DT Midstream, Inc. (DTM) on Q2 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Welcome to the DT Midstream Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I will now turn it over to our speaker today, Todd Lohrmann, Director of Investor Relations. Thank you. Please go ahead. Todd Lohrmann: Good morning, and welcome, everyone. Before we get started, I would like to remind you to read the safe harbor statement on Page 2 of the presentation, including the reference to forward-looking statements. Our presentation also includes references to non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to the reconciliations to GAAP contained in the appendix. Joining me this morning are David Slater, President and CEO; and Jeff Jewell, Executive Vice President and CFO. I'll now turn it over to David to start the call. David Slater: Thanks, Todd. Good morning, and thanks, everyone, for joining us today. I'm very excited to be hosting our inaugural quarterly earnings call after a successful spin-off from DTE. We have been operating as a stand-alone company for just over a month now, and I am pleased to see our business continue its strong performance. I could not be happier with the job the team has done, getting us to this point today. I'd like to personally thank the many people involved in our successful spin, including the employees of both DTM and DTE, the Boards of both companies, and research analysts along with debt and equity investors. Because of your contributions, we are well positioned for continued success. Let's start on Slide 3. For the first half of the year, we delivered strong growth across both business segments and are on track to achieve our 2021 adjusted EBITDA and operating earnings guidance with a bias to the upper end of both ranges. Our Board of Directors is officially in place and yesterday approved our first quarterly dividend of $0.60 per share, which will be paid in the fourth quarter of this year. DTM announced dividend, when combined with that of DTE Energy, is delivering the higher combined dividend that we described pre-spin. We are also highly confident in our growth trajectory beyond 2021. We are affirming our '22 early outlook for adjusted EBITDA and increasing our 2022 early outlook for operating -- earnings. Let's turn to Slide 4. As stand-alone C-corp, DTM offers a unique opportunity for investors. Our asset platforms are well positioned to serve key markets from the 2 premier dry gas basins in the country, providing wellhead-to-market services. We have a clean balance sheet with low leverage and no significant maturities for 7 years, supporting our self-funded growth agenda. Our strong cash flow generation is underpinned by long-term take-or-pay contracts. And we are committed to a best-in-class ESG program with leading C-corp governance and net zero carbon emissions by 2050. I'll now pass it over to Jeff, who will cover our financial results. Jeff Jewell: Thanks, David, and good morning, everyone. I'll start on Slide 5. We continue to deliver strong results from both business segments, our first half 2021 adjusted EBITDA of $384 million, which was $43 million higher year-over-year and was split roughly 50-50 between pipeline and gathering. Pipeline adjusted EBITDA was $199 million, and gathering adjusted EBITDA was $185 million. Our first half 2021 operating earnings were $174 million, which was $32 million higher year-over-year. The year-over-year increases in adjusted EBITDA and operating earnings were driven by the in-service of LEAP Gathering Lateral Pipeline and higher gathering volumes. Now let's turn to Slide 6 and discuss the full year 2021. Based on our strong year-to-date performance, we are reaffirming both our 2021 adjusted EBITDA and operating earnings guidance with the potential to be at the higher end of both guidance ranges. This year-over-year growth is driven by strong operational performance across our portfolio and include offsetting a half year of new public company expenses. Moving to Slide 7. Year-to-date, distributable cash flow is driven by strong performance across both segments. We are revising our 2021 capital guidance range to be $205 million to $230 million due to cost efficiency and a small amount of project timing. Our 5-year growth agenda of $1.2 billion to $1.7 billion remains unchanged. We have significant financial flexibility with our cash flows, and we will allocate to maximize value for our shareholders. Moving on to the next slide to talk about 2022. Looking ahead to 2022, we are highly confident in achieving our growth targets. We expect 2022 adjusted EBITDA to be between $755 million and $795 million, representing 5% to 7% growth from 2021 guidance, which includes offsetting a full year of public company cost. We now expect 2022 operating earnings to grow in line with adjusted EBITDA, driven by interest expense favorability. Therefore, we are raising our outlook for 2022 operating earnings to $314 million to $330 million. I'll now turn it back over to David. David Slater: Thanks, Jeff. Moving on to Slide 9. In the second quarter of 2021, we gathered over 2.5 Bcf a day of production