Kinetik Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ:KNTK) Q4 2023 Earnings Call Transcript February 29, 2024
Kinetik Holdings Inc. isn’t one of the 30 most popular stocks among hedge funds at the end of the third quarter (see the details here).
Operator: Good morning. Thank you for attending today’s Kinetik Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2023 Earnings Call. My name is Megan, and I’ll be your moderator for today’s call. All lines will be muted during the presentation portion of the call with an opportunity for questions-and-answers at the end. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to pass the conference over to Maddie Wagner with Kinetik. Please proceed.
Maddie Wagner: Thank you. Good morning, and welcome to Kinetik’s fourth quarter and full year 2023 earnings as well as our full year 2024 guidance conference call. Our speakers today are Jamie Welch, our President and Chief Executive Officer; and Trevor Howard, our Chief Financial Officer. Other members of our senior management team are also in attendance for this morning’s call. The press release we issued yesterday, the slide presentation and access to the webcast for today’s call are available at www.kinetik.com. Before we begin, I would like to remind all listeners that our remarks, including the question-and-answer section will provide forward-looking statements and actual results could differ from what is described in these statements.
These statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve a number of risks and assumptions. We may also provide certain performance measures that do not conform to U.S. GAAP. We provided schedules that reconcile these non-GAAP measures as part of our earnings press release. After our prepared remarks, we will open the call to Q&A. With that, I will turn the call over to Jamie.
Jamie Welch: Thank you, Maddie. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining our call today. Yesterday, we reported our fourth quarter 2023 results and provided our 2024 financial guidance. We look forward to discussing both in more detail with you this morning. Looking back on this past year, it can best be characterized as a relentless focus on execution. We executed upon several highly strategic growth projects, our financial priorities and sustainability program, and more broadly speaking, our Kinetik vision. We also achieved record processed gas volumes each quarter and provided safe and reliable operating services to our customers. I want to take a moment to thank our team for all of their hard work and dedication over the past year.
They remain focused on delivering projects on time and on budget with an unwavering commitment to safety and sustainability. Thank you. Starting with our financial results. We reported adjusted EBITDA of $228 million for the fourth quarter and $839 million for the full year. Achieving the middle of the revised guidance, we provided in November and above the midpoint of our original guidance range. Full year 2023 capital expenditures were $531 million within our 2023 guidance range. We exited the year with processed gas volumes of 1.56 billion cubic feet per day in the month of December, and fourth quarter average processed gas volumes were 1.54 billion cubic feet per day, representing a more than 22% increase when compared to the fourth quarter 2022.
After achieving our 2023 exit rate guidance of 1.5 billion cubic feet per day in April, we revised our exit rate guidance to 1.6 billion cubic feet per day. We exited the year with processed gas volumes at just under our revised guidance due to a modest shift in producer turn-in-line schedules in the fourth quarter and a package of new gas curtailed, because of elevated CO2 concentrations. To expand a little further, that producer brought online a large number of wells developing several benches. The shallower zones experienced elevated CO2 concentrations that did not meet the contractual gas quality specifications. The producer has been working to address the issue, while gradually ramping up volumes as we complete our system-wide front-end aiming treating project, which will allow us to accept a broader range of gas quality and provide treating and blending services to our customers further expanding our margins.
Treating is becoming increasingly important as producers develop these shallower benches, including the Bone Spring and Avalon, as well as step-out from what we know as the core of the Delaware Basin. In fact, with increasing gas quality issues associated with CO2 and H2S, treating is emerging as one of the most overlooked capacity constraints within the basin. With our system-wide treating and blending capabilities almost fully complete, we are uniquely positioned to support the next phase of basin growth. Looking back over the last couple of years, our gas volume growth rate has been approximately double the growth rate of the underlying Permian Basin, suggesting that Kinetik has significantly increased its gas processing market share in the basin.
