NYSE:OKE ONEOK Q2 2024 Earnings Report $8.00 -0.22 (-2.68%) Closing price 04/15/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$8.00 0.00 (0.00%) As of 04/15/2025 07:59 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast AdaptHealth EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.33Consensus EPS $1.21Beat/MissBeat by +$0.12One Year Ago EPS$1.04AdaptHealth Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$4.89 billionExpected Revenue$5.52 billionBeat/MissMissed by -$626.17 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AAdaptHealth Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date8/5/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, August 6, 2024Conference Call Time11:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsAdaptHealth's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, May 6, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 8:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by AdaptHealth Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 6, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 16 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00and welcome to the ONEOK Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. All participants will be in listen only mode. After today's presentation, Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Andrew Ziola, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:40Thank you, Dave, and good morning, and welcome to ONEOK's Q2 2024 2024 Earnings Call. We issued our earnings release and presentation after the markets closed yesterday, and those materials are on our website. After our prepared remarks, management will be available to take your questions. Statements made during this call that might include ONEOK's expectations or predictions should be considered forward looking statements and are covered by the Safe Harbor provision of the Securities Acts of 1933 1934. Actual results could differ materially from those projected in forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:15For a discussion of factors that could cause actual results to differ, please refer to our SEC filings. Just a reminder for Q and A, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and a follow-up to fit in as many of you as we can. With that, I'll turn the call over to Pierce Norton, President and Chief Executive Officer. Pierce? Speaker 200:01:36Thanks, Andrew. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. On today's call is Walt Hoss, the Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer and Executive Vice President, Investor Relations and Corporate Development and Sheridan Swords, Executive Vice President, Commercial Liquids and Natural Gas Gathering and Processing. Also available to answer your questions today are Chuck Kelley, our Senior Vice President of Natural Gas Pipelines and Kevin Burdick, who is the Executive Vice President and Chief Enterprise Services Officer. Yesterday, we announced the Q2 2024 earnings and affirmed our full year 2024 financial guidance. Speaker 200:02:20Record Rocky Mountain region volumes, continued progress on acquisition related synergies and solid demand on our products and services drove our strong second quarter performance and provide momentum into the second half of twenty twenty four. Increasing volumes across our gathering and processing and natural gas liquids segments and the demand for our natural gas pipeline services combined with the strategic opportunities in our refined products and crude oil segments, continue to provide confidence in our long term growth and highly attractive returns across our business. We continue to identify opportunities to expand and to extend our systems with recent announcements tied specifically to the commercial opportunities and synergy driven growth in our natural gas liquids and refined products and crude segments. In June, we completed our acquisition of a system of NGL pipelines from Eastern Energy. This acquisition was unique and that it made sense for ONEOK even before the acquisition of Magellan because of the ability to capture value downstream of our Mont Belvieu fractionation assets. Speaker 200:03:35Now add in the legacy Magellan assets and the value creation and return potential is even greater. In addition to acquisitions, we continue to see substantial organic growth opportunities. In July, we announced the expansion of our refined products pipeline to the Greater Denver area. This project will provide additional needed capacity for various transportation fuels, including aviation and sustainable aviation fuel to support increasing demand from the significant future expansion of the Denver International Airport. Also in July, we received our 1st shipment of sustainable aviation fuel at our Galena Park Marina terminal in Houston, facilitating growth with sustainable fuels in this market. Speaker 200:04:25These opportunities are all in addition to our previously announced NGL related growth projects, including our MB-six fractionation and expansions of our Elk Creek and West Texas NGL pipelines. Sheridan will provide a more detailed explanation of those projects and timing and more to that shortly. Long term volume commitments, strong operating performance and a proven track record of supporting our customers with reliable capacity gives us the confidence in our future growth, and we remain committed to investing alongside our customers. Less than a year after the Magellan acquisition, are already seeing significant synergies and discovering new growth opportunities that wouldn't have been possible for either company on its own. Our integrated assets are proving their value and our potential for additional growth remains. Speaker 200:05:22With that, I'll turn the call over Speaker 300:05:24to Walt. Thank you, Pierce. ONEOK's Q2 2024 net income totaled $780,000,000 or $1.33 per share, representing an earnings per share increase of 28% compared with the Q2 of 2023 and a 22% compared with the prior quarter. 2nd quarter adjusted EBITDA totaled $1,600,000,000 Results were driven primarily by higher NGL and natural gas processing volumes in the Rocky Mountain region, increased transportation services in the natural gas pipeline segments and contributions from the refined products and crude segment. The sale of non strategic gathering and processing assets in Kansas contributed to a pre tax net benefit of approximately $50,000,000 during the quarter. Speaker 300:06:22We expect the full year net benefit from the sale to be approximately $40,000,000 when considering the earnings the assets would have provided through the remainder of the year. As Pierce mentioned, we affirmed our 2024 financial guidance after increasing it with our Q1 earnings announcement. That increased guidance range included an expected adjusted EBITDA midpoint of $6,175,000,000 with the high end at $6,325,000,000 We continue to expect to meet or exceed our midpoint of $175,000,000 in cost and commercial synergies in 2024 and expect additional annual synergies to meet or exceed $125,000,000 in 2025. As of June 30, we had no borrowings outstanding under our $2,500,000,000 credit agreement. During the quarter, we extended the maturity of our revolving credit facility to June of 2028. Speaker 300:07:31In addition, our run rate net debt to EBITDA ratio was 3.36 times at the end of the second quarter, in line with our long term leverage target of 3.5 times. We have an approximately $480,000,000 maturity due in September, which we expect to pay with cash, strengthening our balance sheet even further. This will position us well to continue returning value to our investors through a strategic and balanced capital allocation approach. Our approach remains an all of the above strategy, utilizing a combination of high return capital projects, dividend growth, debt reduction and share repurchases. I'll now turn the call over to Sheridan for a commercial update. Speaker 400:08:23Thank you, Walt. Beginning with the Natural Gas Liquids segment. Volume growth from the Rocky Mountain and Mid Continent regions of 17% 16%, respectively, compared with the Q1 of 20 24 drove higher earnings in the 2nd quarter. Rocky Mountain region growth was primarily from increased propane plus volume with higher incentivized ethane also contributing. The Mid Continent saw more ethane recovery compared with the Q1 as well as contributions from overall NGL growth sequentially. Speaker 400:09:00In the Permian Basin, we had higher volumes committed short term in the Q2 of 2023 and the Q1 of 2024 than in the Q2 of 2024. We since recontracted much of that capacity with the volumes committed for longer terms. We continue to see opportunities to recover ethane across our system. Favorable ethane economics will continue to depend on natural gas values and ethane demand at petrochemical facilities. Dynamics through the remainder of the year could provide a tailwind to our modest ethane recovery assumptions and guidance. Speaker 400:09:38We've made significant construction progress on our capital growth projects and now expect the West Texas NGL pipeline expansion and our MB6 fractionator to be in service by the end of 2024. Our previous in service estimates were the 1st quarter 2025 for both projects. On the West Texas NGL expansion, the full pipeline looping providing a capacity of 500,000 barrels per day is expected by year end, with a few remaining pump stations to be completed to get to the full capacity of 740,000 barrels per day. The Elk Creek pipeline expansion remains on track for the Q1 2025 completion. Additionally, today with our expanding need for fractionation capacity, we are announcing a project to rebuild our 210,000 barrels per day NGL fractionator in Medford, Oklahoma. Speaker 400:10:38The project is expected to cost approximately $385,000,000 and be completed in 2 phases, with the first expected to be completed in the Q4 of 2026 and the second phase in the Q1 of 2027. Rebuilding at Medford provides a number of strategic benefits. It is the lowest cost per barrel expansion option for ONEOK to help address the expected increase in NGL production. Its location in the Mid Continent will further increase the reliability and resiliency of ONEOK's fractionation capabilities and will allow our integrated system to accommodate volume growth from the Permian, Bakken and Mid Continent. The Medford fractionator will also produce additional butane and natural gasoline for incremental refined products and diluent blipping opportunities in the Mid Continent. Speaker 400:11:33As Pierce mentioned, we recently completed a strategic acquisition of NGL Assets from Eastern Energy in the Houston area. These assets will provide connectivity between our NGL and refined product systems and with key customers in the area. The acquisition came with associated earnings from existing volumes and we expect to fill the additional capacity of the system providing a very