volumes, representing 3% overall growth from the prior quarter. Growth in the Haynesville was driven by higher production volumes on Blue Union, and the system recently hit a record high for volumes during the month of July. In the Northeast, we saw strong volume growth on the Appalachia Gathering System, which offset declines in other gathering areas. As you know, our portfolio has high contributions from contracted take-or-pay agreements, which minimized the impact of volumes on results. Let's turn to Slide 10, and I'll discuss why we are so confident in our 2022 growth. We continue to see strong organic growth into 2022. And the number of assets are delivering highly accretive growth, including contracted growth on LEAP and higher rates and longer contract terms on NEXUS. Also, we continue to support growing production from our producer base, with contract expansions on Appalachia Gathering, contractor treating and gathering expansions on Blue Union, and new third-party expansions. In summary, we are highly confident in our '22 growth. Moving to Slide 11. Looking beyond 2022, our commercial team has been busy developing and executing multiple transactions to solidify accretive growth. We have made significant progress in achieving our strategic priorities, which includes adding new counterparties to enhance portfolio diversification, extending the portfolio of contract tenor across both segments and increasing contract rates. At Blue Union, we have executed agreements with 4 new counterparties as strong supply and demand fundamentals in the Haynesville and Gulf Coast improve the value of our assets. We continue to extend contract tenors across the portfolio. At our Appalachia Gathering System, we extended about 1/3 of the capacity for 5 years with 2 shippers. Emerging constraints in Appalachia have led to improved NEXUS rates and contract tenors, and Millennium has also benefited with contract renewals. NEXUS has also completed 2 new market lateral connections. In Michigan, we received a positive regulatory ruling to convert and expand a portion of our gathering assets to serve DT gas. Now let's turn to Slide 12, and I'll wrap up the call. In summary, we are on track for a strong 2021. We delivered great first half results and expect to be at the upper end of our adjusted EBITDA and operating earnings guidance ranges. We are also well positioned for continued distinctive growth into 2022. And with that, we can now open up the line for questions. Operator: And your first question comes from the line of Jeremy Tonet of JPMorgan. Jeremy Tonet: I just wanted to start off kind of -- given the recent move up in gas prices, I'm wondering if you could provide a bit more detail on your producer customer conversations in what reactions you might see, maybe not this year but in -- going into 2022, response to these kind of higher prices if producers are looking to drill a bit more on your footprint or what you're hearing. David Slater: Sure, Jeremy. Let me provide some color around that. So I'll start off at the highest level. This higher price environment is supportive to all of our producer customers. And it's going to increase their cash flow and improve their balance sheets. We've been watching the Q2 announcements probably just like your team has been. And we're definitely seeing for the public's discontinued disciplined approach to them deploying capital, ensuring that they have positive free cash flow and a continued trend to improve their balance sheets. We think that's very favorable for the sector that provides a stronger foundation in the sector. It certainly improves our customers' financial position and financial rating over time. So we view that as very positive. We continue to see growth in our portfolio in the public sector. And that's what I'll call a disciplined growth, Jeremy. The private side of our business is a little different. I think we see more activity happening inside our portfolio on the private side. And some of that, we've talked about here on the call already in terms of some of the new contracting that we've done. But there seems to be a little bit of a different behavioral response on the private side. They seem to be more inclined to accelerate activity into this stronger price deck. But we view this very favorably and believe this will be very supportive for our business longer term. Jeremy Tonet: Got it. That's very helpful there. And then I just wanted to kind of pivot towards capital allocation policy. And this being kind of the first call, I just want to have you guys walk us through how you think about CapEx versus return to shareholders versus deleveraging. How do you see these different competing paths on capital? David Slater: Yes. Great question, Jeremy. We have a really robust growth agenda in front of us right now, and it's coming primarily from organic opportunities on and around our existing footprint. We're in a really good spot in terms of having a clean balance sheet and have a clear line of sight around growth that will be self-funded with our cash flow, which naturally will delever us over time. So we feel really positive right