HOUSTON, June 27, 2026, 11:04 CDT
- Enterprise Products Partners L.P. NYSE:EPD settled at $36.57 on Friday, slipping 0.73%. The stock is about 0.1% lower than where it was at the close on June 18.
- Average volume for the last five sessions was close to 3.13 million shares, about 25% less than the 65-day average of 4.20 million, according to .
- The Alerian MLP ETF (NYSEARCA:AMLP) added 1.5% between June 18 and Friday. Its 12.19% holding, Enterprise, trailed that move.
- U.S. markets are closed for the weekend. Next week’s trading will be shortened by the July 3 Independence Day holiday.
Enterprise Products Partners L.P. NYSE:EPD finished Friday at $36.57, off 27 cents for the day. U.S. markets are closed Saturday. The units were volatile this week and are now just 3 cents under where they settled June 18, but the chart still looks flat.
Volatility ran high over the five sessions: Monday fell 0.49%, Tuesday jumped 1.95%, Wednesday dropped 2.80%, Thursday bounced 2.08%, and Friday slipped 0.73%. In all, daily swings added up to more than eight percentage points, but the net weekly change was just a 0.1% loss.
Enterprise traded 3.42 million units on Friday, compared to its 65-day average of 4.20 million, according to Wall Street Journal data. Volume over the week ran about 3.13 million units a session. That’s thin for a stock that tends to draw income-focused investors.
That’s important since Enterprise outperformed the S&P 500, which dropped 2% this week, and the Nasdaq, down 4.6%, AP market data show. But Enterprise still lagged behind its own midstream group.
The Alerian MLP ETF (NYSEARCA:AMLP) moved up to $51.44 on Friday from $50.67 on June 18, up roughly 1.5%. Enterprise accounts for 12.19% of the ETF’s top holdings, so its underperformance weighed on the fund even as AMLP climbed.
Enterprise is sticking with its round-number payout. The company announced a first-quarter cash distribution of 55 cents per common unit, or $2.20 annualized. Shares ended Friday with a yield near 6.0%.
Enterprise’s recent earnings firm up the yield. In April, the company posted a 10% rise in Q1 adjusted EBITDA to $2.7 billion. Operational distributable cash flow covered distributions 1.8 times. “A strong start in the first quarter,” co-CEO A.J. “Jim” Teague said. Enterprise Products Partners L.P.
Teague linked the operating results to exports, noting Enterprise is seeing “strong demand for the security and reliability of U.S. energy exports.” First-quarter marine terminal volumes jumped 15%, hitting a record 2.3 million barrels per day, the company said. Enterprise Products Partners L.P.
Analyst targets for Enterprise Products Partners are still ahead of where shares trade, but the gap has narrowed. Google Finance had Barclays’ Theresa Chen sticking with her Buy and $41 target on June 23. Goldman Sachs’ John Mackay stayed at Hold and $38 on June 16. Wells Fargo’s Michael Blum is at Buy with a $42 target as of May 29.
Most analysts are bullish. StockAnalysis says 21 S&P Global analysts have a Buy rating on Enterprise and see an average price target of $41.25, about 12.8% higher than the last price listed.
Enterprise’s events page shows no fresh company news lined up in the coming week. It just says “More events are coming soon” under upcoming events. The latest presentations posted are from May 19 and May 18. Enterprise Products Partners L.P.
Nasdaq schedules U.S. stock-market hours from Monday to Friday. The exchange will close Friday, July 3, for the Independence Day observance, according to its site. That puts just four regular trading sessions next week for catch-up between Enterprise and AMLP.