Skip to Content

Targa Earnings: Volume Strength Goosed by Recent Deal Activity, Offset by Lower Pricing

""
Securities In This Article
Targa Resources Corp
(TRGP)

Targa Resources’ TRGP second-quarter results were solid, in our view. The firm reaffirmed 2023 EBITDA guidance at the midpoint of $3.6 billion; this is slightly below our estimate of $3.7 billion, as we think volumes are tracking to better results. We continue to expect near-term volume strength across Targa’s portfolio to offset pricing and marketing weakness in the short run. 2023 growth capital spending guidance also is unchanged at a midpoint of $2.1 billion. After updating our model, we maintain our $72 fair value estimate and no-moat rating.

Targa’s second-quarter EBITDA was $789 million compared with $666 million last year. The improvement is mainly attributable to higher gathering and processing volumes driven by deal activity in 2022, as well as higher natural gas liquids volumes on the logistics side. Still, EBITDA declined 16% sequentially, as the 54% year-over-year drop in realized natural gas liquids pricing is having an impact. Pricing is now below Targa’s assumptions underlying 2023 guidance. Despite the near-term weakness in pricing, Targa announced two new gathering and processing plants in the Permian due online in late 2024 and mid-2025 to meet demand from Permian gas producers.

From a capital allocation standpoint, Targa bought back $149 million in shares in the quarter, taking its total for 2023 so far to $201 million. As the average price was about $71.49 compared with our $72 fair value estimate, we see the repurchases as value-neutral.

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

More in Stocks

About the Author

Stephen Ellis

Strategist
More from Author

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.

Sponsor Center