attractive return on the project through committed volumes we control. In addition to tariff earnings on the system, we also expect the acquisition to accelerate our commercial synergy opportunities, primarily related to blending. The close proximity of our NGL and refined products terminals to major refiners in the Houston area and now improved connectivity presents considerable opportunities to capture value downstream of our fractionation assets. Speaker 400:12:25We expect to complete connections from the legacy Houston asset to our Houston based assets beginning in mid-twenty 25 through the year end 2025. Moving on to the Refined Products and Crude segment. Gasoline and jet demand was strong in the 2nd quarter, supported by the beginning of a robust summer travel season. As it relates to marketing and optimization, we were able to optimize our assets through forward sales to capture higher margins on our liquids blending activity. As Pierce mentioned, we recently announced the expansion of our refined products pipeline system from Kansas to the Greater Denver area, including an additional direct connection with the Denver International Airport. Speaker 400:13:12Total system capacity will increase by 35,000 barrels per day with a low cost expansion opportunities available as demand continues to grow in these markets. Following the successful open season, the additional capacity is fully subscribed. The project is expected to cost approximately $480,000,000 and be completed in mid-twenty 26. Moving on to the Natural Gas Gathering and Processing segment. Rocky Mountain region processing volumes increased 10% year over year, averaging a record of more than 1.6 PCF per day during the quarter. Speaker 400:13:51There are currently 40 rigs in the Williston Basin with more than 20 on our dedicated acreage. As we look to the remainder of the year, we are reaffirming our volume guidance due to the benefits we're seeing from the drilling of longer laterals and higher well performance on traditional laterals without the need for as many well connects. In the Mid Continent region, we are currently seeing 35 rigs in Oklahoma with 6 operating on our acreage. With current commodity prices, we expect producers to continue concentrating activity in the oilier and NGL rich region areas in the region and as natural gas prices strengthen towards the remainder of the year, we could see rig activity increase in the gassier regions. In the Natural Gas Pipeline segment, we benefited from higher firm and interruptible transportation rates in the 2nd quarter. Speaker 400:14:48The demand for natural gas storage remains high. Progress continues to be made on our current expansion projects in Texas and Oklahoma, which we both have which both have firm contracts extending beyond 2,030. In the Q2, we completed 2 Bcf of the Texas project and expect the remaining 1 Bcf to be in service next month. Our Oklahoma project is expected to be completed in the Q2 of 2025. Pierce, that concludes my remarks. Speaker 200:15:21Thank you, Sheridan and Walt, for those updates. Before we conclude, I'd like to express my deep appreciation to our Houston based employees for their incredible dedication through Hurricane Burrow and its aftermath. Despite challenging weather conditions and persistent power outages, they remain committed to ensuring the safe and reliable operations of our assets in the area. Many also faced impacts to their own homes, yet they continue to demonstrate resilience and professionalism. So I want to thank you personally for your dedication and the efforts that you showed during this aftermath of this event. Speaker 200:16:04ONEOK employees have consistently demonstrated to responsible operations and doing things the right way. As our business has grown, we have continued our commitment to our company wide sustainability program and practices. This dedication has been recognized with the MSCI AAA rating and being named as one of America's greatest workplaces in 2024 by Newsweek. As we close our prepared remarks, we published our 16th corporate sustainability report last week, highlighting our safety, environmental and governance programs. This report details our efforts and progress in these crucial areas as we continue to deliver the energy the world needs, while innovating for the future. Speaker 200:16:56Operator, we're now ready for questions. Operator00:17:18Our first question comes from Spiro Dounis with Citi. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:17:24Thanks, operator. Good morning, team. First one, maybe just to start with the guidance. Walt, if you could just go back over some of your comments and guide for the year. You maintained the range, but I think in some of your comments there, you seem to mainly make reference to the midpoint and high end. Speaker 500:17:40Then if I combine that with Sheridan's comments around ethane being a tailwind in the back half of the year, it seems to suggest like coming in below the midpoint is getting a little bit more remote here. So one of am I kind of reading through some of those comments correctly? And as you think about that second half of the year, what needs to go right here to kind of beat the midpoint? Speaker 200:18:03So Spiro, this is Pierce. Walt mentioned in his comments that we did raise guidance in the Q1 during that analyst call. Personally, I like the team likes where we are and where we're trending to, and it does give us a lot of confidence in the back half of the year. So we're going to take a look at this guidance again as we come to you guys with some additional information in the Q3. So that's the way I'd answer your question. Speaker 500:18:35No problem. We'll be patient on that one. Second one, maybe just going to double H. Of course, one of your peers has announced the conversion to an NGL pipeline up in the Bakken where you've sort of enjoyed a lot of the market share there. So curious how you're assessing the risk to your Bakken position at this point? Speaker 500:18:53And is there a scenario where you actually see some of these volumes flow on OPPL and maybe into a 1 Oak frac? Speaker 400:19:03Well, Spiro, this is Sheridan. What I would say is, we were aware of this pipeline was being considered as an alternative for NGL takeaway out of the region and don't expect a material impact on our business. We have long term contracts in the basin with a very small amount of NGLs in the Williston are up for contract renewal in the next 5 years. The average life on our contracts in the Williston Basin today is over 9 years. We think we provide a superior service both with dual pipeline offerings, redundancy and reliability to our customers and a seamless service from the Bakken to market centers in Conway and Mont Belvieu on one system with the overall best value through our integrated system. Speaker 400:19:47As we talk about volumes moving on, could volumes move on OPPL, currently today OPPL is full and on allocation. We control over 70% of that allocation. And I think if you think about volume coming on to OPPL, people must be assuming that when we complete the Elk Creek pipeline, we will move volume off of OPPL and that is not a foregone conclusion. Speaker 500:20:14Got it. Appreciate all the color there. Thank you, gentlemen. Operator00:20:19And the next question comes from Jeremy Tonet with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:20:25Hi, this is Jeremy Tonet with JPMorgan. Good morning. Speaker 400:20:29Good morning. Good morning. Speaker 600:20:32Just wanted to pick up with synergies, if I could. Following the Easton acquisition, wondering if you could provide a bit more color on what you see this unlocking specifically for your platform, especially post Magellan acquisition. Just wondering if you could provide a bit more color on what could be accomplished? Speaker 400:20:56Sure, Jeremy. This is Sheridan. Then you go back to the Easton acquisition, we had our eyes on the Easton acquisition for a period of time because we saw that as a way to continue to move our product downstream of our frac directly through pipelines to end users. In fact, a lot of the product today that's on Easton comes from our fractionation complex in Mont Belvieu. But with the Magellan acquisition came up, what we saw was an opportunity to buy Easton to create a more capital efficient and faster way to connect our NGL and refined products systems, thus accelerating our commercial synergies through this caporate at a lower capital cost and faster. Speaker 600:21:54Got it. That's very helpful there. Thank you. And then just moving along, I guess, with producer activity, as you see it right now, wonder if you could provide a bit more color on how things are shaking out, particularly given Bakken well connects year to date versus your guide. Just wondering any thoughts you could share there? Speaker 700:22:17Well, I Speaker 400:22:17would just say that on the volume side, we still are reaffirmed our guidance on volume. What we are seeing is, as we had talked earlier about longer laterals. And so the wells are producing more and more efficient. And so we see that we don't need as many well connects to reach our volume guidance that we have in there and that's been a pleasant surprise this year. We knew we'd see some of it, but it's even more a pleasant surprise. Speaker 400:22:41So even you see that our well connects seem to be a little bit down, we're still very confident in our volumes, the remainder of this year and going into 2025. Speaker 600:22:54Got it. That's very helpful. I'll leave it there. Thanks. Operator00:22:58And the next question comes from Theresa Chen with Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:23:04Good morning. I'd love to get your thoughts on the strength in the refined products and crude segment? Just puts and takes on what's driving that? Is it largely seasonal? Are you realizing the synergies ahead of schedule? Speaker 800:23:21And as we look to the second half of the year and kind of touching on the broader discussion of where you're going to land within your guidance. Within this segment, as we see downtime in the Chicago area and the product margins as well as regional product spreads spike as a result, would it reasonable to think that that would increase your earnings in this segment above what you typically budget year in and year out? Speaker 400:23:50Teresa, this is Sheridan. I think when you start off, it's kind of all the above. We are seeing our synergy capture coming in very nicely and very strong and that will accelerate through the remainder of the year. So we are very confident as we said that we will be at the cost and commercial synergies at or above the $175,000,000 that we have outlined. We are seeing a little bit of seasonality, a little bit more volume in the summer months. Speaker 400:24:18But as you remember, as we get into the back half of the Q3, we'll our blending activity will ramp up. So we will see a growth in that time as well. And the issues we have in Chicago are creating a little bit of tailwinds for us right now, but we always anticipate we will see some of the refinery turnarounds throughout the year. So we feel very comfortable where we are sitting at today on both our synergies and where the refined product crude segment is going to end the year at. Speaker 800:24:49That's helpful. Thank you. And then on your expansion project into Denver, can you help us think through the economics related to that expansion? And if there are additional opportunities as you assess the landscape within the segment to expand your infrastructure based on committed volumes to additional inland premium markets? Speaker 400:25:15Well, I would say, Theresa, on the expansion, this is a 5 times multiple project on 35,000 barrels a day. Obviously, we laid a 16 inches we're laying a 16 inches line into Denver and that's why we say we have very cheap expansion capability on that pipeline as we anticipate volume continue to grow. And if volume continues I mean, if demand continues to grow and we need more volume on that pipeline system, we will go out for a subsequent open season. Speaker 800:25:46Thank you. Operator00:25:48And the next question comes from Tristan Richardson with Scotiabank. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:25:55Hey, good morning guys. Could you talk a little bit about ethane across the basin, seemingly pretty strong recovery in the Mid Con and in the Rockies. But is this is ethane trending better than maybe you were thinking at the beginning of the year? And then just how you see the second half looking? Speaker 400:26:15Tristan, it's Sheridan. Ethane is going to be volatile. It's going to be up and down. As we said, it's going to be dependent on natural gas prices. That's why we've always put just a very modest amount of ethane recovery into our guidance as we look forward. Speaker 400:26:34Right now, we are seeing the Permian is in full recovery. The Mid Continent at this time is in rejection. We do have already locked in some incentivized ethane through the Q3 and into the Q4. So we see that going and we'll just have to watch and see how the ethane market evolves as it changes. We do see that the petrochemicals are having a very wide spread between ethane and ethylene. Speaker 400:27:01It's very wide right now. So they're wanting to run at high utilization rates. And so we anticipate that we will see some recovery in the ethane markets as we finish the remainder of the year. Speaker 900:27:14Appreciate it, Jared. And then maybe Walt, curious, you haven't offered anything on 25 CapEx yet, but just given that you've pulled some projects forward, and you've said in the past, you really expect a downtrend in 25 versus 24 CapEx. Curious if we should see that maybe amplified with some of the projects pulled forward into 2024? Speaker 300:27:41Well, Tristan, we were going to be finishing up those projects in 2025. So clearly, the capital that was associated with the tag end of those projects is going to move forward into 2024 and that'll be a positive for our CapEx. In 2025, we've added the Denver project spread over a couple of years that isn't really a material increase to our capital. So I think the trends we've talked about in the past continue to be true. And we're getting to that point where we're going to enjoy the operating leverage we have built into our system. Speaker 300:28:21And as we fill that demand, we're going to see that drop to the bottom line. Speaker 900:28:27I appreciate it. Well, thank you guys very much. Operator00:28:31Next question comes from Keith Stanley with Wolfe Research. Speaker 1000:28:35Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:28:37Hi, good morning. Several of your producer customers in the Bakken have announced mergers, Conoco Marathon, Devon and Grayson Mill. Any thoughts on what you think that could mean for Bakken production and your business over time? Speaker 400:28:56Keith, this is Sheridan. One thing I'd tell you is all those producers, all those on both sides of the acquisition up in the Bakken, we have very good relationships with them, not only in the Bakken, but also in other areas as well. And we think that they will as we've talked to them, but we think that it's not going to have an impact on what's going on up there. They're going to continue their cadence that they do as drilling. There may be even some upsizing to the right as they go to the more better areas or more in the core areas and drill those a little bit faster. Speaker 400:29:32So we are feeling very good about the consolidation that's happened up there going into the hands of strength and they will want to be producing up there for the long period of time. Speaker 1100:29:45Great. Thanks. And I wanted to follow-up just on the Denver project. So I mean the whole Magellan business has historically been viewed as a lower growth kind of high return of capital business. But the Denver project is pretty material when you think about it. Speaker 1100:30:02Are there other material opportunities across refined products besides Denver that you could pursue other areas of the system that are getting tight on capacity or seeing more of a demand deflection? Speaker 400:30:15Absolutely. We continue to look for those areas as well. We think there's some other opportunities. We continue to one is we continue to think El Paso showed some strength as well as we have completed our expansion into El Paso and it is running full. We've actually had an open season on a little smaller expansion on there that was fully subscribed. Speaker 400:30:35So we're already seeing a little bit more growth in that area, and we're encouraged about that continuing to grow. And then our teams are continuing to look for different areas, synergies or growth that we can expand our system as well. So we are excited about the growth in the refined product and system that we think we will see it at a higher rate than has been typically seen in that business. Speaker 1200:31:00Thank you. Operator00:31:02The next question comes from Michael Blum with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Speaker 1200:31:08Thanks. Good morning, everyone. Wondering if you have any updates on potential AI data center related projects in the gas pipeline segment? Speaker 700:31:20Good morning, Michael. This is Chuck. Yes, since we last spoke last quarter, as I mentioned then, we had about 15 projects, potential projects across our footprint. Of those, there were 3 that specifically stated AI. Since then, we've our numbers up about to 17 on the potential power plants and of which 5 are AI demand specifically. Speaker 700:31:48Approximately across our footprint, these 5 are right in the neighborhood of a Bcf per day. So again, early stages, but more to come. Speaker 1200:31:59Okay, got it. Thanks for that. And then just was looking for an update on Saguaro, any recent conversations and what's kind of the latest thinking there on timing of FID if that's going to happen? Thanks. Speaker 700:32:14Yes. I would just remind everyone, this really is a commercially strong project with world class customers and it makes great commercial sense. I mean, you've got Permian supplies, LNG demand pools competitively advantaged to the Asian markets. So NPL is working on their project financing to make their final investment decision. And at this time, we do not anticipate material capital spend on our behalf here in 2024. Operator00:32:46And the next question comes from Manav Gupta with UBS. Please go ahead. Speaker 1300:32:53Good morning, guys. My first question is, can you talk a little bit about ethane? Can you also talk about any Huguen blending opportunities in your system at this point Speaker 400:33:04of time? Yes, Mani, this is Sheridan. And we I mean, obviously, we have opportunities as we continue to integrate the refined products and NGL systems together that we are have the opportunity to take our butane and put it into our refined products Speaker 700:33:29blend more butane into Speaker 400:33:29our refined products as to blend more butane into our fine products across our system by more automation and understanding directing volumes through our system. So we are very pleased with where we're sitting on our blending strategy at this time. And obviously, we have found some projects to that take some capital that will be more into next year. We'll see Easton being one of them, but we'll see greater blending opportunities next year as we put some of these capital projects, small capital projects into service. Speaker 1300:34:05Perfect. My quick follow-up is, you kind of mentioned earlier, hinted to it that 25 CapEx obviously now would be lower than 24. So your growth projects are kicking in and the CapEx is lower. So the free cash flow next year would be higher. And just to understand if there is a preliminary plan and how should we think about those uses of that extra cash that is going to come out in 2025? Speaker 300:34:30As we stated before, back in January, the Board did give us an authorization to buy up to $2,000,000,000 worth of stock. We remain committed to our level of capital allocation. Our first goal is always to find high growth projects that are extremely accretive to our shareholders. Then we want to maintain that balance sheet. We've clearly demonstrated that we have a very strong dividend that we've maintained through some very difficult times over time and continue to grow. Speaker 300:35:10And then if we have excess cash, that does provide the opportunity for stock repurchases. We fully expect to complete that $2,000,000,000 program over the time plan time program that we had announced. And we haven't bought any to date, as we mentioned on the Q1 call, because we do have this maturity coming up in September that we were going to focus our free cash flow on through that. And we will just allocate as appropriate as we get out in the coming quarters. Speaker 1300:35:50Thank you so much. Operator00:35:54And the next question comes from Neal Dingmann with Truist. Please go ahead. Speaker 1400:35:59Hey, good morning, guys. Just want to approach the data center question from a different angle, not really on new projects and this might be early, but has the downward market activity in the last month changed the conversation side of this at all? I would assume they're not changing their demand forecast in real time, but have there been any maybe pauses in conversations? Or do some parties want to take a step back? Or is everything kind of steady as she goes? Speaker 700:36:22I'm sorry, Ronnyo, could you repeat the first part of that question? You said something about the past month. Speaker 1400:36:28Yes, just the downward activity in the market over the past month, has that impacted the conversations at all? Or is everyone still looking so long term that maybe downward