This is a testament to our system reliability, customer-first approach, and tailored service offerings. As I touched on earlier, we demonstrated strong operational execution over the past year. On October 1, we placed in a service, Delaware Link, a 1 billion cubic feet per day intra-basin residue gas pipeline. This pipeline connects our processing facilities directly to Waha, providing our customers with enhanced system reliability and flow assurance. On December 1, the 550 million cubic feet per day Permian Highway Pipeline expansion was placed in the service. Then, most recently, we completed our gathering system expansion into New Mexico and began flowing volumes on January 18. The project was completed over 2 months ahead of schedule and under budget.
Kinetik offers a differentiated service to New Mexico producers as we can provide flow assurance on a fully integrated solution from wellhead to premium Gulf Coast markets on wholly-owned or majority-owned infrastructure today. We’re excited about the opportunities to grow our business and footprint in New Mexico, which has been a part of our long-term vision. As a new entrant into this market, we already have a strong competitive advantage with available processing capacity today and treating and blending capabilities. Furthermore, we offer counterparty diversity on quality infrastructure to New Mexico producers. Looking ahead to 2024, we remain in a period of volatile commodity prices driven by economic uncertainty and geopolitical turmoil.
Despite the announcement of the LNG permitting pause by the administration last month, our view remains that the demand pool to the U.S. Gulf Coast will continue to be significant as the LNG export infrastructure already under construction is slated to come online in 2025 through 2030. As the world continues to demand cleaner, lower cost, and more reliable sources of energy, natural gas will play a critical role as it offers lower emissions versus other traditional fossil fuels. The U.S. was a net exporter of 12.8 billion cubic feet per day of natural gas in 2023, representing nearly 100 million metric tons, which can provide roughly 720 billion kilowatt hours of energy, or enough power for almost 100 million homes. With existing projects in the U.S., we expect to more than double that export amount by 2030.
At Kinetik, we are proud to be a part of the value chain that delivers a cost-effective, reliable, and lower carbon energy solution. While Trevor will share more specific assumptions regarding our 2024 guidance, we have continued to take steps to further de-risk our balance sheet. Over 90% of our gross profit is sourced from fixed-fee contracts. We have hedged approximately 50% of our commodity-linked gross profit and we will continue to hedge our remaining 2024 and 2025 exposures as we see opportunities. The Permian is a well-class resource and remains one of the most prolific cost-competitive basins. Even at $70-barrel WTI producer economics are advantaged supporting continued growth and development. In 2023, the EIA estimated that wellhead wet gas increased by approximately 3 billion cubic feet per day.
Now, when applying a 30% fuel and shrink factor, we estimate the Permian residue supply increased by approximately 2 billion cubic feet per day. Now, I would remind the audience that due to changes in ethane gas spreads, trailing 12-month residue gas growth can swing materially from one month to the next. With Permian rig activity finding a floor at approximately 310 rigs for the last several months, which is nearly a 15% reduction from the peak reached in April 2023, we think that 2024 will struggle to keep pace with 2023’s production growth levels. Therefore, on an exit-to-exit basis, we expect Permian wellhead wet gas to grow approximately 1.5 to 2 billion cubic feet per day in 2024, which is mid- to high-single-digit percentage growth.
According to the EIA, this past January, 118 billion cubic feet per day of natural gas was consumed in the United States alone, the most in any month on record, with forecasts expecting gas demand to grow upwards of 20% by 2030. We strongly believe that the Permian will continue to deliver and meet the world’s growing demand for crude oil, natural gas liquids, and natural gas. Opportunities exist across our footprint, including shallower formations like the Bone Spring and Avalon, and the deeper zones like the Wolfcamp C, Barnett and Woodford Shale. We are encouraged by recent well results from these formations and zones. Now, before turning over the call to Trevor, I’d like to reiterate the significance of this year for Kinetik. Throughout 2023, we remain focused on our commitments and taking the necessary steps to position Kinetik for a robust 2024.
We are extremely proud of what we have accomplished, and we are excited for what is yet to come on our growth journey. So stay tuned. And with that, I would now like to hand the call over to Trevor.
