcLight Capital Partners. The $500 million IPO is expected to take place in the first quarter of 2014.
The partnership owns, operates and develops strategically located natural gas and crude oil infrastructure assets. The partnership’s initial assets include approximately 11,000 miles of gathering pipelines, 11 major processing plants with approximately 1.9 billion cubic feet per day of processing capacity, approximately 7,800 miles of interstate pipelines, approximately 2,300 miles of intrastate pipelines and eight storage facilities with 86.5 billion cubic feet of capacity.The asset base includes Bakken gathering assets contributed by CenterPoint Energy. The gathering system began operations last month and is expected to be in full operation in the third quarter of 2014. Enable Midstream estimates it could spend as much as $110 million on the Bakken system. The company’s Bakken system will have a capacity of 19,500 b/d when fully operational, with the entire amount contracted through 2028.
Conclusion
Oil and gas output in the Bakken continue to surge, posing challenges as well as opportunities for midstream operators. Several offer investors another attractive income stream with a growth kicker and limited exposure to volatile commodity prices.
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