DALLAS, May 9, 2026, 17:05 CDT
Energy Transfer LP units slipped 1.24%, closing at $19.34 on Friday—even as unitholders of record became eligible for a higher quarterly distribution. Investors now face a choice: a bigger cash payout or the prospect of a more ambitious 2026 buildout.
At master limited partnerships, distributions tell the story. Energy Transfer bumped its first-quarter payout to $0.3375 per common unit—annualized, that’s $1.35—set for payment on May 20. The company’s recent figures show the cash flow is up, but so are outlays.
What’s changed: Energy Transfer has pivoted, focusing its growth story on U.S. natural gas pipelines, surging power demand, and the data center buildout—moving away from its Lake Charles LNG export ambitions. Back in January, Reuters reported the company was planning to invest as much as $5.5 billion in 2026, mainly targeting natural gas network expansions, after hitting pause on Lake Charles in December. That capex target has since been raised.
Adjusted EBITDA came in at $4.94 billion for the first quarter, a 20% jump over last year, the company said. Net income attributable to partners edged down, landing at $1.25 billion compared to $1.32 billion a year ago. Distributable cash flow climbed, reaching $2.70 billion from $2.31 billion—an important metric for investors watching payout potential.
Energy Transfer bumped up its 2026 adjusted EBITDA outlook, now targeting $18.2 billion to $18.6 billion compared to the earlier $17.45 billion to $17.85 billion range. Projected growth capital expenditures have also increased to $5.5 billion–$5.9 billion, topping both previous guidance and what was laid out in January.
Volumes drove the story for the quarter. According to the company, NGL exports and NGL/refined product terminal volumes each climbed 19%, while NGL fractionation volumes posted an 11% gain. Crude oil transportation was up 8%. Midstream gathered volumes increased 6%. Each of those categories reached new highs for the partnership. Natural gas liquids—propane, butane, and related products—are separated out from gas streams.
Permian pipelines aren’t the whole story anymore. Energy Transfer announced deals to move firm gas on its Texas intrastate network for the Nexus Hubbard AI hyperscale campus in central Texas, while fresh Oklahoma power plant hookups will bring roughly 300 million cubic feet a day of gas online. The company also gave a green light to the 120-mile Springerville Lateral—underpinned by 20-year contracts—to feed new gas-fired generation set to take over for retiring coal plants.
During the earnings call, co-CEO Tom Long pointed to “strong operations” as a driver. CFO Dylan Bramhall noted the quarter came in roughly $500 million ahead of what they’d budgeted internally. Co-chief executive Marshall McCrea, for his part, talked up demand on the company’s Desert Southwest system, saying Energy Transfer was “chasing a lot of demand” there and had “zero concerns” about moving the rest of its available capacity. The Motley Fool
Traders weren’t as enthusiastic as Energy Transfer’s latest update might suggest. Still, shares outpaced rivals Friday: Enterprise Products Partners slipped 1.43%, and Williams Cos. dropped 1.36%, MarketWatch data show. Even so, Energy Transfer finished 6.41% off its 52-week peak set May 5.
The quarterly report, just filed, offered a closer look at the balance sheet. Energy Transfer reported it—and its subsidiaries—remained in compliance with debt covenants as of March 31. The company’s five-year credit facility showed $1.49 billion outstanding, leaving $3.45 billion in available capacity once letters of credit were accounted for.
The filing also highlighted risks. Energy Transfer warned that if a disputed EPA air-quality rule goes into effect, the company might have to retrofit or swap out around 192 engines—an upgrade that could mean hefty capital costs. Floating-rate debt stood at $3.46 billion, so a swing of 100 basis points could shift yearly interest costs by $35 million.
Energy Transfer’s heft is hard to miss. With a network stretching over 140,000 miles of pipelines and energy infrastructure in 44 states, it’s a major player in natural gas, crude, NGLs and refined products. For investors, though, the question is more pointed: can increased throughput and locked-in contracts outpace the rising capital costs?