Pipe Dreams

Pipe Dreams

A four-factor framework for energy infrastructure

There is a useful exercise that anyone who covers the energy infrastructure sector should perform from time to time. Take a list of the largest American midstream master limited partnerships — Enterprise Products Partners, Energy Transfer, MPLX, Western Midstream, Plains All American — and ask a roomful of generalist equity investors how they would go about valuing them. The answers will fall into two camps. The first will quote yield. The second, marginally more sophisticated, will quote EV/EBITDA. Both camps will, almost without exception, miss what these businesses actually are.

The problem is partly structural. Midstream MLPs sit at an awkward intersection of asset classes. They look like utilities, but their cash flows are not regulated in the way most utility revenue is. They look like REITs, but they own pipelines rather than buildings, and they are exposed — at the margin — to commodity prices in a way that no apartment block ever is. They look like energy stocks, but the bulk of their EBITDA comes from contracts whose pricing has nothing to do with WTI or Henry Hub. They are, in short, hybrid creatures, and the standard valuation metrics treat them as one or another of their constituent species rather than as the chimeras they actually are.

The result is a sector that has, on a multi-decade view, generated equity-like returns with bond-like volatility — the Alerian MLP Index has compounded at double-digit annualised rates over five and ten-year horizons, with a current yield of approximately 7.5% — and yet trades persistently at multiples that imply something else entirely. The discount has narrowed since the lows of 2020. It has not closed. We think we know why.

In what follows, we set out the inadequacies of the standard valuation toolkit and propose a four-factor proprietary framework that, in our view, captures what midstream MLPs actually are: hybrid income vehicles whose value derives less from their distributions than from the strategic, contractual and structural characteristics of the assets that produce them.

Why the standard metrics fail.

Begin with yield. For most of the period from 2010 to 2014, when the sector was in growth mode and capital markets were open, yield was a reasonable proxy for value. Four conditions held: distributions were paid out of organic cash flow; cash flows were predictable; growth capex could be funded externally; and unit prices reflected distribution expectations. By the time of the 2015–18 commodity rout, none of those conditions held reliably. Today, with the sector in a free-cash-flow inflection and a different ownership base, yield without context is a coin toss. Energy Transfer and Plains All American both yield over 8%. One has investment-grade credit and the bulk of its EBITDA fee-based; the other does not, quite. The yield does not tell you which is which.

Price-to-earnings ratios are worse than meaningless. They are actively misleading. Pipelines, when properly maintained, do not depreciate. They appreciate. The book depreciation that flows through GAAP earnings is an accounting fiction — a reflection of tax rules and historical cost accounting, not of any economic reality. Enterprise Products Partners’ Mont Belvieu salt caverns do not become less valuable as they age; they become more valuable, as fractionation capacity in the area becomes more constrained. Yet the partnership’s GAAP earnings are heavily depressed by depreciation expense, and its P/E multiple is therefore a function of accounting policy rather than business performance. Generalist investors who quote midstream P/E ratios are, almost without realising it, making category errors.

EV/EBITDA does better. It strips out depreciation, recognises that capital structure matters, and allows reasonable comparison across operators. But it is blind to the most important variable in midstream: contract quality. A dollar of EBITDA from a twenty-year take-or-pay LNG offtake contract with an investment-grade counterparty is not the same dollar of EBITDA as one earned from a percent-of-proceeds gathering contract with a small-cap Permian operator. The market knows this. EV/EBITDA does not capture it.

The MLP-native metric is P/DCF, or its inverse, distribution coverage — distributable cash flow divided by distributions paid. DCF, defined as EBITDA minus interest, minus maintenance capital expenditure, minus cash taxes, is genuinely informative. It captures the cash that can either be paid out to unitholders or reinvested without raising new capital. The leading midstream operators currently report distribution coverage of 1.5x to 2.0x; a decade ago, the same names were running at 1.0x to 1.2x. That is one of the most important under-appreciated facts about the sector.

