Summary
- Energy infrastructure has come under pressure with some company-specific challenges and macro concerns around US production trends as oil weakens.
- Despite recent volatility, we believe the key pillars of the midstream investment case are intact, including distribution growth, free cash flow generation, and long-term tailwinds from natural gas demand growth.
- Dividend announcements could provide a potential catalyst over the coming weeks, but choppiness could continue near term around oil volatility.
Last week’s headlines around China tariffs and corresponding weakness in oil prices brought back memories of April and May when oil and energy stocks sold off sharply on the heels of tariff news. The weakness in energy infrastructure has been particularly acute.
Every name in the Alerian Midstream Energy Select Index (AMEI) is down month-to-date through October 10. The Alerian MLP Infrastructure Index (AMZI) is now slightly negative on a total-return basis for the year, while AMEI is up 2.3% through Friday. AMEI and AMZI fell 5.4% and 4.2% last week, underperforming the 3.3% loss in WTI crude, which fell below $59 per barrel. As of October 10, AMZI is yielding 8.2%, which is in-line with its ten-year average, and AMEI is yielding 5.6%.
This note briefly discusses some of the drivers for recent performance weakness, as well as the pockets of midstream that have been more resilient (namely Canadian corporations or natural gas infrastructure names). It also discusses the outlook from here. While we see the main pillars of the midstream investment case remaining intact, including free cash flow generation, distribution growth, and natural gas tailwinds, oil weakness could create an overhang as the market waits for more color on producer plans into 2026.
Why have MLPs/midstream been so weak lately?
There are several factors that have contributed to MLP/midstream weakness lately. Some headwinds are broad in nature, and other issues are more company specific.
Broad headwinds:
- The market has been cautious on oil prices for months. This is leading to concerns around production volumes from the US into 2026, including the Permian, which has historically been the US growth engine. This in turn drives some concern around midstream volumes, with Hess Midstream’s (HESM) September guidance update reinforcing the potential impact for midstream (see below). Gathering and processing names tend to be more sensitive to production trends and therefore commodity prices, as they operate closest to the wellhead. The US Energy Information Administration currently expects US oil production to be down slightly in 2026, and natural gas production to grow modestly.
- Analysts are generally expecting muted 3Q earnings results, and estimates for large MLPs have mostly moved lower. This year has seen very few “beat and raise” quarters. Lighter-than-expected volumes could weigh on quarterly results. Some companies are already expecting to come in at the low-end of full-year financial guidance.
- On a related note, natural gas prices in West Texas (Waha hub) turned negative in mid-September and worsened in October. Weakness in natural gas prices can act as another deterrent to production growth and may drive temporary production shut-ins. While pipeline maintenance likely contributed (example), meaningful Permian gas takeaway additions will not be online until 2H26 (read more).
Company-specific news:
- Liquefaction C-Corp Venture Global (VG) fell 24.9% on October 10 after announcing that an international arbitration court ruled against them in a proceeding with BP. VG has been involved in a series of arbitration proceedings tied to its start up at Calcasieu Pass, as it sold liquefied natural gas (LNG) in the open market during an extended commissioning period instead of delivering volumes to customers. VG received a positive ruling in its arbitration with Shell in August (read more), but its ongoing legal proceedings and potential damages represent an overhang.
- Hess Midstream (HESM) gained 13.0% in July, as Chevron (CVX) completed its acquisition of Hess. The market likely assumed CVX would eventually buy HESM, similar to its purchase of Noble Midstream in 2021. On its 2Q earnings call, CVX was somewhat ambiguous on HESM, deferring to its November analyst day. Then, on September 18, HESM updated its guidance for CVX dropping a rig in the Bakken. HESM pointed to the low-end of its adjusted EBITDA guidance range for 2025, flat EBITDA for 2026, and growth in 2027. HESM continues to expect growth in adjusted free cash flow and 5% distribution growth through 2027, but the stock fell sharply. From September 18 through October 10, HESM is down almost 20%, weighing noticeably on AMZI performance.