Trevor Howard: Thanks, Jamie. In the fourth quarter, we reported adjusted EBITDA of $228 million. For the quarter, we generated an adjusted distributable cash flow of $150 million and free cash flow was $77 million. Looking at our segment results, our Midstream Logistics segment generated an adjusted EBITDA of $146 million in the quarter, up 10% year-over-year. This was attributed to increased processed gas volumes. And as a result, gas fee-based gross profit increased by 13%, despite lower commodity prices. Shifting to our Pipeline Transportation segment, we generated an adjusted EBITDA of $85 million, up nearly 7% quarter-over-quarter. Sequential growth within the segment was driven by one full month of contributions from Delaware Link and the PHP expansion.
Total capital expenditures for the quarter were $95 million, with $61 million within our Midstream Logistics segment and $34 million at the Pipeline Transportation segment. For the full year, we reported adjusted EBITDA of $839 million, $569 million of distributable cash flow, and $60 million of free cash flow. Total capital expenditures for the year were $531 million within the guidance range provided last February. Midstream Logistics capital expenditures totaled $244 million at the bottom half of the guidance range. Pipeline Transportation capital expenditures were $287 million, above our range driven by cost increases related to the non-operated PHP expansion project. It is worth noting our total operated capital came in 5% below our internal estimates for full year 2023.
We exited the year with a 4 times leverage ratio per our credit agreement. In December, we took a series of steps to refinance a portion of our debt through $800 million of sustainability-linked senior notes due 2028 conducted in two separate transactions. The proceeds were used to pay down the existing Term Loan A facility and extend that maturity by 1-year to June 2026. Following the refinancing, nearly 100% of our interest rate exposure remains fixed. Also in December, we facilitated a secondary offering of 7.5 million shares by Apache, increasing our public float by just under 50%. Our public float now represents more than 15% of the total shares outstanding. On January 24, we declared a $0.75 per share quarterly dividend, $3 on an annualized basis to be paid on March 7.
Kinetik’s Board of Directors made the decision to maintain the reinvestment level of Blackstone, I Squared and management’s applicable fourth quarter dividend at 100%. However, following the fourth quarter dividend payment on March 7, all shareholders will receive a cash dividend. The agreement between Blackstone, Apache and I Squared to reinvest their dividend expires on March 8, 2024. In 2023, we repurchased approximately 194,000 shares for $5.8 million in total. We have $94 million of remaining authorized capacity under our board approved share buyback program. We will continue to evaluate opportunistic share repurchases to return value to shareholders, while understanding the delicate balance with maintaining our public float. Moving to 2024 guidance, we estimate full year adjusted EBITDA in the range of $905 million to $960 million.
The midpoint of $933 million implies adjusted EBITDA growth of approximately 11% year-over-year. In terms of each quarter’s contribution to full-year EBITDA, we expect 2024 to look comparable to 2023. Our recently completed projects drive growth at both the Midstream Logistics and Pipeline Transportation segments. Specifically, within the Midstream Logistics segment, our New Mexico gathering and processing contracts, fully supported by minimum volume commitments, came online early in January of this year. Additionally, we expect to see a full-year benefit to gas and produced water volumes attributed to the Permian Resources Incentive Agreement that started during the fourth quarter of last year. Coupled with our existing customers, we anticipate over 10% gas processed volume growth year-over-year, which outpaces expected basin growth.
I would also note that with Waha prices remaining depressed and volatile, Apache is now planning for the next phase of Alpine High development activity in 2025. On a quarterly basis, we forecast first quarter 2024 volumes to be lower than fourth quarter 2023 as a result of molecular sieve bed change-outs at several processing facilities. And similarly to 2023, we will see a step-up in volumes beginning in the second quarter with customer development activity more heavily weighted in the second and third quarters of this year. In 2024, our Pipeline Transportation segment will have the full-year benefit from Delaware Link and the PHP expansion. To frame the full-year EBITDA contribution from Delaware Link, I’ll remind you that this project was roughly a 5 times billed multiple, and we saw one full month of EBITDA contribution in the fourth quarter of 2023 as volumes ramped with the PHP expansion in-service.