activity over the last month is just kind of a blip? Speaker 700:36:40No. As a matter of fact, it hasn't impacted the discussions at all. As a matter of fact, we see even more activity here this month and then in the next several months. So the markets are looking long term. And when you're looking at having to add facilities to serve these markets, that takes time. Speaker 700:37:00That's understood both by the power generators and the commissions that they answer to. So no impacts at this time. Speaker 1400:37:11That's helpful. Thank you. And then the second one on Slide 10, you do a really good job of showing Williston Basin GORs and kind of how flaring has tailed off and maybe that relationship is related. But do you see that continuing? Is this more of an inventory just drifting with a higher GOR? Speaker 1400:37:29Or is there any other kind of plateaued on that trend? Speaker 400:37:34I would say on the GOR question, we know that as Wells Ah, the GOR goes up. So a little bit the movement in the GOR we see is more based on drilling activity as if you drill in an area that starts at a lower GOR, it may pull the overall GOR down for a little bit, but those wells, even wells that start at lower will continue to grow. So we overall, we see the GORs increasing in as a general trend increasing in the Bakken. Speaker 1400:38:04Appreciate the answers. Thanks. Operator00:38:07And the next question comes from Neil Mitra with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Speaker 1200:38:14Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to touch on the share repurchase. I think the leverage level over the last 12 months has been 3.36, which you pointed out. Are you looking to buy back shares after the September debt maturity? Speaker 1200:38:32Or are there other factors or criteria which you're waiting for to start executing on that $2,000,000 program? Speaker 300:38:42I think the plan is to allocate the capital as appropriate from the Q3 through the remainder of the program. So it's over several years and we expect that to be executed in each of those years going forward. But it will obviously ebb and flow as we have opportunities to spend capital on high growth projects in a particular quarter, then it will be allocated there and other quarters it will go in other direction. So but we are committed to completing the program over the time period that we have said. And I think on track with our plans with this maturity coming up in September. Speaker 1200:39:35Okay, perfect. My second question relates to the Medford rebuild. Can you talk about the decision to move forward with that? My understanding was that with the Magellan merger, you're able to merge or batch NGLs up the refined pipe. So there was an ability to maybe replicate Medford with Mont Belvieu sending volumes up to Conway and then also with the Easton acquisition. Speaker 1200:40:11So maybe you can kind of educate me on that on the where I'm wrong or what's not connecting and how Medford benefits, ONEOK? Speaker 400:40:24Well, I think the first thing how Medford benefits ONEOK is, if you just do the math on 210,000 barrels a day at fractionation capacity for $385,000,000 that is a very low cost per barrel capacity for fractionation. The second thing is what you're alluding to is, could we take all our raw feed all the way down to Mont Belvieu and then turn around and take certain products and ship them all the way back up to the Mid Continent and deliver them into the Mid Continent. That is could be a possibility. This is a much more efficient way to do that to have all those volumes not have to make that travel and consume that variable cost or fractionate them in the Mid Continent, be able to put them back into the Mid Continent as we need it, but still have the ability to move them down into the Gulf Coast. The third thing it also does is by not having to move all that raw feed down all the way down to Mont Belvieu to fractionate and bring it up, we are actually creating capacity on our Arbuckle system to be able to source even more raw feed into the Mont Belvieu system. Speaker 400:41:33So we're moving that volume off of the Arbuckle system, fractionating it in that burden and putting on the Sterling system. So it's a much better way to balance our system as we go forward. So our system is really designed to have Medford where it is and it runs more efficiently that way. So we're pretty excited about bringing this facility back up. Speaker 1200:41:55Okay, perfect. I appreciate all the detail. Operator00:42:00And the next question comes from Craig Shere with Tuohy Brothers. Please go ahead. Speaker 1500:42:07Hi, thanks for taking the question. Congratulations on the strong performance. Speaker 700:42:13Thank you. Speaker 1500:42:14I just have one question. It's obvious that you're finding ways to more than nickel and dime at very high return stable contracting growth that is beyond what was originally guided with the MMP acquisition. But and this kind of relates to some of the questions have already been asked, but it seems that apart from contracted stable very high return growth that your asymmetric optimization opportunities between Y Grade or Purity NGL transport with increased lending opportunities with the Easton acquisition and more that in any given year, I mean it's not going to go down, but you'd have increasing asymmetric upside in any given year. Am I thinking about that wrong? Speaker 400:43:13No, Craig, I think you are thinking about that correct, especially as we continue to put into place some of these low capital projects that I had mentioned about earlier, we are going to increase our blending opportunities both with our blending, our refined products, blending butane into gasoline that we do, but also with the Easton acquisition, we have customers at our terminals now that are also blending NGLs into their facilities. And this is going to really allow us to supply that those volumes into those locations and create a bundled service in there. We're looking at the whole value chain that we'll be able to track even more volume into our terminals on the Gulf Coast down there. So yes, I think you are seeing that we will continue to grow this and this is an area that we saw that when we bought the Magellan acquisition and it has been we've been very pleased with how it's playing out. Speaker 700:44:15This is Perris. I want Speaker 200:44:18to add one thing to what Sheridan says as a big picture comment is, as this company has gotten more diversified, it is harder to point to one thing that maybe that will drive our numbers down, which is I think what you're kind of alluding to is that there's not maybe as much downside as maybe we've had in the past. So I think that's one comment I would make to your question. Speaker 1500:44:49Great. That's very helpful. And I think Sheridan's point that it's not just the optimization I mentioned, but increasing bundled opportunities, which would seem to be even more stable long term returns that get the icing on the cake potential with the optimization, but all of it's happening at once as you take these expansion and attract bolt Speaker 400:45:19on opportunities. Operator00:45:24The next question comes from Sunil Sibal with Seaport Global. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:45:31Hi, good morning everybody and thanks for all the color on the call. Speaker 700:45:35And I'm Speaker 1000:45:35not sure if I missed this, but could you talk a little bit about the economics on the Medford project? How should we think about returns on that project? Speaker 400:45:47Well, incrementally on the Medford project, we already even with MB6 coming up online here at the end of this year, we still have need contracted need for more fractionation capacity. So what we took a look at is where was the cheapest fractionation capacity we could get and where is the best fit into our system. And also the idea of bringing that much on with what we have contracted already today, we have a very nice project and we do this a lot. We have a very nice project with a lot of upside on this capacity. And that's why we're going back at Medford that we will be able to grow into this as we continue to see volume grow across our systems, be able to have capacity online to be able to timely meet our customers' demands as they continue to grow their system as well. Speaker 400:46:35So basically, we're saying we're putting in we're once again putting in a very low cost option that allows us to compete in all basins across our footprint. Speaker 1000:46:45Okay. Thanks for that. And then on the Bakken processing, it seems like a lot of commentary we hear is gas to oil ratios getting higher. And it seems like your processing system is running close to 85%, 90% capacity, or at least it was in Q2. How should we think about opportunities in terms of processing there in that region? Speaker 400:47:18Yes, we continue our I think I understand your question. I mean, our facilities up in the Bakken are running at a pretty good utilization, but we still have we're running about 1.6 Bcf today. We have 1.9 Bcf capacity. So we still basically have a plant to be able to grow into or be able to handle turnarounds on our system as well. We will continue to monitor production growth and at that time and at the right time that we need to, we'll put more capacity in that region as well to make sure we can be able to service our customers out there that they have a very reliable alternative to move the both the gas and the NGLs to make sure they can produce their crude oil, because that's really what they're after. Speaker 400:48:03They're after the production of their crude oil and they just need to make sure they have a very reliable and resilient outlet for their gas and NGLs. Speaker 1000:48:12Got it. Thanks for that. Operator00:48:16This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Andrew Ziola for any closing remarks. Speaker 100:48:25Our quiet period for the Q3 starts when we close our books in October and extends until we release earnings in late October. We'll provide details to that conference call at a later date. Thank you all for joining us and have a good day. Operator00:48:42The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallAdaptHealth Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) AdaptHealth Earnings HeadlinesOneok (OKE) Gets a Buy from J.P. MorganApril 16 at 1:06 AM | markets.businessinsider.com5 Safe Dividend Stocks Yielding 5% or More to Buy Right Now for Durable Passive IncomeApril 15 at 9:02 PM | fool.comNew “Trump” currency proposed in DCAccording to one of the most connected men in Washington… A surprising new bill was just introduced in Washington. Its purpose: to put Donald Trump’s face on the $100 note. All to celebrate a new “golden age” for America. April 16, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)Energy stocks sink alongside crude oil as traders focus on escalating U.S.