New York, May 16, 2026, 15:02 (EDT)
Enterprise Products Partners L.P. finished flat at $39.23 on Friday. Units gained around 5.5% for the week while U.S. stocks fell late in the session. The NYSE was closed Saturday. Regular trading runs Monday through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. in New York. The next session is Monday, May 18.
Timing is the key point here. The Houston-based midstream firm, which handles transport and storage of energy, paid its quarterly distribution of $0.55 per unit on May 14. That’s a 2.8% increase from its first-quarter payout last year.
Stocks stumbled Friday, with the S&P 500 down 1.2%, the Dow off 1.1% and the Nasdaq sinking 1.5%. The market moved lower as rising oil prices and higher bond yields weighed on equities, according to the Associated Press.
Enterprise moved in a tighter range this week. Shares ended at $37.90 on May 11, then $38.16 and $38.29, rising to $39.23 for both May 14 and May 15. Volume dropped to 2.71 million Friday, down from 11.11 million on Thursday.
Cash flow is the key for the income case. In the first quarter, Enterprise reported net income for common unitholders of $1.5 billion, or 68 cents per diluted unit, with adjusted EBITDA up 10% to $2.7 billion in its April 28 release. Co-CEO Jim Teague said distributable cash flow “supported a 2.8 percent increase” in the distribution and went to $116 million of buybacks. Enterprise Products Partners L.P.
Peers moved in different directions. Energy Transfer fell 1.03% and Williams Cos. ticked up 0.04% on Friday. MarketWatch said Enterprise was flat during the session. EPD was not the top midstream name or one of the biggest losers.
NGLs like ethane and propane are still a core part of the business, with products separated from natural gas going into fuels and petrochemicals. The company’s most recent 10-Q showed first-quarter midstream-service revenue up $51 million year-over-year, as transportation demand increased across NGL and natural-gas assets.
Teague brought up the geopolitics risk for investors as well. On the earnings call, he said markets are “underestimating the potential global supply implications” if the Strait of Hormuz stays closed for a long time. He estimated up to 12 million to 15 million barrels a day of crude, products, propane and petrochemicals could be at risk, according to Investing.com.
Energy infrastructure was in focus Friday, even as markets slipped. Enterprise isn’t a straight oil-price play, though rising export demand and uneven markets can boost what customers will pay for pipeline, storage, and dock use when they want more flexibility.
But the risk is there. Enterprise warned regulators its 2026 capital spending plans may shift due to economic trouble, weather, higher supplier prices, labor issues, supply chain snags or inflation. If rates go up and export demand drops, the stock’s payout could turn less special.
Market focus this week is on a few key tests. EPD needs to hold above $39 now that its payout date is in the rearview. Oil prices are keeping midstream names interesting, but higher Treasury yields still weigh on income stocks. Right now, no big swings are in the mix. That could change, in either direction.