Our forecast also calls for EBITDA growth at Shin Oak and EPIC Crude. The Pipeline Transportation segment is expected to contribute 40% of total Kinetik adjusted EBITDA in 2024, representing a 15% increase over the past 2 years. As Jamie touched on, commodity prices will continue to be choppy in 2024. However, we have and will continue to de-risk our earnings and balance sheet. Our 2024 guidance assumes approximately $76 per barrel for WTI, $2 per MMBtu for natural gas at the Houston Ship Channel Hub, and $0.60 per gallon for natural gas liquids. Approximately 10% of our 2024 expected gross profit is commodity-linked, comprised of the following contributions, 25% from natural gas or ethane, 45% from propane and butane, and 30% from crude. To date, we are hedged approximately 50% on an average across commodities, with a higher hedge concentration on propane, butane, and crude.
Turning to our capital expenditures guidance, we expect capital expenditures to be between $125 million to $165 million for the full year, including approximately $35 million of maintenance capital for the year, which is elevated because of the completion of multi-year compression overhauls. Our guidance reflects the return to a reduced capital program following the completion of last year’s growth projects, and in fact is slightly below our previously communicated expectations. Taking the midpoints of our 2024 adjusted EBITDA and capital expenditures guidance, this translates into nearly $450 million of incremental free cash flow before dividends year-over-year, marking a significant increase in Kinetik’s free cash flow generation. We remain focused on our capital allocation priorities and took meaningful steps in 2023 to strengthen our balance sheet and maintain financial flexibility.
And with that, I would like to open the line for Q&A.
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Q&A Session
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Operator: Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Spiro Dounis with Citi. Your line is now open.
Spiro Dounis: Thanks, operator. Good morning, everybody.
Jamie Welch: Good morning.
Spiro Dounis: Jamie, I want to start with treating, if we could. You had mentioned being uniquely positioned there, and it sounds like that is becoming an emerging issue. So, I’m curious if you have any sense of lead time you have on some of your competition there and your ability to do that, and then when you might need to be in a position again to add even more treating capacity?
Jamie Welch: Good morning, Spiro. Look, treating’s a great question. I’m glad actually we have maybe we’ll ask Matt, or the sort of saunter over here to the mic. But I think, look, as far as treating is one aspect in the context of your front-end aiming and, obviously, your contact is in what you can take as far as, I would say, impurities in the gas stream. What is interesting for us is because – for us, it’s taken almost 2 years, since I think we first announced as part of the merger that we would install the system-wide treating. We already had it at Diamond. Obviously, we’ve rolled it out in the context of the rest of the system with, I think, Pecos Bend being the last to be done in early April. And so, other people have front-end, I mean, treating don’t get us wrong.
I think what is interesting to us is, because of the breadth of our system, it’s as much blending as it is treating, because we have a lot of sweet gas on our system, and therefore when you, in fact, mix it all together, you obviously blend it down in the context of the level of the impurities. And that obviously is helpful, certainly for our producers. So I don’t think it’s a case of we’re just more advanced than others. Others certainly have it. The fact is we’ve converted now a sweet system into a sour system, so we’re adding to that capacity. And, the fact that we already have open processing capacity available means that we can now take a much broader range of gas quality. I don’t know, Matt, if there’s anything else you want to add to that.
Matt Wall: No, I think you hit the main points, really, it’s probably the broadness of the footprint and difference in gas quality from north to south really helps with the blending process.
Jamie Welch: So, Spiro, just on that point, in what I’ll call sort of Central Southern Reeves, it’s much, much sweeter. We don’t really see a lot of – not a whole lot of H2S. There are pockets and not a lot of CO2. We certainly are aware of it in the context of this. We’ve had discussions in Lea County, and as you heard in our prepared remarks, we started flowing on that pipeline, Pegasus on January 18. So we do know that we already seeing higher elevated levels of both H2S and CO2. Loving County, yeah, again, pockets. Eddy County, best we can tell, not so much. Not yet. And maybe that’s – because it’s in the earlier stages than maybe what we’ve seen with Lea County.