now about deploying capital to growth projects that meet that very disciplined investment criteria that we've talked to you about in the past. To the extent that projects don't meet that criteria, we will look at deploying that capital in other ways to maximize shareholder value. And those options are either through an accelerated delevering or through a mechanism to return more cash to the shareholders. So again, we're always going to look at this to maximize shareholder value in the long term. And we feel very blessed and fortunate that we have a really robust portfolio of opportunities in front of us that we believe will deliver returns that will be very favorable for the shareholders. Jeremy Tonet: Got it. That's helpful. It seems like that lends itself to continue deleveraging as well given the retained cash flow. So helpful there. And just wanted to see, I guess, the last one real quick. The amine treaters that you guys have in the Haynesville, it seems like that might lend itself towards some CCS opportunities there. I'm wondering if you might be able to talk about that a bit. David Slater: Yes. I sure can, Jeremy. I think as we said previously, we are very actively pursuing investment opportunities in what I'll call a lower carbon future. And yes, our situation in the Haynesville with the amine treaters, I think, puts us in a very good position to develop a CCS project down in the Haynesville. We're actively working on that. It's probably too early to get into the specifics, but we view that as an area of focus here over the next 6 to 12 months to get a project like that off the ground. We are also looking at projects up in Michigan, sort of a similar structured project around CCS. So that is an area that is getting a lot of attention inside our organization right now. And I feel that it aligns a lot of our natural assets and competencies. It's great in our geographic footprint, and it's great inside our competencies in terms of being able to capture CO2, pipe it and store it. So more to come on that, Jeremy, as the project advances but definitely an area of focus for us. Operator: And your next question comes from the line of Spiro Dounis of Credit Suisse. Spiro Dounis: Congrats on the spinout. David or Jeff, maybe I just want to start with the growth CapEx. It took a pretty meaningful reduction in the first quarter out and yet you're still able to maintain that 2022 EBITDA growth target. So just curious -- I know you mentioned optimization and some timing there. But maybe a little more color on the exact nature of that reduction and how you're able to still maintain the growth outlook. David Slater: Yes. I sure can. It was a very modest reduction. I think we pulled it back around $40 million or so. And it's really simple. It's just some timing. And some of the projects are coming in under budget right now and still delivering the EBITDA. So I think the way I look at it is we're delivering really strong EBITDA growth next year with a very accretive deployment of capital to generate that. Spiro Dounis: Perfect. Second one, sticking with the CapEx theme, looking out the sort of 5-year range of $1.2 billion to $1.7 billion, a 2-part question here. So first, what's going to determine the high or low end of that range? And then second, when you think about what that range represents, are these projects that are in sort of various stages of development that are very visible to you? Or are these more aspirational in nature? Is this a target you think you need to hit to develop and grow at a certain rate? David Slater: Yes. I'd say the projects that are very visible to us right now, which probably played out over the first 3 or 4 years of that 5-year plan would be a LEAP expansion, which we're in very active conversations around the LEAP expansion. We continue to see expansions in a number of our gathering platforms both in the Haynesville and in Appalachia. And we continue to see really robust inbound inquiries on lateral expansions across our pipeline network, particularly up in the north. And I think we referenced a few in the deck where NEXUS is bringing and building 2 more connections, 2 market connections. But we continue to see a really strong lateral business developing around our asset footprint in the north, much like the Birdsboro project that's currently in the portfolio. And so those -- I'd say those are the 3 areas that are very visible to us and very -- we're very active in the development cycle that will absorb large portions of that capital agenda. And yes, I'm just trying to give you a little color here to directly answer your question, but those are the areas that we will deploy capital around. Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Robert Mosca of Mizuho. Robert Mosca: Just on those newly executed Blue Union agreements, were any of those signed in 2Q? And is there anything you'd provide in the way of volume expectations, perhaps the potential to wrap those volumes onto LEAP eventually? David Slater: Yes, Rob. Great question. Yes, those agreements are very hot off the press. In aggregate, there's 150 million a day of commitments amongst those counterparties. The diversified piece is just allocation of capacity from Indigo to diversified. So the 3 others that are, what I'll call, truly incremental represent about 150 million a day of capacity. And yes, we expect, at least in the near term, much of those volumes, if not all of those volumes, to flow on LEAP. Robert Mosca: Got it. Okay. That's helpful. And then on the -- with respect to the shift that you're seeing in some of the Northeast gathering volumes, just curious to hear what's driving the growth in Appalachia and presumably decline on Susquehanna. Is that just producers electing to shift production to more NGL-rich areas? Anything you provide would be helpful. David Slater: Yes. I think it's more just timing, timing of how people's drill plans have played out over the year. So we're definitely seeing growth on AGS, and AGS is a dry system. So it's dry Appalachia production. Susquehanna is probably going to be flat. I'm going to say flat this year as to when we'll be holding production there. And then in the other gathering assets in the north, so the Michigan assets, Tioga, we did see some declines there. And that's sort of why Appalachia in aggregate was relatively flat when you kind of put all those numbers together. And then we're seeing really encouraging growth in the Haynesville. The Haynesville system, we hit a high this month on Haynesville, the Blue Union system, which is very encouraging. And we're very happy with the gathering results we're seeing. We're running ahead of plan in both segments, both the pipeline segment and the gathering segment. Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Jean Ann Salisbury of Bernstein. Jean Ann Salisbury: Just a couple about your assets. So I appreciate the Haynesville kind of 1.23 Bcf/d gathering volume that you disclosed. I think that you've said that the capacity of that gathering system is 2 Bcf/d. So I guess my question is, should -- is the way to think about it that you can basically grow another 0.8 Bcf/d with very little CapEx, maybe some well connect CapEx? But other than that, the backbone is already there. David Slater: Yes, Jean. The Blue Union system is a complex gathering system. So I wouldn't simplify it the way you described it. But what I will say is that we're always looking to make sure that we optimize all of our systems such that they're creating the maximum accretion possible to the company. As that system gets built out, there certainly is open runway in pockets and areas in that system that we expect Indigo or SWN to be utilizing as they continue to drill the acreage. But I do expect we will continue to see expansions in Blue Union, especially in some of the areas, the most economic resource areas where if you rationally are deploying capital, you would tend to deploy it first, the very best rock. And those areas of the system will attract a lot of drilling attention and, as such, may require expansions over time. Jean Ann Salisbury: Okay. That makes sense. And then I just wanted to ask about the new contracts for the 165 on NEXUS. My understanding on NEXUS was that it was originally built to be 1.5 Bcf/d, but then you could only flow 1.2 Bcf/d because you didn't have enough market demand. Is this 165 kind of incremental to that 1.2? So you -- because of the market connections that you discussed, so it would sort of be flowing like over 1.3 -- between 1.3, 1.4. Is that the right way to think about it? Or is it like some of the 1 point figure that 165. David Slater: Yes. Let me help with that. First off, just -- let's just level set what the capacity is on NEXUS. So the 1.5 that you are referencing was the original capacity design early in the project life cycle. We elected not to construct one of the compressor stations. So the actual nameplate capacity on NEXUS is 1.3 and change. So that's just kind of point number one. I'd say point number two, on the incremental 165. So we're really encouraged by that contracting activity that's occurred over the last couple of months. It's a strong -- we're seeing strong price signals coming out of the Appalachia. We're seeing rate expansions on all those longer-term contracts. And there's a nice suite of customers that are primarily investment-grade customers that stepped into that capacity. So the way to think about it is that portion of the capacity that we didn't sell long term with anchor agreements that we have been selling seasonally and annually, we're simply taking those agreements and extending those out long term and reducing the amount of capacity that we've been managing in the annual market. And the fundamentals that are playing out will -- I expect the team will continue to contract and extend a contract term at favorable rates just given the dynamics of the market right now. We're seeing tremendous inbound interest on that NEXUS capacity. I'd say we are probably the only exit pipe in Appalachia that has material capacity to offer the market right now. Jean Ann Salisbury: Okay. So on this 165, that's not really incremental like flows that's just replacing seasonal with contracted, which I agree is very good, but