-China trade warApril 11, 2025 | msn.comONEOK, Inc. (NYSE:OKE) Receives $105.00 Consensus Target Price from BrokeragesApril 11, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comOneok price target lowered to $101 from $102 at ScotiabankApril 10, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comSee More ONEOK Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like AdaptHealth? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on AdaptHealth and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About AdaptHealthAdaptHealth (NASDAQ:AHCO), together with its subsidiaries, sells home medical equipment (HME), medical supplies, and home and related services in the United States. The company provides sleep therapy equipment, supplies, and related services, such as CPAP and bi-PAP services to individuals suffering from obstructive sleep apnea; medical devices and supplies, including continuous glucose monitors and insulin pumps for the treatment of diabetes; HME to patients discharged from acute care and other facilities; oxygen and related chronic therapy services in the home; and other HME devices and supplies on behalf of chronically ill patients with wound care, urological, incontinence, ostomy, and nutritional supply needs. It also offers wheelchairs, hospital beds, oxygen concentrators, CPAP masks and related supplies, wound care supplies, diabetes management supplies, wheelchair cushion accessories, orthopedic bracing, breast pumps and supplies, walkers, commodes and canes, and nutritional and incontinence supplies. The company services beneficiaries of Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial insurance payors. 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There are 16 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00and welcome to the ONEOK Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. All participants will be in listen only mode. After today's presentation, Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Andrew Ziola, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:40Thank you, Dave, and good morning, and welcome to ONEOK's Q2 2024 2024 Earnings Call. We issued our earnings release and presentation after the markets closed yesterday, and those materials are on our website. After our prepared remarks, management will be available to take your questions. Statements made during this call that might include ONEOK's expectations or predictions should be considered forward looking statements and are covered by the Safe Harbor provision of the Securities Acts of 1933 1934. Actual results could differ materially from those projected in forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:15For a discussion of factors that could cause actual results to differ, please refer to our SEC filings. Just a reminder for Q and A, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and a follow-up to fit in as many of you as we can. With that, I'll turn the call over to Pierce Norton, President and Chief Executive Officer. Pierce? Speaker 200:01:36Thanks, Andrew. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. On today's call is Walt Hoss, the Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer and Executive Vice President, Investor Relations and Corporate Development and Sheridan Swords, Executive Vice President, Commercial Liquids and Natural Gas Gathering and Processing. Also available to answer your questions today are Chuck Kelley, our Senior Vice President of Natural Gas Pipelines and Kevin Burdick, who is the Executive Vice President and Chief Enterprise Services Officer. Yesterday, we announced the Q2 2024 earnings and affirmed our full year 2024 financial guidance. Speaker 200:02:20Record Rocky Mountain region volumes, continued progress on acquisition related synergies and solid demand on our products and services drove our strong second quarter performance and provide momentum into the second half of twenty twenty four. Increasing volumes across our gathering and processing and natural gas liquids segments and the demand for our natural gas pipeline services combined with the strategic opportunities in our refined products and crude oil segments, continue to provide confidence in our long term growth and highly attractive returns across our business. We continue to identify opportunities to expand and to extend our systems with recent announcements tied specifically to the commercial opportunities and synergy driven growth in our natural gas liquids and refined products and crude segments. In June, we completed our acquisition of a system of NGL pipelines from Eastern Energy. This acquisition was unique and that it made sense for ONEOK even before the acquisition of Magellan because of the ability to capture value downstream of our Mont Belvieu fractionation assets. Speaker 200:03:35Now add in the legacy Magellan assets and the value creation and return potential is even greater. In addition to acquisitions, we continue to see substantial organic growth opportunities. In July, we announced the expansion of our refined products pipeline to the Greater Denver area. This project will provide additional needed capacity for various transportation fuels, including aviation and sustainable aviation fuel to support increasing demand from the significant future expansion of the Denver International Airport. Also in July, we received our 1st shipment of sustainable aviation fuel at our Galena Park Marina terminal in Houston, facilitating growth with sustainable fuels in this market. Speaker 200:04:25These opportunities are all in addition to our previously announced NGL related growth projects, including our MB-six fractionation and expansions of our Elk Creek and West Texas NGL pipelines. Sheridan will provide a more detailed explanation of those projects and timing and more to that shortly. Long term volume commitments, strong operating performance and a proven track record of supporting our customers with reliable capacity gives us the confidence in our future growth, and we remain committed to investing alongside our customers. Less than a year after the Magellan acquisition, are already seeing significant synergies and discovering new growth opportunities that wouldn't have been possible for either company on its own. Our integrated assets are proving their value and our potential for additional growth remains. Speaker 200:05:22With that, I'll turn the call over Speaker 300:05:24to Walt. Thank you, Pierce. ONEOK's Q2 2024 net income totaled $780,000,000 or $1.33 per share, representing an earnings per share increase of 28% compared with the Q2 of 2023 and a 22% compared with the prior quarter. 2nd quarter adjusted EBITDA totaled $1,600,000,000 Results were driven primarily by higher NGL and natural gas processing volumes in the Rocky Mountain region, increased transportation services in the natural gas pipeline segments and contributions from the refined products and crude segment. The sale of non strategic gathering and processing assets in Kansas contributed to a pre tax net benefit of approximately $50,000,000 during the quarter. Speaker 300:06:22We expect the full year net benefit from the sale to be approximately $40,000,000 when considering the earnings the assets would have provided through the remainder of the year. As Pierce mentioned, we affirmed our 2024 financial guidance after increasing it with our Q1 earnings announcement. That increased guidance range included an expected adjusted EBITDA midpoint of $6,175,000,000 with the high end at $6,325,000,000 We continue to expect to meet or exceed our midpoint of $175,000,000 in cost and commercial synergies in 2024 and expect additional annual synergies to meet or exceed $125,000,000 in 2025. As of June 30, we had no borrowings outstanding under our $2,500,000,000 credit agreement. During the quarter, we extended the maturity of our revolving credit facility to June of 2028. Speaker 300:07:31In addition, our run rate net debt to EBITDA ratio was 3.36 times at the end of the second quarter, in line with our long term leverage target of 3.5 times. We have an approximately $480,000,000 maturity due in September, which we expect to pay with cash, strengthening our balance sheet even further. This will position us well to continue returning value to our investors through a strategic and balanced capital allocation approach. Our approach remains an all of the above strategy, utilizing a combination of high return capital projects, dividend growth, debt reduction and share repurchases. I'll now turn the call over to Sheridan for a commercial update. Speaker 400:08:23Thank you, Walt. Beginning with the Natural Gas Liquids segment. Volume growth from the Rocky Mountain and Mid Continent regions of 17% 16%, respectively, compared with the Q1 of 20 24 drove higher earnings in the 2nd quarter. Rocky Mountain region growth was primarily from increased propane plus volume with higher incentivized ethane also contributing. The Mid Continent saw more ethane recovery compared with the Q1 as well as contributions from overall NGL growth sequentially. Speaker 400:09:00In the Permian Basin, we had higher volumes committed short term in the Q2 of 2023 and the Q1 of 2024 than in the Q2 of 2024. We since recontracted much of that capacity with the volumes committed for longer terms. We continue to see opportunities to recover ethane across our system. Favorable ethane economics will continue to depend on natural gas values and ethane demand at petrochemical facilities. Dynamics through the remainder of the year could provide a tailwind to our modest ethane recovery assumptions and guidance. Speaker 400:09:38We've made significant construction progress on our capital growth projects and now expect the West Texas NGL pipeline expansion and our MB6 fractionator to be in service by the end of 2024. Our previous in service estimates were the 1st quarter 2025 for both projects. On the West Texas NGL expansion, the full pipeline looping providing a capacity of 500,000 barrels per day is expected by year end, with a few remaining pump stations to be completed to get to the full capacity of 740,000 barrels per day. The Elk Creek pipeline expansion remains on track for the Q1 2025 completion. Additionally, today with our expanding need for fractionation capacity, we are announcing a project to rebuild our 210,000 barrels per day NGL fractionator in Medford, Oklahoma. Speaker 400:10:38The project is expected to cost approximately $385,000,000 and be completed in 2 phases, with the first expected to be completed in the Q4 of 2026 and the second phase in the Q1 of 2027. Rebuilding at Medford provides a number of strategic benefits. It is the lowest cost per barrel expansion option for ONEOK to help address the expected increase in NGL production. Its location in the Mid Continent will further increase the reliability and resiliency of ONEOK's fractionation capabilities and will allow