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Kinder Morgan Earnings: 2023 Forecast Trimmed Due to Lower Oil and Gas Prices

Results solid enough to maintain $17.50 fair value estimate for Kinder Morgan stock.

In this photo illustration a Kinder Morgan logo is seen on a smartphone screen.
Securities In This Article
Kinder Morgan Inc Class P
(KMI)

Kinder Morgan Stock at a Glance

Kinder Morgan Earnings Update

Kinder Morgan’s KMI second-quarter results were solid, in our view. The firm flagged that it may fall slightly short of its 2023 forecast of $7.7 billion (which matches our current forecast) due to lower oil and gas prices. However, we don’t consider the difference material enough to adjust our $17.50 fair value estimate or our narrow moat rating.

The shortfall is likely most pronounced in U.S. gas prices, where Kinder Morgan assumed $5.50 per million cubic feet for 2023, whereas recent prices were around $2.50. Realized natural gas liquid pricing for Kinder is also down 25% year over year.

Despite the price weakness, we think the underlying business is doing well. Natural gas transport volumes were up 5% year over year primarily due to favorable rates on re-contracting the Midcontinent Express, which was helped by demand for liquefied natural gas, or LNG, as well as El Paso natural gas returning a pipeline to service. Natural gas gathering volumes were up 19% over the same time frame, with the Haynesville, Bakken, and Eagle Ford regions leading the way.

Considering a longer-term view, the gas business is growing increasingly valuable as it becomes more challenging to build long-haul interstate capacity. Pipeline utilization, despite adding new capacity of several key pipelines such as the Tennessee Gas Pipeline, has increased to 97% in 2022 from 86% in 2015, while the El Paso Natural Gas Pipeline has increased to 86% from 67% over the same time frame.

Gas storage is benefiting not only from serving LNG demand (which can be variable on a daily or nearly daily basis due to weather, maintenance, or cargo cancellations) but also from serving as the battery backstop for renewables. Storage rates still have room to increase, as they are materially below the cost rates for greenfield capacity. Texas intrastate contracts have increased to nearly six years in length in 2022 from three and a half years in 2015, as buyers want to lock in capacity in a more constrained market.

The author or authors do not own shares in any securities mentioned in this article. Find out about Morningstar’s editorial policies.

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Stephen Ellis

Strategist
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Stephen Ellis is an energy and utilities strategist for Morningstar Research Services LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Morningstar, Inc., covering midstream companies. Ellis is a former member of Morningstar’s China Economic Committee, which provides research on the long-term outlook for the Chinese economy.

Before assuming his current role in 2017, he was director of equity research for financial services and a senior equity analyst. He is also a former editor of the Morningstar Opportunistic Investor newsletter and a former member of the Economic Moat Committee, a group of senior members of the equity research team responsible for reviewing all Economic MoatTM and Moat TrendTM ratings issued by Morningstar.

Prior to joining Morningstar in 2007, he worked as a freelance analyst for The Motley Fool and spent three years working in project and financial analysis for Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI), a supplier of geographic information system software and geodatabase management applications.

He holds a bachelor’s degree in business administration and a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Redlands.

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