P/DCF is the right starting point. It is not, however, sufficient. It tells you nothing about the durability of the cash flows it describes, the strategic value of the assets that generate them, the exposure of the operator to structural demand growth, or the duration mismatch between long-life assets and shorter-tenor debt. To capture those, we need a proprietary framework. We propose four metrics, each of which addresses a distinct question that the standard toolkit cannot answer.

Factor 1 — Quality of Income Score (QIS).

The first question an investor in any income-producing asset should ask is: how durable is the income? In real estate, this is captured (imperfectly) by tenant credit quality and lease structure. In midstream, it requires four sub-components.

The Quality of Income Score combines, on a 0-to-1 scale: first, the percentage of EBITDA from fee-based contracts (i.e., not exposed to commodity prices); second, the percentage of fee-based EBITDA from take-or-pay or minimum-volume-commitment contracts (i.e., not exposed to throughput volumes); third, the percentage of those contracted revenues explicitly indexed to inflation, whether through the FERC Oil Pipeline Index, regulatory rate-base adjustments or contractual PPI escalators; and fourth, the weighted-average credit quality of the counterparties. The score is a composite — equally weighted for the lay reader, more sophisticatedly weighted in our internal models — and represents, in essence, the share of cash flow that is simultaneously commodity-insensitive, volume-insensitive, inflation-protected and credit-secure.

In practice, the leading large-cap midstream operators score in a band that has been migrating steadily upwards since 2018, as operators have systematically renegotiated contracts toward fee-based and take-or-pay structures. The sector mean has roughly doubled over the period. Hess Midstream, with over 90% MVC-backed revenue from a single high-quality counterparty, scores at the top of the range. Smaller gathering-and-processing names with significant percent-of-proceeds exposure score considerably lower.

The QIS matters because it is the variable that ultimately determines whether the cash flows that fund distributions are bond-like or equity-like. A 7% yield from an asset with a high QIS is a different security from a 7% yield with a low QIS. The market does not currently price this distinction efficiently. We think it eventually will.

Factor 2 — Strategic Asset Value (SAV).

Pipelines, LNG terminals, gas storage and gathering systems share a property that is rare in modern equity markets: they cannot easily be replaced. The Mountain Valley Pipeline, a 303-mile gas line connecting West Virginia to Virginia, took thirteen years to build and ultimately required an act of Congress to complete. The Trans-Alaska Pipeline could not be built today on any reasonable timeline. New interstate pipelines in the American Northeast face a permitting environment that varies between hostile and impossible. Greenfield LNG export facilities in the United States now require five-to-seven years from FID to first cargo, with capital costs that have risen approximately 40% since 2020. In Europe, the comparable timelines are longer still.

This means the listed midstream sector enjoys a form of barrier-to-entry that is increasingly rare in public equity markets — and largely absent from the valuation models used to price it. The Strategic Asset Value ratio captures it as enterprise value divided by an estimated replacement cost, with the replacement cost adjusted upward for what we call the “permitting impossibility premium” — the implied uplift required to reflect the fact that some of these assets simply could not be rebuilt under current regulatory conditions. We estimate the impossibility premium at between 1.3x and 2.5x, depending on jurisdiction and asset type. It is highest for new interstate pipelines in the American Northeast, lowest for greenfield gathering systems in the Permian Basin.

On this measure, the major US midstream operators are currently trading at SAV ratios meaningfully below 1.0 — meaning the market values them at less than the honest cost of recreating their asset bases. Comparable infrastructure in private hands has, in recent transactions, changed hands at SAV ratios closer to or above 1.0. The gap is the visible portion of the discount we mentioned at the beginning.

Factor 3 — Asset–Liability Duration Index (ALDI).