our integrated system to accommodate volume growth from the Permian, Bakken and Mid Continent. The Medford fractionator will also produce additional butane and natural gasoline for incremental refined products and diluent blipping opportunities in the Mid Continent. Speaker 400:11:33As Pierce mentioned, we recently completed a strategic acquisition of NGL Assets from Eastern Energy in the Houston area. These assets will provide connectivity between our NGL and refined product systems and with key customers in the area. The acquisition came with associated earnings from existing volumes and we expect to fill the additional capacity of the system providing a very attractive return on the project through committed volumes we control. In addition to tariff earnings on the system, we also expect the acquisition to accelerate our commercial synergy opportunities, primarily related to blending. The close proximity of our NGL and refined products terminals to major refiners in the Houston area and now improved connectivity presents considerable opportunities to capture value downstream of our fractionation assets. Speaker 400:12:25We expect to complete connections from the legacy Houston asset to our Houston based assets beginning in mid-twenty 25 through the year end 2025. Moving on to the Refined Products and Crude segment. Gasoline and jet demand was strong in the 2nd quarter, supported by the beginning of a robust summer travel season. As it relates to marketing and optimization, we were able to optimize our assets through forward sales to capture higher margins on our liquids blending activity. As Pierce mentioned, we recently announced the expansion of our refined products pipeline system from Kansas to the Greater Denver area, including an additional direct connection with the Denver International Airport. Speaker 400:13:12Total system capacity will increase by 35,000 barrels per day with a low cost expansion opportunities available as demand continues to grow in these markets. Following the successful open season, the additional capacity is fully subscribed. The project is expected to cost approximately $480,000,000 and be completed in mid-twenty 26. Moving on to the Natural Gas Gathering and Processing segment. Rocky Mountain region processing volumes increased 10% year over year, averaging a record of more than 1.6 PCF per day during the quarter. Speaker 400:13:51There are currently 40 rigs in the Williston Basin with more than 20 on our dedicated acreage. As we look to the remainder of the year, we are reaffirming our volume guidance due to the benefits we're seeing from the drilling of longer laterals and higher well performance on traditional laterals without the need for as many well connects. In the Mid Continent region, we are currently seeing 35 rigs in Oklahoma with 6 operating on our acreage. With current commodity prices, we expect producers to continue concentrating activity in the oilier and NGL rich region areas in the region and as natural gas prices strengthen towards the remainder of the year, we could see rig activity increase in the gassier regions. In the Natural Gas Pipeline segment, we benefited from higher firm and interruptible transportation rates in the 2nd quarter. Speaker 400:14:48The demand for natural gas storage remains high. Progress continues to be made on our current expansion projects in Texas and Oklahoma, which we both have which both have firm contracts extending beyond 2,030. In the Q2, we completed 2 Bcf of the Texas project and expect the remaining 1 Bcf to be in service next month. Our Oklahoma project is expected to be completed in the Q2 of 2025. Pierce, that concludes my remarks. Speaker 200:15:21Thank you, Sheridan and Walt, for those updates. Before we conclude, I'd like to express my deep appreciation to our Houston based employees for their incredible dedication through Hurricane Burrow and its aftermath. Despite challenging weather conditions and persistent power outages, they remain committed to ensuring the safe and reliable operations of our assets in the area. Many also faced impacts to their own homes, yet they continue to demonstrate resilience and professionalism. So I want to thank you personally for your dedication and the efforts that you showed during this aftermath of this event. Speaker 200:16:04ONEOK employees have consistently demonstrated to responsible operations and doing things the right way. As our business has grown, we have continued our commitment to our company wide sustainability program and practices. This dedication has been recognized with the MSCI AAA rating and being named as one of America's greatest workplaces in 2024 by Newsweek. As we close our prepared remarks, we published our 16th corporate sustainability report last week, highlighting our safety, environmental and governance programs. This report details our efforts and progress in these crucial areas as we continue to deliver the energy the world needs, while innovating for the future. Speaker 200:16:56Operator, we're now ready for questions. Operator00:17:18Our first question comes from Spiro Dounis with Citi. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:17:24Thanks, operator. Good morning, team. First one, maybe just to start with the guidance. Walt, if you could just go back over some of your comments and guide for the year. You maintained the range, but I think in some of your comments there, you seem to mainly make reference to the midpoint and high end. Speaker 500:17:40Then if I combine that with Sheridan's comments around ethane being a tailwind in the back half of the year, it seems to suggest like coming in below the midpoint is getting a little bit more remote here. So one of am I kind of reading through some of those comments correctly? And as you think about that second half of the year, what needs to go right here to kind of beat the midpoint? Speaker 200:18:03So Spiro, this is Pierce. Walt mentioned in his comments that we did raise guidance in the Q1 during that analyst call. Personally, I like the team likes where we are and where we're trending to, and it does give us a lot of confidence in the back half of the year. So we're going to take a look at this guidance again as we come to you guys with some additional information in the Q3. So that's the way I'd answer your question. Speaker 500:18:35No problem. We'll be patient on that one. Second one, maybe just going to double H. Of course, one of your peers has announced the conversion to an NGL pipeline up in the Bakken where you've sort of enjoyed a lot of the market share there. So curious how you're assessing the risk to your Bakken position at this point? Speaker 500:18:53And is there a scenario where you actually see some of these volumes flow on OPPL and maybe into a 1 Oak frac? Speaker 400:19:03Well, Spiro, this is Sheridan. What I would say is, we were aware of this pipeline was being considered as an alternative for NGL takeaway out of the region and don't expect a material impact on our business. We have long term contracts in the basin with a very small amount of NGLs in the Williston are up for contract renewal in the next 5 years. The average life on our contracts in the Williston Basin today is over 9 years. We think we provide a superior service both with dual pipeline offerings, redundancy and reliability to our customers and a seamless service from the Bakken to market centers in Conway and Mont Belvieu on one system with the overall best value through our integrated system. Speaker 400:19:47As we talk about volumes moving on, could volumes move on OPPL, currently today OPPL is full and on allocation. We control over 70% of that allocation. And I think if you think about volume coming on to OPPL, people must be assuming that when we complete the Elk Creek pipeline, we will move volume off of OPPL and that is not a foregone conclusion. Speaker 500:20:14Got it. Appreciate all the color there. Thank you, gentlemen. Operator00:20:19And the next question comes from Jeremy Tonet with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:20:25Hi, this is Jeremy Tonet with JPMorgan. Good morning. Speaker 400:20:29Good morning. Good morning. Speaker 600:20:32Just wanted to pick up with synergies, if I could. Following the Easton acquisition, wondering if you could provide a bit more color on what you see this unlocking specifically for your platform, especially post Magellan acquisition. Just wondering if you could provide a bit more color on what could be accomplished? Speaker 400:20:56Sure, Jeremy. This is Sheridan. Then you go back to the Easton acquisition, we had our eyes on the Easton acquisition for a period of time because we saw that as a way to continue to move our product downstream of our frac directly through pipelines to end users. In fact, a lot of the product today that's on Easton comes from our fractionation complex in Mont Belvieu. But with the Magellan acquisition came up, what we saw was an opportunity to buy Easton to create a more capital efficient and faster way to connect our NGL and refined products systems, thus accelerating our commercial synergies through this caporate at a lower capital cost and faster. Speaker 600:21:54Got it. That's very helpful there. Thank you. And then just moving along, I guess, with producer activity, as you see it right now, wonder if you could provide a bit more color on how things are shaking out, particularly given Bakken well connects year to date versus your guide. Just wondering any thoughts you could share there? Speaker 700:22:17Well, I Speaker 400:22:17would just say that on the volume side, we still are reaffirmed our guidance on volume. What we are seeing is, as we had talked earlier about longer laterals. And so the wells are producing more and more efficient. And so we see that we don't need as many well connects to reach our volume guidance that we have in there and that's been a pleasant surprise this year. We knew we'd see some of it, but it's even more a pleasant surprise. Speaker 400:22:41So even you see that our well connects seem to be a little bit down, we're still very confident in our volumes, the remainder of this year and going into 2025. Speaker 600:22:54Got it. That's very helpful. I'll leave it there. Thanks. Operator00:22:58And the next question comes from Theresa Chen with Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:23:04Good morning. I'd love to get your thoughts on the strength in the refined products and crude segment? Just puts and takes on what's driving that? Is it largely seasonal? Are you realizing the synergies ahead of schedule? Speaker 800:23:21And as we look to the second half of the year and kind of touching on the broader discussion of where you're going to land within your guidance. Within this segment, as we see downtime in the Chicago area and the product margins as well as regional product spreads spike as a result, would it reasonable to think that that