A Broken Global Energy Supply Chain Just Unlocked a New Supercycle This High-Yield Stock

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By Alex Sirois Published

Quick Read

  • Global energy supply chain disruptions have pushed EPD up 22% year to date, tripling the S&P 500's gain, as buyers pivot to U.S. NGL exports.

  • EPD delivers a 5.79% yield backed by 27 consecutive years of distribution growth and 1.6x DCF coverage, earning a Very Safe dividend rating.

  • Co-CEO AJ Teague personally bought 2,665 EPD units in March 2026 while growth capex drops from $4.5B to ~$2.5B, signaling a free cash flow inflection.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Enterprise Products Partners didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

A Broken Global Energy Supply Chain Just Unlocked a New Supercycle This High-Yield Stock

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The midstream MLP space rarely makes headlines, but a fractured global energy supply chain has turned Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE:EPD | EPD Price Prediction) into a magnet for income capital. Units are up 21.79% year to date, outpacing the S&P 500’s 6.38%, as Strait of Hormuz disruptions push international buyers toward U.S. NGL, LPG, and ethane logistics. The question for retirees: is the distribution safe?

Distribution Snapshot

Metric Value
Annualized Distribution $2.20
Yield 5.79%
Consecutive Years of Growth 27
Most Recent Increase 2.8% (April 2026)
Aristocrat/King Status Shadow King (MLP, not S&P member)

The Payout Math Has a Wrinkle Worth Understanding

Enterprise paid $4.678 billion in distributions in 2025 against $8.585 billion in operating cash flow and $2.965 billion in free cash flow. FY 2025 EPS of $2.66 against a $2.18 calendar distribution puts the earnings payout near 82%, normal for an MLP given heavy depreciation add-backs.

Metric Value Assessment
Earnings Payout ~82% Normal for MLP
FCF Payout (FY25) 0.63x cover Elevated (growth capex)
OCF Coverage 1.83x Strong
DCF Coverage (Q2 25) 1.6x Healthy

The FCF gap reflects a $5.3 billion growth project backlog, not distribution stress. 2026 growth capex drops to $2.3 to $2.6 billion from $4.5 billion, the FCF inflection management has telegraphed.

Debt Is Heavy but Well-Termed

Metric Value
Total Debt $34.2B
EBITDA (TTM) $9.79B
Net Debt/EBITDA ~3.5x (manageable for IG midstream)
Beta 0.469

27 Years, No Cuts, and Buybacks on Top

Year Annual Distribution
2026 (run rate) $2.20
2025 $2.17
2024 $2.09
2023 $1.99
2022 $1.89

The streak held through 2020 at $0.445 quarterly. Co-CEO AJ Teague also bought 2,665 units at $37.55 in March 2026.

Management Is Pointing at the Cash Inflection

Co-CEO Jim Teague on the Q1 2026 call: “Our DCF for the quarter supported a 2.8 percent increase in our cash distribution rate to common unitholders and allowed us to retain $1.5 billion of DCF to reinvest… and fund $116 million of buybacks.” On the macro setup: “As a result of the recent disruption of exports from the Middle East, we are seeing strong demand for the security and reliability of U.S. energy exports.”

Verdict: Very Safe

Dividend Safety Rating: Very Safe. DCF coverage of 1.6x, OCF coverage of 1.83x, a 27-year streak, and a winding-down capex cycle give me high confidence in the payout. The bull case for Enterprise rests on record 1.9 MMBPD fractionation volumes and growing LPG export demand. The key risk is NGL prices collapsing below $0.50/gallon and forcing marketing margin compression deeper than 2026 guidance assumes. For retirees, this is one of the cleanest 5.79% yields in the energy complex.

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About the Author Alex Sirois →

Alex Sirois is a financial writer with experience spanning both retail and institutional investing. He has written for InvestorPlace and held roles at BNY Mellon and Bernstein, giving him a perspective that bridges Main Street portfolios and Wall Street analysis.

Alex holds an MBA from George Washington University and has built his career across multiple industries, including e-commerce, education, and translation — a breadth of experience that informs how he breaks down complex financial topics for everyday investors. His writing is conversational, actionable, and grounded in long-term, buy-and-hold investing principles.

At 247 Wall St., Alex focuses on delivering analysis that is both accessible and useful, with a clear emphasis on helping readers make more informed decisions with their money.

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