What companies have held up well?
While MLPs were outperforming C-Corps for most of the year, midstream corporations have generally held up better since the end of July, with Canadian names TC Energy (TRP CN) and Enbridge (ENB CN) providing the greatest positive contribution to AMEI’s performance. The Canadian names tend to be more defensive and can benefit more from lower interest rates given higher leverage.
Other notable mentions in AMEI include natural-gas focused DT Midstream (DTM) and Williams (WMB), which recently announced two more behind-the-meter power projects as expected (read more). Canadian name Pembina (PPL CN) has also seen strength as media reports speculated that the proposed Greenlight Electricity Centre with Kineticor is working with Meta (META).
Buying opportunity or more weakness on deck? Puts and takes from here.
Investors understandably will wonder if this is a buying opportunity or if more weakness is in store. As investors think about the outlook from here, there are a few points to highlight:
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Dividends on deck. Companies have begun announcing dividends and will continue to do so over the coming weeks. MPLX (MPLX) is particularly in focus given company commentary around a 12.5% distribution increase, and their recent track record of raising the November payout. Dividend announcements could help boost the space. We do not anticipate any cuts. Elevated yields could be attractive to income investors.
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Discounted valuations, particularly for MLPs. As of October 10, AMZI was trading at just 8.4x based on 2026 estimates and 8.1x on 2027 numbers. This is well below AMZI’s three-year average forward multiple of 8.8x. AMEI was trading at 10.0x based on 2026 numbers and 9.8x on 2027 estimates, compared to its three-year average of 9.7x. At the end of September, AMEI was trading at 10.5x on 2026 estimates, so it has lost roughly half a turn in less than two weeks.
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Free cash flow theme intact. Midstream MLPs and corporations are expected to continue generating free cash flow, which in turn is expected to fuel dividend growth and opportunistic buybacks (read more). HESM’s guidance reinforces that this tailwind can remain intact, even if producers curb activity.
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Midstream financially stronger today. Compared to pre-2020, midstream companies generally have stronger balance sheets, lower leverage, and greater financial flexibility thanks to free cash flow generation.
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Crude and West Texas natural gas could remain choppy. Caution on oil prices is likely still warranted given increased OPEC+ supply, weaker demand in the winter, and the risk of tariffs, which would be negative for demand. Geopolitics is still a wildcard, mainly as it relates to Russia-Ukraine. Weakness in oil prices could put a damper on some producer plans into 2026. Additionally, depressed West Texas natural gas prices remain a risk to production until more gas takeaway comes online in 2H26.
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Multi-year natural gas demand growth still expected. The long-term outlook for natural gas demand growth still remains strong, with rising North American LNG export capacity (read more) and power demand, including data centers, providing tailwinds (read more). This is exemplified by the resilience of DTM, WMB, and PPL CN discussed above.
Bottom Line:
We see the key pillars of the midstream investment case such as dividend growth, free cash flow generation, and tailwinds from rising natural gas demand remaining intact. However, weakness in oil prices can translate to concerns around US production volumes and the potential impact to midstream. We see the impact as manageable and transient, but choppiness could continue near term.
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AMZI is the underlying index for the Alerian MLP ETF (AMLP) and the ETRACS Alerian MLP Infrastructure Index ETN Series B (MLPB). AMEI is the underlying index for the Alerian Energy Infrastructure ETF (ENFR) and the ALPS Alerian Energy Infrastructure Portfolio (ALEFX).
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vettafi.com is owned by VettaFi LLC (“VettaFi”). VettaFi is the index provider for AMLP, MLPB, ENFR, and ALEFX, for which it receives an index licensing fee. However, AMLP, MLPB, ENFR, and ALEFX are not issued, sponsored, endorsed, or sold by VettaFi. VettaFi has no obligation or liability in connection with the issuance, administration, marketing, or trading of AMLP, MLPB, ENFR, and ALEFX.
Originally published on ETF Trends
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