would increase your earnings in this segment above what you typically budget year in and year out? Speaker 400:23:50Teresa, this is Sheridan. I think when you start off, it's kind of all the above. We are seeing our synergy capture coming in very nicely and very strong and that will accelerate through the remainder of the year. So we are very confident as we said that we will be at the cost and commercial synergies at or above the $175,000,000 that we have outlined. We are seeing a little bit of seasonality, a little bit more volume in the summer months. Speaker 400:24:18But as you remember, as we get into the back half of the Q3, we'll our blending activity will ramp up. So we will see a growth in that time as well. And the issues we have in Chicago are creating a little bit of tailwinds for us right now, but we always anticipate we will see some of the refinery turnarounds throughout the year. So we feel very comfortable where we are sitting at today on both our synergies and where the refined product crude segment is going to end the year at. Speaker 800:24:49That's helpful. Thank you. And then on your expansion project into Denver, can you help us think through the economics related to that expansion? And if there are additional opportunities as you assess the landscape within the segment to expand your infrastructure based on committed volumes to additional inland premium markets? Speaker 400:25:15Well, I would say, Theresa, on the expansion, this is a 5 times multiple project on 35,000 barrels a day. Obviously, we laid a 16 inches we're laying a 16 inches line into Denver and that's why we say we have very cheap expansion capability on that pipeline as we anticipate volume continue to grow. And if volume continues I mean, if demand continues to grow and we need more volume on that pipeline system, we will go out for a subsequent open season. Speaker 800:25:46Thank you. Operator00:25:48And the next question comes from Tristan Richardson with Scotiabank. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:25:55Hey, good morning guys. Could you talk a little bit about ethane across the basin, seemingly pretty strong recovery in the Mid Con and in the Rockies. But is this is ethane trending better than maybe you were thinking at the beginning of the year? And then just how you see the second half looking? Speaker 400:26:15Tristan, it's Sheridan. Ethane is going to be volatile. It's going to be up and down. As we said, it's going to be dependent on natural gas prices. That's why we've always put just a very modest amount of ethane recovery into our guidance as we look forward. Speaker 400:26:34Right now, we are seeing the Permian is in full recovery. The Mid Continent at this time is in rejection. We do have already locked in some incentivized ethane through the Q3 and into the Q4. So we see that going and we'll just have to watch and see how the ethane market evolves as it changes. We do see that the petrochemicals are having a very wide spread between ethane and ethylene. Speaker 400:27:01It's very wide right now. So they're wanting to run at high utilization rates. And so we anticipate that we will see some recovery in the ethane markets as we finish the remainder of the year. Speaker 900:27:14Appreciate it, Jared. And then maybe Walt, curious, you haven't offered anything on 25 CapEx yet, but just given that you've pulled some projects forward, and you've said in the past, you really expect a downtrend in 25 versus 24 CapEx. Curious if we should see that maybe amplified with some of the projects pulled forward into 2024? Speaker 300:27:41Well, Tristan, we were going to be finishing up those projects in 2025. So clearly, the capital that was associated with the tag end of those projects is going to move forward into 2024 and that'll be a positive for our CapEx. In 2025, we've added the Denver project spread over a couple of years that isn't really a material increase to our capital. So I think the trends we've talked about in the past continue to be true. And we're getting to that point where we're going to enjoy the operating leverage we have built into our system. Speaker 300:28:21And as we fill that demand, we're going to see that drop to the bottom line. Speaker 900:28:27I appreciate it. Well, thank you guys very much. Operator00:28:31Next question comes from Keith Stanley with Wolfe Research. Speaker 1000:28:35Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:28:37Hi, good morning. Several of your producer customers in the Bakken have announced mergers, Conoco Marathon, Devon and Grayson Mill. Any thoughts on what you think that could mean for Bakken production and your business over time? Speaker 400:28:56Keith, this is Sheridan. One thing I'd tell you is all those producers, all those on both sides of the acquisition up in the Bakken, we have very good relationships with them, not only in the Bakken, but also in other areas as well. And we think that they will as we've talked to them, but we think that it's not going to have an impact on what's going on up there. They're going to continue their cadence that they do as drilling. There may be even some upsizing to the right as they go to the more better areas or more in the core areas and drill those a little bit faster. Speaker 400:29:32So we are feeling very good about the consolidation that's happened up there going into the hands of strength and they will want to be producing up there for the long period of time. Speaker 1100:29:45Great. Thanks. And I wanted to follow-up just on the Denver project. So I mean the whole Magellan business has historically been viewed as a lower growth kind of high return of capital business. But the Denver project is pretty material when you think about it. Speaker 1100:30:02Are there other material opportunities across refined products besides Denver that you could pursue other areas of the system that are getting tight on capacity or seeing more of a demand deflection? Speaker 400:30:15Absolutely. We continue to look for those areas as well. We think there's some other opportunities. We continue to one is we continue to think El Paso showed some strength as well as we have completed our expansion into El Paso and it is running full. We've actually had an open season on a little smaller expansion on there that was fully subscribed. Speaker 400:30:35So we're already seeing a little bit more growth in that area, and we're encouraged about that continuing to grow. And then our teams are continuing to look for different areas, synergies or growth that we can expand our system as well. So we are excited about the growth in the refined product and system that we think we will see it at a higher rate than has been typically seen in that business. Speaker 1200:31:00Thank you. Operator00:31:02The next question comes from Michael Blum with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Speaker 1200:31:08Thanks. Good morning, everyone. Wondering if you have any updates on potential AI data center related projects in the gas pipeline segment? Speaker 700:31:20Good morning, Michael. This is Chuck. Yes, since we last spoke last quarter, as I mentioned then, we had about 15 projects, potential projects across our footprint. Of those, there were 3 that specifically stated AI. Since then, we've our numbers up about to 17 on the potential power plants and of which 5 are AI demand specifically. Speaker 700:31:48Approximately across our footprint, these 5 are right in the neighborhood of a Bcf per day. So again, early stages, but more to come. Speaker 1200:31:59Okay, got it. Thanks for that. And then just was looking for an update on Saguaro, any recent conversations and what's kind of the latest thinking there on timing of FID if that's going to happen? Thanks. Speaker 700:32:14Yes. I would just remind everyone, this really is a commercially strong project with world class customers and it makes great commercial sense. I mean, you've got Permian supplies, LNG demand pools competitively advantaged to the Asian markets. So NPL is working on their project financing to make their final investment decision. And at this time, we do not anticipate material capital spend on our behalf here in 2024. Operator00:32:46And the next question comes from Manav Gupta with UBS. Please go ahead. Speaker 1300:32:53Good morning, guys. My first question is, can you talk a little bit about ethane? Can you also talk about any Huguen blending opportunities in your system at this point Speaker 400:33:04of time? Yes, Mani, this is Sheridan. And we I mean, obviously, we have opportunities as we continue to integrate the refined products and NGL systems together that we are have the opportunity to take our butane and put it into our refined products Speaker 700:33:29blend more butane into Speaker 400:33:29our refined products as to blend more butane into our fine products across our system by more automation and understanding directing volumes through our system. So we are very pleased with where we're sitting on our blending strategy at this time. And obviously, we have found some projects to that take some capital that will be more into next year. We'll see Easton being one of them, but we'll see greater blending opportunities next year as we put some of these capital projects, small capital projects into service. Speaker 1300:34:05Perfect. My quick follow-up is, you kind of mentioned earlier, hinted to it that 25 CapEx obviously now would be lower than 24. So your growth projects are kicking in and the CapEx is lower. So the free cash flow next year would be higher. And just to understand if there is a preliminary plan and how should we think about those uses of that extra cash that is going to come out in 2025? Speaker 300:34:30As we stated before, back in January, the Board did give us an authorization to buy up to $2,000,000,000 worth of stock. We remain committed to our level of capital allocation. Our first goal is always to find high growth projects that are extremely accretive to our shareholders. Then we want to maintain that balance sheet. We've clearly demonstrated that we have a very strong dividend that we've maintained through some very difficult times over time and continue to grow. Speaker 300:35:10And then if we have excess cash, that does provide the opportunity for stock repurchases. We fully expect to complete that $2,000,000,000 program over the time plan time program that we had announced. And we haven't bought any to date, as we mentioned on the Q1 call, because we do have this maturity coming up in September that we were going to focus our free cash flow on through that. And we will just allocate as appropriate as we get out in the coming quarters. Speaker 1300:35:50Thank you so much. Operator00:35:54And the next question comes from Neal Dingmann with Truist. Please go ahead. Speaker 1400:35:59Hey, good morning, guys. Just want to approach the data center question from a different angle, not really on new