A typical interstate gas pipeline has a useful economic life of fifty to seventy years. A typical LNG export facility, properly maintained, has forty to fifty years. Underground gas storage assets — the salt caverns at Mont Belvieu, the depleted reservoirs at Aliso Canyon, the bedded salt at Bay Gas — can operate, with periodic recompletion, for over a century. The weighted average remaining useful life of the major US midstream operators’ asset bases is, by our estimate, between thirty-five and fifty years.

The weighted average duration of those operators’ debt is, by contrast, nine to twelve years.

This duration mismatch is a feature, not a bug. It means that an operator who finances 50-year assets with 10-year debt enjoys a structural rolling option to refinance at lower nominal rates as the asset base ages, even as the cash flows from those assets are escalating with inflation. The Asset–Liability Duration Index — weighted average remaining asset life divided by weighted average debt duration — therefore captures the “free option” embedded in long-life infrastructure financed at intermediate-tenor rates. The leading operators score in a band of three-to-five times. This is, in our view, the single most under-appreciated source of structural alpha in the sector. A high ALDI, in a world of accelerating inflation, generates a compounding tailwind that no GAAP financial statement directly displays.

Factor 4 — Demand-Indexed Income Score (DIIS).

The fourth factor addresses the question that yield-chasers tend to forget: where is the cash flow going to come from in fifteen years’ time? The Demand-Indexed Income Score is the percentage of an operator’s EBITDA tied to structural-growth themes — LNG export, gas-fired power generation, data-centre offtake, gas-to-chemicals — versus legacy or declining themes (mature-basin crude oil gathering, refined products distribution to declining demand centres).

The DIIS is forward-looking, necessarily an estimate, and the single factor most likely to drive multiple expansion over the next five years. A midstream operator with the majority of forward EBITDA tied to growth platforms should, in our view, trade at a meaningful premium to one whose EBITDA is anchored in structurally declining markets. The market is beginning to price this distinction. It has not yet priced it fully.

Putting it together.

A composite framework that combines QIS, SAV, ALDI and DIIS yields a four-dimensional profile of any given midstream operator. The sector’s standard valuation toolkit collapses these dimensions into a single yield or multiple. We think the dimensions deserve to be looked at separately.

The implications for portfolio construction are significant. Two operators trading at the same yield, with identical EV/EBITDA multiples, can have radically different four-factor profiles. One may have superior cash-flow durability, embedded scarcity value, structural inflation tailwind and forward growth optionality. The other may have none of those things. The market, currently, prices them similarly. We do not.

There is a temptation, when looking at a list of seven-percent-yielding pipeline partnerships in 2026, to conclude that one is being paid generously to own boring assets. The truth is the opposite. One is being paid generously to own assets that, viewed correctly, are anything but boring. They are, in fact, the most strategically valuable, most contractually secure, longest-duration, most inflation-protected, most demand-advantaged assets available in the public equity market — and they trade at a discount to comparable private market transactions of thirty to forty per cent.

The right question is not “what yield does it pay?” The right question is “what would it cost to rebuild?” The answer, in many cases, is: more than the market thinks.

EDITORIAL NOTE

These three essays form part of a series on the structural case for natural gas as an asset class. They are intended to underpin the investment thesis behind the Navigate Global Energy High Income Fund, a sub-fund of Navigate Funds SICAV plc (subject to final MFSA approval). The Quality of Income Score, Strategic Asset Value, Asset–Liability Duration Index and Demand-Indexed Income Score are proprietary analytical constructs developed by Navigate’s investment team and form part of the Fund’s QuadLogic-overlaid security selection process. The framework is illustrative; numerical estimates are directional and based on Navigate’s internal modelling unless otherwise stated.

Marketing communication. For professional and institutional investors only. Not a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Capital at risk.

READ MORE

Related Content

Ready To Work With Us?

Partner with a team that sees beyond the market noise.

This website is not suitable for individual (retail) investors. If you are a retail investor, please contact your financial adviser.