there's still more that you could add if there was a market for it by adding a compressor station in the future? Is that the right way to think about it? David Slater: Yes. That's exactly how to think about it. So that station that we chose not to build, we could certainly build it and create incremental capacity out of the basin. And that certainly is something that the team is looking at and evaluating continuously. Operator: And your next question comes from the line of Sunil Sibal of Seaport Global. Sunil Sibal: So I just had a couple of follow-ups from previous questions. So first, on the recent contracts that you signed in Haynesville, could you give us a sense of what kind of rates you're seeing on these new contracts versus what you had previously? David Slater: Yes. So maybe I'll just keep it at a high level. So number one, we're really encouraged by bringing those new third parties onto the system. That was one of our strategic priorities and opportunities that we saw when we did the acquisition over 2 years ago. With the activity that's in the Haynesville right now -- there are 55 rigs running in the Haynesville. We're seeing a lot of robust activity. So at this time, we will not be providing more public information on the details around those contracts just given the nature of the competitive environment in Haynesville. But as I said earlier, the contract MDQs in aggregate are 150 million a day, and those 3 incremental parties, Rockcliff, Comstock and Tellurian are all actively growing and I think have been public about their growth aspirations. So we're very happy to have them as customers and certainly want to work closely with them as their plans solidify and grow over time. Sunil Sibal: Understood. Then just pivoting to their ESG goals, I realize that you've got some existing assets which -- that fit well with the CCS technology. I was just kind of curious if you had looked at some other alternative kind of technologies in addition to amine treating in terms of taking out CO2 from the gas stream and if you have any thoughts there. David Slater: As we think about -- I guess I'm going to just back up 1 second here. When we think about our aspirations to be net zero by 2050 and look across our footprint, where our emissions are, certainly the emissions in the Haynesville are -- is an area of focus and, thus, why there's great -- there's a great opportunity there for CCS for us, and that's going to be our primary area of focus. But there's lots of other opportunities across our portfolio to reduce our footprint both -- when we look at pipeline expansions using electric compression and making sure we have a clean source of electricity to power that electric compression. That's certainly something that we're evaluating very closely across our footprint. We're also having lots of conversations with different parties related to hydrogen and how hydrogen can be used inside the current footprint as well as with some of our large industrial customers, their desire to explore a hydrogen blend for their feedstock. So we've got a lot of different areas that we're exploring right now. It's early days, but it's a very exciting development. We want to be part of that in North America, and we -- I really want DTM to establish a position in what I'll call utilizing our assets around a lower carbon footprint in the future, so a very exciting, developing area. There's going to be lots of new technologies, I think, that come around. My perspective on this, from a strategic perspective, is we want to use proven technology that exists today so we don't carry large amounts of technological risk as we deploy capital. And again, that's why some of our priorities are really around what I'll call proven technology, and CCS is one of those areas. Sunil Sibal: Understood. One kind of follow-up on that. So the capital outlay, that $1.2 billion to $1.7 billion that they have laid out, could you give us a sense of how much of these ESG evaluations that you're doing are a component of that? Or is there potential or meaningful upside on that capital spend if some of these things that you're evaluating would get to FID? David Slater: Yes. The way I would think about it in terms of that capital agenda, I would think about it that some of that capital agenda will get deployed into these new emerging areas. And it's -- at this point, I wouldn't describe it as incremental per se. I think as we get a little further along and start to move these projects forward and firm them up, we will certainly be updating you on our thinking around that. But yes, that's a great question, how much of that will go towards what I'll call this new platform. And it's just a little early to really provide detailed guidance on that. But as we mature, we will definitely be providing that to the investors. Operator: And there are no further questions at this time. David Slater: Well, thank you. And I just want to thank everybody for joining us today. And please stay safe and have a great weekend. Operator: And this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.
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