Spiro Dounis: Got it. Thanks for that. Second question, just going to capital return, Trevor, you’d mentioned an incremental $450 million of free cash flow. I suspect most of the excess there after the dividend probably ends up going to the balance sheet for now. But as you sort of look beyond this and sustainability and the growth of the free cash flow going forward, what are some of the guideposts you’re looking for to maybe start increasing that dividend again?
Trevor Howard: Thanks for the question, Spiro. So, yeah, just taking the guidance that we provided, and we do have in excess of $100 million of free cash flow after dividends that for right now we are earmarking for debt pay down. We currently, right now, we’re at about 4 times leverage with a leverage target of 3.5 times. So, right now, we just given the landscape that we see in front of us in the deleveraging profile, we’re focused on moving the football down the field and get into that 3.5 times, which sets us up for an investment-grade upgrade. And so, honestly, that’s where we are right now. I think until we get to, I’d say a 3.5 times leverage ratio or closer or within earshot, raising the dividend, I’d say at this point in time is not in the – we’re not quite there yet.
And, I think, we do have the repurchase option. We have about $95 million of authorized levels remaining on that program. And, I think, if we see dislocations in the stock, we can be a little bit more flexible with how we allocate the free cash flow after dividends. But, right now, for our 2024 program, we’re going to keep the dividend flat at $3 a share.
Jamie Welch: And I think – Spiro, it’s Jamie. I think a couple of things. One is, we have a pretty healthy dividend, just look at our yield. And I think that shouldn’t be lost on people. I give Trevor and a lot of credit in the context of how we’ve managed the balance sheet. And, I think, if you just do simple arithmetic based on the guidance that we gave you. I think to the midpoint around 3.7 times on the balance sheet. So, I think, if you look at the guidance range, on the low-end, meaning you have the high level of EBITDA, low-end of capital, you have 3.6, you have 3.8 on the sort of low-end of guide on EBITDA and high-end capital. That’s a pretty good place to be, and I give them a lot of credit, because we are really starting to get within, I would say, within earshot of that 3.5 times target.
And to me, it’s not as much the target. To me, it was the default position of putting a marker out there that said, it’s investment-grade, right? Investment-grade is really, to me, the important component for this company as we look at our future and at the potential for us to continue to grow. There is obviously a durational element to capital that comes with investment-grade. You can start to think about much longer maturities. And there’s obviously a just basis point differential in the context, not just of cost to execute, being underwriting fees, but also interest rate. And, I think, the sum total of it says, you run it as investment-grade business, you get a lot more flexibility to do things, and that’s what you want to do. Yeah, we’ve always used the 3.5 times as sort of the de facto default in the context of giving people a numerical target to think about.
Operator: Thank you, Spiro. The next question will go to the line of Tristan Richardson with Scotiabank. Your line is now open.
Tristan Richardson: Hey, good morning, guys. Just a question around G&P growth. Clearly, outgrowing the basin, clearly in 2023, added a lot of new customers that will bring online volume in 2024. But certainly, you did note sort of decelerating, whereas in the growth in the basin overall, does this kind of change your timing in terms of how you think about how your capacity fills over time and maybe the need for additional infrastructure? I think we were all kind of thinking exiting 2024 might have to start thinking about future infrastructure. But has that timing shifted just with the pace of growth you’re seeing?
Jamie Welch: No, Tristan, good morning. I think the short answer is the timing isn’t impacted at all. I think what is unique and different about our system is the breadth of it, as Matt intimated. We, now, with the access into Lea County, we now have access into every pocket. I’m looking at Kris Kindrick. Other than Eddy County right now, we can access gas anywhere in the basin. And that gives us a lot of shots on goal, if you will. Is that probably the right way to say it? And, therefore, I think, yes, we’re seeing a general macro of – we don’t expect the rate of pace of growth for 2024 as we did in 2023. And I don’t think it changes our timing on how we think about the need for a processing plan and making a decision instead of an FID decision sometime in the second half of 2024.