You are about to enter a website for professional investors and financial advisers and/or intermediaries and the information contained herein is not suitable for retail investors. Any person unable to accept these terms and conditions should not proceed any further. Before making any investment decision, you shall read carefully the offering documents of each Fund. The use of www.navigate-pa.com (this “Website”) is subject to the following terms and conditions (the “Terms”).

After you have read and understood these Terms, you may click “Accept” to confirm that you agree to the Terms. By clicking “Accept” you (i) expressly acknowledge that you have read and understood the Terms and agree to abide by them; (ii) represent and warrant that the jurisdiction you have selected is the applicable jurisdiction for the intended investment activities, and that you are not resident in the United States of America and are not a U.S. Person; (iii) confirm that you are accessing this Website in compliance with the laws and regulations of the jurisdiction you have selected, and all other applicable laws, rules and regulations; (iv) represent and warrant, if applicable, that you are authorised to accept these Terms and use or access (or attempt to use or access) this Website on behalf of your employer, your client, or both, and that in doing so you are acting within the scope of your duties and, at all times, on behalf of your employer, your client or both; and v) hereby represent and warrant that you are not a private investor or retail client (as defined in the Markets and Financial Instruments Directive 2014/65/EU as amended or updated (“MiFID”)) and that you shall not in any circumstances use or rely on any information displayed on this Website for your own personal investment use. If you do not agree with these Terms you must refrain from using this Website.

In these Terms, references to “you” and “your” are references to any person using or accessing (or attempting to use or access) this Website or, as the context requires, the legal entity on whose behalf a user uses or accesses (or attempts to use or access) this Website.

References to “ACM” “we” and “us” are references to ACM Europe Limited. References to “group” are references to other companies and affiliates with the same beneficial owner as ACM. By entering this Website, you acknowledge and agree to be bound by each of the Terms, together with any additional terms and conditions that apply to individual webpages, documents or other attachments contained within this Website (together, the "Conditions of Use"). If there are any Conditions of Use that you do not understand or agree with, you must leave this Website or the webpage in question (as applicable) immediately and delete immediately from the memory of your computer all documents from this Website.