projects and this might be early, but has the downward market activity in the last month changed the conversation side of this at all? I would assume they're not changing their demand forecast in real time, but have there been any maybe pauses in conversations? Or do some parties want to take a step back? Or is everything kind of steady as she goes? Speaker 700:36:22I'm sorry, Ronnyo, could you repeat the first part of that question? You said something about the past month. Speaker 1400:36:28Yes, just the downward activity in the market over the past month, has that impacted the conversations at all? Or is everyone still looking so long term that maybe downward activity over the last month is just kind of a blip? Speaker 700:36:40No. As a matter of fact, it hasn't impacted the discussions at all. As a matter of fact, we see even more activity here this month and then in the next several months. So the markets are looking long term. And when you're looking at having to add facilities to serve these markets, that takes time. Speaker 700:37:00That's understood both by the power generators and the commissions that they answer to. So no impacts at this time. Speaker 1400:37:11That's helpful. Thank you. And then the second one on Slide 10, you do a really good job of showing Williston Basin GORs and kind of how flaring has tailed off and maybe that relationship is related. But do you see that continuing? Is this more of an inventory just drifting with a higher GOR? Speaker 1400:37:29Or is there any other kind of plateaued on that trend? Speaker 400:37:34I would say on the GOR question, we know that as Wells Ah, the GOR goes up. So a little bit the movement in the GOR we see is more based on drilling activity as if you drill in an area that starts at a lower GOR, it may pull the overall GOR down for a little bit, but those wells, even wells that start at lower will continue to grow. So we overall, we see the GORs increasing in as a general trend increasing in the Bakken. Speaker 1400:38:04Appreciate the answers. Thanks. Operator00:38:07And the next question comes from Neil Mitra with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Speaker 1200:38:14Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to touch on the share repurchase. I think the leverage level over the last 12 months has been 3.36, which you pointed out. Are you looking to buy back shares after the September debt maturity? Speaker 1200:38:32Or are there other factors or criteria which you're waiting for to start executing on that $2,000,000 program? Speaker 300:38:42I think the plan is to allocate the capital as appropriate from the Q3 through the remainder of the program. So it's over several years and we expect that to be executed in each of those years going forward. But it will obviously ebb and flow as we have opportunities to spend capital on high growth projects in a particular quarter, then it will be allocated there and other quarters it will go in other direction. So but we are committed to completing the program over the time period that we have said. And I think on track with our plans with this maturity coming up in September. Speaker 1200:39:35Okay, perfect. My second question relates to the Medford rebuild. Can you talk about the decision to move forward with that? My understanding was that with the Magellan merger, you're able to merge or batch NGLs up the refined pipe. So there was an ability to maybe replicate Medford with Mont Belvieu sending volumes up to Conway and then also with the Easton acquisition. Speaker 1200:40:11So maybe you can kind of educate me on that on the where I'm wrong or what's not connecting and how Medford benefits, ONEOK? Speaker 400:40:24Well, I think the first thing how Medford benefits ONEOK is, if you just do the math on 210,000 barrels a day at fractionation capacity for $385,000,000 that is a very low cost per barrel capacity for fractionation. The second thing is what you're alluding to is, could we take all our raw feed all the way down to Mont Belvieu and then turn around and take certain products and ship them all the way back up to the Mid Continent and deliver them into the Mid Continent. That is could be a possibility. This is a much more efficient way to do that to have all those volumes not have to make that travel and consume that variable cost or fractionate them in the Mid Continent, be able to put them back into the Mid Continent as we need it, but still have the ability to move them down into the Gulf Coast. The third thing it also does is by not having to move all that raw feed down all the way down to Mont Belvieu to fractionate and bring it up, we are actually creating capacity on our Arbuckle system to be able to source even more raw feed into the Mont Belvieu system. Speaker 400:41:33So we're moving that volume off of the Arbuckle system, fractionating it in that burden and putting on the Sterling system. So it's a much better way to balance our system as we go forward. So our system is really designed to have Medford where it is and it runs more efficiently that way. So we're pretty excited about bringing this facility back up. Speaker 1200:41:55Okay, perfect. I appreciate all the detail. Operator00:42:00And the next question comes from Craig Shere with Tuohy Brothers. Please go ahead. Speaker 1500:42:07Hi, thanks for taking the question. Congratulations on the strong performance. Speaker 700:42:13Thank you. Speaker 1500:42:14I just have one question. It's obvious that you're finding ways to more than nickel and dime at very high return stable contracting growth that is beyond what was originally guided with the MMP acquisition. But and this kind of relates to some of the questions have already been asked, but it seems that apart from contracted stable very high return growth that your asymmetric optimization opportunities between Y Grade or Purity NGL transport with increased lending opportunities with the Easton acquisition and more that in any given year, I mean it's not going to go down, but you'd have increasing asymmetric upside in any given year. Am I thinking about that wrong? Speaker 400:43:13No, Craig, I think you are thinking about that correct, especially as we continue to put into place some of these low capital projects that I had mentioned about earlier, we are going to increase our blending opportunities both with our blending, our refined products, blending butane into gasoline that we do, but also with the Easton acquisition, we have customers at our terminals now that are also blending NGLs into their facilities. And this is going to really allow us to supply that those volumes into those locations and create a bundled service in there. We're looking at the whole value chain that we'll be able to track even more volume into our terminals on the Gulf Coast down there. So yes, I think you are seeing that we will continue to grow this and this is an area that we saw that when we bought the Magellan acquisition and it has been we've been very pleased with how it's playing out. Speaker 700:44:15This is Perris. I want Speaker 200:44:18to add one thing to what Sheridan says as a big picture comment is, as this company has gotten more diversified, it is harder to point to one thing that maybe that will drive our numbers down, which is I think what you're kind of alluding to is that there's not maybe as much downside as maybe we've had in the past. So I think that's one comment I would make to your question. Speaker 1500:44:49Great. That's very helpful. And I think Sheridan's point that it's not just the optimization I mentioned, but increasing bundled opportunities, which would seem to be even more stable long term returns that get the icing on the cake potential with the optimization, but all of it's happening at once as you take these expansion and attract bolt Speaker 400:45:19on opportunities. Operator00:45:24The next question comes from Sunil Sibal with Seaport Global. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:45:31Hi, good morning everybody and thanks for all the color on the call. Speaker 700:45:35And I'm Speaker 1000:45:35not sure if I missed this, but could you talk a little bit about the economics on the Medford project? How should we think about returns on that project? Speaker 400:45:47Well, incrementally on the Medford project, we already even with MB6 coming up online here at the end of this year, we still have need contracted need for more fractionation capacity. So what we took a look at is where was the cheapest fractionation capacity we could get and where is the best fit into our system. And also the idea of bringing that much on with what we have contracted already today, we have a very nice project and we do this a lot. We have a very nice project with a lot of upside on this capacity. And that's why we're going back at Medford that we will be able to grow into this as we continue to see volume grow across our systems, be able to have capacity online to be able to timely meet our customers' demands as they continue to grow their system as well. Speaker 400:46:35So basically, we're saying we're putting in we're once again putting in a very low cost option that allows us to compete in all basins across our footprint. Speaker 1000:46:45Okay. Thanks for that. And then on the Bakken processing, it seems like a lot of commentary we hear is gas to oil ratios getting higher. And it seems like your processing system is running close to 85%, 90% capacity, or at least it was in Q2. How should we think about opportunities in terms of processing there in that region? Speaker 400:47:18Yes, we continue our I think I understand your question. I mean, our facilities up in the Bakken are running at a pretty good utilization, but we still have we're running about 1.6 Bcf today. We have 1.9 Bcf capacity. So we still basically have a plant to be able to grow into or be able to handle turnarounds on our system as well. We will continue to monitor production growth and at that time and at the right time that we need to, we'll put more capacity in that region as well to make sure we can be able to service our customers out there that they have a very reliable alternative to move the both the gas and the NGLs to make sure they can produce their crude oil, because that's really what they're after. Speaker 400:48:03They're after the production of their crude oil and they just need to make sure they have a very reliable and resilient outlet for their gas and NGLs. Speaker 1000:48:12Got it. Thanks for that. Operator00:48:16This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Andrew Ziola for any closing remarks. Speaker 100:48:25Our quiet period for the Q3 starts when we close our books in October and extends until we release earnings in late October. We'll provide details to that conference call at a later date. Thank you all for joining us and have a good day. Operator00:48:42The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by