And that, I think, is consistent with what we’ve told you for some time. And, I think, we see some pretty good opportunities still to sell out the balance of our capacity. So that is what the commercial team is working on and, right now, we basically use the full extent and breadth of our system to maximize those opportunities.
Trevor Howard: And the other thing that I’d add to that, Tristan. It’s Trevor. Despite, I just say, decelerating growth, the growth is still pretty healthy. And at the state line and north of the state line, it’s still extremely tight on processing. And, I think, as long as that dynamic stays, we’re going to see opportunities to continue to gain market share in areas of the basin where we don’t have market share, given we do have that open space for processing today.
Tristan Richardson: Helpful. Appreciate it. And then maybe just a quick follow-up as we think about to follow on the last question, the delevering tools available to you. Should we think about the processing volume growth that you’ve talked about in 2024, new customers, the cadence of minimum volume commitments, and then obviously the pipeline logistics assets you brought online? Should we think of EBITDA growth from all of that work as really the primary delevering tool in the toolbox today?
Jamie Welch: Yeah, and I think, look, even capital, yeah, Matt and I, we start to think about of the $125 million to $165 million guide, $145 at the midpoint. There’s still a bunch of we’ll call one-off projects, meaning, we still have $30-some-odd-million being allocated for the Pegasus lateral, the balance of the PB front-end amine treating. We’ve got elevated maintenance CapEx this year. I would say, look, I give Matt a lot of credit. He is managing this to make sure that this year, that this system is running basically top decile. He wants run times at exceptionally high rates. He wants every plant giving recoveries, whether it’s in pure rejection or whether it’s actually in full recovery in the context of obviously thinking about your NGL barrel, and it’s running to peak perfection.
So that’s why in the first quarter, as we pointed out both in our prepared remarks as well as obviously in the press release as well, we mentioned that look we’ve got the mol sieve change outs pretty much across that system. First time it happens for Diamond. I think it’s the first time since in service in 2018-2019, so it’s probably overdue, and we could see that the recoveries weren’t, I would say, at the level that we really, really knew, in fact, that equipment could actually extract. And we’re going to do it across the rest of the system, so PB, East Toyota, the rest of it. So between that and then on the compression side, we’ve got a lot of maintenance CapEx as well related to top ends and major overhauls, because we own a lot of engines.
And just like any turbine, you’ve got to basically, it requires a major overhaul just like a car for service. So if you want to get run times up, particularly given, I think, they pretty much took a beating last summer, don’t you think? Most of our equipment, last summer, everything took a beating. So it was like, look, we’ve got to get this done and we’re doing a lot of this in this first quarter.
Operator: Thank you, Tristan. Our next question comes from the line of Neel Mitra with Bank of America. Your line is now open.
Neel Mitra: Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to focus a little bit on the elevated CO2 levels that played you in the fourth quarter. I was wondering if that was kind of a one-off with the producer maybe looking at spacing tests? Or was it kind of in the normal course of business? And what details you can provide? What benches you’re seeing where the CO2 content is especially high? And then, Jamie, you kind of alluded to this, but the different regions and where this is really a problem across the Delaware?
Jamie Welch: All right. Kris Kindrick and Trevor are the industry experts here sitting in this room as far as talking about the CO2 issues. I think in context, multiple benches done by this particular producers, and there was – it was an, I would say, unexpected result that it was more elevated than they anticipated. I don’t think it wasn’t crazy outside of the ballpark kind of thing, but it was more elevated than they anticipated. Don’t think there was much else to say in the context of – it wasn’t – I don’t know if it was spacing or anything else, honestly, I think it was just doing the multiple benches and the blend of the two was just higher than they anticipated. I’m going to hand it over to Kris and Trevor.