  1. About this Website The information on this Website is issued and communicated by ACM Europe Limited (“ACM,” “we” and “us”), which is authorised and regulated by the Maltese Financial Services Authority (“MFSA”).
  2. This Website contains information about various Sub Fund of the Navigate Funds SICAV Plc (the “Funds”). The Funds have been registered in Malta, Ireland, Singapore, Spain and the UK. Please note that the fact of such registration or notification does not mean that any regulator including the Maltese Financial Services Authority, or any national regulator of your jurisdiction has determined that the Funds are suitable for all or any investors. The Funds referred to on this Website may not be suitable investments for you and you should therefore seek professional investment advice before making a decision to invest in any of the Funds.
  3. When using this Website you must comply with all applicable local, national and international laws and regulations including those related to data privacy, international communications and exportation of technical or personal data. It may be unlawful to access or download the information contained on this Website in certain countries and the Funds, ACM and its affiliates disclaim all responsibility if you access or download any information from this Website in breach of any law or regulation of the jurisdiction in which you are residing or domiciled or the jurisdiction from which you access the Website.
  4. If you are acting as a financial adviser or intermediary, you agree to access this Website only for the purposes for which you are permitted to do so under applicable law. If you are acting as a financial adviser or intermediary and provide services to clients categorised as retail clients under MiFID, you agree that you will not share with or provide to your retail clients any information available on this Website that has not been approved for retail use and is not otherwise suitable for your retail clients.
  5. ACM reserves the right to suspend or withdraw access to any page(s) included on this Website without notice at any time and accepts no liability if, for any reason, these pages are unavailable at any time or for any period.
  6. U.S. Persons interests in the Funds of services of ACM are not being offered, and will not be sold, within the United States or to, or for the account or benefit of, any U.S. Person. The term U.S. Person shall have the meaning given to it in Regulations under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and includes, among other things, U.S. residents and U.S. corporations and partnerships.
  7. The Funds are not available, and offering materials relating to them will not be distributed, to any person resident in any jurisdiction where such distribution would be contrary to local law or regulation.
  8. No Investment Advice. The information on this Website is provided for information only and on the basis that you will make your own investment decisions. Nothing contained on this Website constitutes, and nothing on this Website should be construed as, investment advice or a recommendation to buy, sell, hold or otherwise transact in any investment including interests in the Funds. It is strongly recommended that you seek professional investment advice before making any investment decision.
  9. The information on this Website does not take account of any investor's investment objectives, particular needs or financial situation. Investment in the Funds may not be suitable for you. In addition, nothing on this Website shall, or is intended to, constitute financial, legal, accounting or tax advice. Unless agreed separately in writing with a client, ACM and its affiliates neither provide investment advice to nor receive and transmit orders from investors in the Funds nor do they carry on any other activities with or for such investors that constitute “investment services” or “ancillary services” for the purposes of MiFID. You should consider whether an investment fits your investment objectives, particular needs and financial situation before making any investment decision. You should also inform yourself as to (a) the possible tax consequences, (b) the legal requirements and (c) any foreign exchange restrictions or exchange control requirements which you might encounter under the laws of the countries of your citizenship, residence or domicile and which might be relevant to the subscription, holding, transfer or disposal of interests in the Funds. Any opinion, article, comment, financial analysis, market forecast, market commentary or other such information which is published on this Website is not binding on ACM or its affiliates.
  10. Any past performances, forecasts or Simulations to the extent that this Website contains any information regarding the past performance and/or forecast of the Funds, such information is not a reliable indicator of future performance of these Funds or investment products of ACM and should not be relied upon as a basis for an investment decision. To the extent that this Website contains any information regarding simulated past performance, such information is not a reliable indicator of future performance and should not be relied on as the basis for an investment decision. Investment results for each Fund may vary. The value of investments and the income from them can go down as well as up and investors may not get back the amount originally invested and may lose all of their investment. The value of investments in the Funds may be affected by the price of underlying investments. Exchange rate changes may cause the value of overseas investments to rise or fall.
  11. Price Information All prices or values may not reflect actual prices or values that would be available in the market at the time provided or at the time you may decide to purchase or sell an interest in a particular Fund.
  12. Risk Warnings There are significant risks associated with an investment in any of the Funds. Investment in the Funds is intended only for those investors who can accept the risks associated with such an investment (including the risk of a complete loss of investment). You should ensure that you have fully understood such risks before taking any decision to invest. These Terms do not represent a complete statement of the risk factors associated with an investment in the Funds. The offering documents for each Fund contain risk warnings which are specific to the relevant Fund. You should consider these risk warnings carefully and take appropriate investment advice before taking any decision to invest.
