Plains All American Pipeline (PAA 0.35%) and its general partner Plains GP Holdings (PAGP) have been among the worst devastated energy stocks of the last year.
However, unlike many quality midstream MLPs, which have been beaten down unfairly in Wall Street's mad dash out of anything oil and gas related, Plains All American Pipeline and Plains GP deserve their outlandish yields of nearly 20%.
Let's take a closer look at Plains All American's latest earnings and full year results to see just why long-term income investors should stay far away from this troubled pipeline giant, even at these rock bottom prices.
Weak results miss guidance
Metric | 2014 | 2015 | Change |
Adjusted Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization |
$2.2 billion | $2.168 billion | (1.5%) |
Distributable Cash Flow (DCF) |
$1.565 billion | $1.475 billion | (1.2%) |
Average Units Outstanding | 367 million | 394 million | 7.4% |
Distributions to Investors | $2.61 | $2.78 | 6.5% |
Distribution Coverage Ratio (DCR) | 1.11 | 0.88 | (20.7%) |
Note that Plains GP Holdings cash flow is derived purely from its ownership of its MLP's limited units and incentive distribution rights. Therefore the safety of its own dividend is solely based on Plains All American Pipelines' results which are shown in the table above.
Due to continued weakness in the natural gas liquids market Plains All American badly missed its own DCF guidance this quarter, returning a DCR of 0.88 instead of the previously guided for 0.94.
Management remains optimistic, however, that it will be able to sustain its current payout. This is due to $1.5 billion in capital projects scheduled to come online over the next two years, which will be funded by the proceeds of its recent $1.6 billion in preferred equity issuances.
Payout profile remains abysmal
For the full year the Plains All American Pipelines' misguided dedication to growing its payout in the face of falling DCF and rising unit count resulted in a dangerous decline in its coverage ratio, which remains far below the minimum sustainable level of 1.0.
In addition, its recent announcement that it will cut its 2016's capital budget by as much as 30% and potentially have to sell assets in 2016 (at rock bottom prices) indicates that Plains All American is undergoing financial stress that contradicts management's sugar coated optimism.
Limited growth runway AND limited access to profitable growth
Plains All American's only hope of maintaining its current distribution is to grow its way to a sustainable DCR.
Despite the recent issuance of $1.6 billion worth of 8% preferred perpetual convertible units,
which management believes will provide sufficient capital until sometime in 2017, I believe that the MLP's ability to profitably grow could be greatly constrained should energy prices remain low for several years.
Metric | Plains All American Pipeline |
2016 Projected Debt/Adjusted EBITDA | 4.6 |
Cost of Debt | 3.8% |
Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) | 6.54% |
Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) |
7.07% |
Plains All American's total debt of $11.1 billion means that its balance sheet is highly leveraged which likely means that future debt costs will rise. In addition, management's target Debt/Adjusted EBITDA target of 3.5-4.0 means that it will have to rely on more equity capital raises to grow in the future, at least until its leverage ratio declines to the target range.
The problem with this is that, as its latest preferred equity issuance shows, Wall Street isn't willing to give Plains All American access to such growth capital except at rates in excess of its current WACC.
The energy crash has resulted in the MLP's ROIC declining (In Q3 it was just 6.66%).
With its costs of capital rising Plains All American potentially faces the prospect of being forced to fund unprofitable projects in hopes of boosting its DCR to a sustainable 1.0, or cut its distribution to better match the realities of today's energy markets.
Plains All American's sky-high yield of almost 20% shows that wall Street thinks a payout cut is the more likely outcome. With the MLP facing the prospect of low energy prices continuing into 2017, when it will need to raise additional capital at potentially even higher cost, I don't have much hope in the long-term sustainability of the current distribution to survive the current oil crash.
Bottom line
Given Plains All Americans': rising cost of capital, large debt load, limited profitable growth outlook, and continuing troubles covering its excess distribution, I think its clear that investors should look elsewhere for sustainably income growth.
Nothing less than a sharp and sustained energy price recovery in 2016 is likely to allow Plains to sustain its current payout and that is a highly speculative bet, one that only the most high risk investors should consider making.