Kris Kindrick: Yeah, Neel, this is Kris. As Jamie said, this producer developed the same bench a few miles over and didn’t see these levels of CO2. So it may be a one-off. We’re able to take the CO2 today. It’s blending into our system and it’s increasing in volume. We are adding additional treating as Jamie alluded to, we’ll have Pecos Bend amine on in April. So just one of the dynamics we’re seeing as these different benches are getting developed Bone Spring and Avalon, we need to prepare for it because that’s what we’re seeing, right, Bone Spring and Avalon? That’s right. And so as these benches get developed as an industry, we need to prepare for that.
Trevor Howard: And then, Neel, the last thing that I add on that, this is a 45-well package coming all online in a matter of months from one receipt point. And so that’s a bit unique relative to how we see volumes come on the system. So we don’t really expect – we expect this to continue to be an issue just basin wide. But with respect to our specific system, it was a little bit unique. And Matt had talked earlier about just our blending capacities and capabilities. But when you have 45 wells coming online from one part of the system, it can be a little bit difficult for both the operator midstream and upstream to handle that elevated level of unexpected CO2.
Neel Mitra: Got it. That’s really helpful. And I know you don’t want to speak on commercially sensitive information, but Jamie and Trevor and Kris, can you maybe just comment on geographically where this is a bigger issue? I think you alluded to it a little bit earlier, but the Avalon and the Bone Spring, but you know specifically is it the New Mexico, Delaware more so than the Southern Delaware and where we can kind of see those different points?
Jamie Welch: Hey, Neel, it’s Jamie. Absolutely. Look, Lea County is a fascinating sort of understanding geology. It is the one area that we actually see that I’m aware of that we actually have specific treating companies like [Pinion and NorthWind] [ph] and others that actually do shallow gas treating. That’s all they do. They take the shallow gas, they clean it and literally redirect it and redeliver it back or whether it’s to the processor or to the customer. So, Lea County, I think, has more challenges from a gas quality and, I think, the further upward you go, the tougher it gets, actually gets, meaning the more impurities there are and the more elevated the levels.
Neel Mitra: Thank you, Neel. Our next question comes from the line of Keith Stanley with Wolfe Research. Your line is now open.
Keith Stanley: Hi, good morning. I wanted to ask on GCX, I know you’re waiting for the expansion decision prior to considering monetizing the asset, but at this point what’s really the strategic rationale in still selling GCX? It seems like you’re getting pretty much to the leverage target by year-end, the DRIP’s done. It’s a quality asset, the expansion would give you a modest sized growth opportunity in the pipeline segment. That might even actually help support ongoing dividend growth a little bit. So just, how are you seeing the pros and cons at this point of selling GCX?
Jamie Welch: Keith, you just did a masterful job of the exact rationalization and discussion that happens internally here. It’s a tough one. If you got a lights out offer at an FID of the expansion and lights out, obviously, is far in excess of your trading multiple and what you thought their value was, then you might consider doing it. If you just went and sold it today and as Trevor would point out regularly, guys, selling this and paying down 6% debt, I’m not sure, is you’re selling something at like a 10 times which is implied of a 10% cash on cash yield and you’re paying down something at 6%. Somebody has to explain to me that that actually makes any numerical sense or any value enhancing sense to any stakeholder of this company, and it’s a very fair point.
And the fact that next week we’ve finished the DRIP, it’s done. If we no longer have to have this discussion, which actually we have much joy around this table and the context of not having to engage in that conversation anymore. So I think, look, to us, it would be that there really would have to be a compelling offer and that there is an alternative use of proceeds that we think provides more value than just paying down at 6% debt.
Keith Stanley: That makes a lot of sense. Second question, I know you’re given the 2024 outlook today, but thinking out a couple of years, how are you thinking about growth for the company beyond 2024? So CapEx is very low, which is allowing you to do a lot of things, but you don’t have a lot of new assets coming on. Do you see growth beyond this year? Is it basically just volume growth on existing acreage? Do you expect more growth from New Mexico? Or what are the opportunities you’re seeing for growth over the next several years?