  13. Offering Documents The terms of any investment in a Fund or investment product are governed by the documents establishing such terms. An application for interests in any of the Funds should only be made having fully and carefully read the offering documents, which are the relevant prospectus, key investor information document, the latest financial reports and any other offering documents for the relevant Fund which are available on this Website and upon request from the fund representative in your jurisdiction and specified in the prospectus for the relevant Fund. It is your responsibility to use the offering documents and by making an application to invest in a Fund you will represent that you have read the prospectus for the relevant Fund, the appropriate key investor information document for the Fund and any other applicable offering document and will agree to be bound by its contents.
  14. ACM and its affiliates accept no liability for such information. No representation or warranty of any kind regarding the accuracy, adequacy, validity, completeness or timeliness of the information on this Website or the error-free use of this Website is given and, to the extent permitted by applicable laws, no liability is accepted for the accuracy or completeness of such information. No warranty of any kind, express or implied, including but not limited to the warranties of non-infringement of third-party rights, title, merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and freedom from computer virus is given in conjunction with the information, materials, products, and services on the Website. Any views expressed herein are those of the author(s), are based on available information, and are subject to change without notice. Individual portfolio management teams may hold different views and may make different investment decisions for different clients. ACM does not warrant that the Website will meet your needs. You agree to assume the entire risk as to your use of the Website. Any person who acts upon, or changes his investment position in reliance on information contained on this Website, does so entirely at his own risk. In the event of any inconsistency between the information on this Website and the terms of the relevant offering documents, the terms of the offering document shall prevail. All content on the Website is subject to modification from time to time without notice save for any mandatory disclosure requirements.
  15. Please contact ACM (using the details in the “Contact Us” section below) for further information regarding the validity of any information contained on this Website. This Website and most of the documentation contained within it is provided in the English language and you represent and warrant that you understand the English language.
  16. Privacy Please see our privacy policy which is contained on this Website for information about how the group protects your personal data, including personal data collected through this Website. You will be asked to agree to the terms of our privacy policy when selecting your relevant jurisdiction.
  17. Cookies When you visit this Website, a group company server may record your IP address together with the date, time, page visited and duration of your visit. Please note that the group uses cookies on this section of the Website. Cookies are small pieces of software that are issued to your computer or device and that store and sometimes track information about your use of the site. Cookies on this Website may collect a unique identifier, user preferences and profile information and membership information from which it is possible to identify individual users. The group also uses cookies to collect general usage and volume statistical information that does not include personally identifiable information. Some cookies may remain on the user's computer after they leave this Website (these are known as persistent cookies). For more information about cookies including how to set your internet browser to reject cookies, please go to www.allaboutcookies.org or https//youronlinechoices.eu. By using this Website, you agree that the ARIA group can place cookies on your device which collect the data and for the purposes described above and as further detailed in the Cookie Policy. If you delete cookies relating to this Website, we will not remember things about you, you will be treated as a first-time visitor the next time you visit this Website and we will not be able to tailor your experience of this Website. The group has engaged one or more third party service providers to track and analyse usage and volume statistical information from visitors to this Website. The service provider(s) set cookies on behalf of the group. The group may re-associate the information provided by the technologies directly above with other personal information we hold about you. By using this Website, you agree that third parties can place cookies on your device as described above.
  18. Website Security and Restrictions on Use As a condition to your use of this Website, you agree that you will not, and you will not take any action intended to (i) access data that is not intended for you; (ii) invade the privacy of, obtain the identity of, or obtain any personal information about any other user of this Website; (iii) probe, scan, or test the vulnerability of this Website or ACM's network or breach security or authentication measures without proper authorisation; (iv) attempt to interfere with service to any user, host, or network or otherwise attempt to disrupt our business; or (v) send unsolicited mail, including promotions and/or advertising of products and services. Unauthorised use of the Website, including but not limited to unauthorised entry into ACM's systems or misuse of any information posted to a web site, is strictly prohibited. 22. Amendment ACM may delete or make changes to these Terms and to the information contained on this Website at any time. Where such amendments are made, you will be required to accept any such changes in order and prior to continue to use the Website. If you do not accept such revised Terms, you may no longer be able to access this Website. If any provision of these Terms is found by any court or authority of competent jurisdiction to be illegal, void or invalid under the laws of any jurisdiction, the legality, validity or enforceability of the remainder of these Terms in that jurisdiction shall not be affected and the legality, validity and enforceability of the whole of these Terms in any other jurisdiction shall not be affected.
  19. ACM Europe Limited with its registered office at Nu Bis Centre, Mosta Road, Lija LJA 9012, Malta, Malta Registration Number: C 26673, is authorised and regulated by the MFSA with the Authorised Person ID: FEXS.
  20. Navigate Funds SICAV Plc with its registered office at Nu Bis Centre, Mosta Road, Lija LJA 9012, Malta, Malta Registration Number: SV 415 is licensed by the Maltese Financial Services Authority Authorised Person ID: ARIA.