Jamie Welch: So I think, obviously, the initial growth is to sell out the balance of your open processing space. There will be underlying growth given the expense of the system, and there’ll be literally puts and takes or gives and gets that we get in the context of where we’re seeing those pockets. We put in the prepared remarks, I’m sure you heard it, you listened to it. Apache is now sort of a 2Q 2025 and beyond for turn-in-line. That’s a big change from where we were 12 months ago, which was they moved from year end of last year and they moved it to second half of 2024 in line, I’m looking at Kris with in-service right at Matterhorn. And, obviously, the best laid plans of mice and men, it doesn’t look like that obviously hasn’t come to pass just given where our Waha gas prices are.
So there’s a big growth swing, as you know, given how gassy that particular area is, because it’s just rich gas. Those are, I think, the building blocks in the context of just underlying growth. Looking out, Trevor has said this repeatedly, 2026 becomes a significant adjustment during the course of 2026 and the year-end 2026. On the NGL side with literally a big change as it relates to our existing contracts that we have with Lone Star. And so, they themselves also create great opportunity and, obviously, a fairly attractive margin upside.
Operator: Thank you, Keith. Our next question comes from the line of Jeremy Tonet with JPMorgan. Your line is now open.
Jeremy Tonet: Hi, good morning.
Jamie Welch: Good morning. Tough of the day.
Jeremy Tonet: I just wanted to touch on the EBITDA trajectory into 2024. You gave color on contribution by quarter across the year before and also Alpine High. But just wanted to see, I guess, as we think about 2024 and looking forward, how you see, I guess, this ramp developing over time. Is there more of a back half waiting here, just trying to get a sense for how things are evolving at this point, especially, light of overall basin growth relative to maybe what’s happening in Alpine High?
Trevor Howard: Jeremy, good morning and thank you for the question. As, I think, we’ve said consistently, and you covered so many stocks, it would be an interesting question to ask all the management teams. Our experience, and it may be unique or it may be uniform across the sector is, 2Q, 3Q is literally when everyone gets to work. 1Q, I think, on the back of still not quite the freshness of Winter Storm Uri, but certainly the experience of Winter Storm Uri, we have probably still it’s within recent memory and therefore people are more thinking about obviously the impact of that, because you don’t want to spend a fortune. People spend so much money developing these well pads and these developments and they set it all up.
And then some winter event happens and bad things really go – start. So, I think, our view is 2Q, 3Q, that’s when you see our turn-in-line ramp up. 4Q, I have my own suspicions on 4Q. I kind of consider it to be, it’s where producers obviously have seen our performance. They can potentially obviously decide to throw out back on some turn-in-line and sort of move some stuff around. But I think, look, it’s really 2Q, 3Q, and then obviously into 4Q that you’re going to see the growth for this year.
Jeremy Tonet: Got it. That’s helpful there. Thanks. And then maybe pivoting a little bit, talk of higher CO2 here, and just wondering if you could take that one step further, I guess, in how you see CCS potentially evolving in the Permian and more specific to Kinetik and what role Kinetik might or might not have in CCS going forward.
Jamie Welch: Well, I think, Jeremy, the use of waste CO2, that’s how I’m going to describe it. I’m looking at Matt as we speak, is something that is very, not only near and dear, but front and center for him. And I think, watch this space, I think we’re going to have some – we’ll have some more news to share within the next, I would say, 30 days as it relates to things we’re doing. We definitely – yeah, I don’t think – I’m sorry, Jeremy, I don’t think we’ve got, we’ve sort of quite big enough for CCS, I’m looking at that, and we’ve looked at it, we’ve got, and there’s a slightly different angle that we’re looking at, again, full utilization of waste CO2, which is phenomenal, but a different application, I’m sort of thinking, is the best way to describe it.
Jeremy Tonet: I agree.
Operator: Thank you, Jeremy. Our next question come from the line of Olivia Halferty with Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open.
Olivia Halferty: Hi, good morning, thank you for taking our questions. I wanted to follow-up on your comments regarding open processing capacity. Would you be able to share commentary on how pricing is trending on deals to take capacity on your open processing footprint? And then, more broadly, what other margin changes could we see on your existing footprint?