DKL February 27, 2026

Delek Logistics Partners Q4 2025 Earnings Call - Record 2025 EBITDA, sour gas ramp is the hinge for 2026 upside

Summary

Delek Logistics closed 2025 with a full year record Adjusted EBITDA of $536 million and a record fourth quarter Adjusted EBITDA of approximately $142 million. Management is pitching 2026 EBITDA in a $520 million to $560 million range, while keeping a tight focus on leverage and coverage. The partnership finished the year with roughly $940 million of available liquidity and approved its 52nd consecutive quarterly distribution increase, raising the payout to $1.125 per unit.

The operational storyline is straightforward, and also conditional. Libby 2 is live at about 160 million scf per day, and the partnership is drilling an AGI well and building sour gas gathering and compression infrastructure. Management admits ramping sour volumes has been slower than expected, but they expect a step change in utilization once AGI and sour gathering are complete. Acquisitions of H2O, Gravity, and Edgestore expanded crude, gas, and water scale, pushing third party EBITDA to roughly 80% to 82% of run rate, which management says materially increases DKL’s independence and growth optionality.

Key Takeaways

  • Delek Logistics reported record full year 2025 Adjusted EBITDA of $536 million, driven by acquisitions and operations across gas, crude, and water businesses.
  • Fourth quarter Adjusted EBITDA was about $142 million, up from $114 million a year earlier and $6 million above the prior quarter record.
  • Distributable cash flow as adjusted for Q4 was $73 million, with an adjusted DCF coverage ratio of approximately 1.22 times.
  • Management set full year 2026 Adjusted EBITDA guidance at $520 million to $560 million, flagging execution and sour gas ramp as primary sources of upside within that range.
  • Libby 2 processing capacity is now roughly 160 million scf per day, and management has invested about $15 million for optionality on future Libby expansions.
  • The partnership is drilling the first AGI well and building sour gas gathering and compression infrastructure, expecting a step change in utilization once projects are complete, although ramp has been slower than initially forecast.
  • Q4 capital expenditures were about $32 million, of which $26 million was growth capex, primarily for initiating sour gas capabilities at the Libby complex.
  • Acquisitions in the last two years including H2O (2024), Gravity (2025), and Edgestore increased scale and contributed materially to the Gathering and Processing segment, which earned $71 million of Adjusted EBITDA in Q4 versus $66 million a year ago.
  • Management says roughly 80% to 82% of run-rate EBITDA in 2026 will come from third parties, marking a notable increase in economic separation from sponsor DK.
  • Storage and transportation Adjusted EBITDA jumped to $35 million in Q4 from $18 million a year ago, reflecting the impacts of May 2025 intercompany asset sales to DK.
  • Pipeline joint ventures contributed $26 million to Q4 Adjusted EBITDA, up from $18 million, driven by strong performance from the Wink to Webster joint venture.
  • Balance sheet liquidity stood at approximately $940 million available under credit facilities, which management cites as flexibility for growth while maintaining financial discipline.
  • Board approved the 52nd consecutive quarterly distribution increase to $1.125 per unit, the 13th straight year of distribution growth, underscoring management’s priority on steady returns.
  • Management stressed disciplined M&A, saying future deals must be accretive to free cash flow, leverage, and coverage; they flagged ongoing opportunities but will not chase expensive assets.
  • Management expects produced water gathering and disposal to require new innovation as produced water cuts increase, positioning the combined H2O and Gravity footprint as a growth platform.

Full Transcript

Jael, Conference Operator: Thank you for standing by. My name is Jael, I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Delek Logistics Partners fourth quarter 2025 earnings call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by 1 on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, simply press star 1 again. I would now like to turn the conference over to Robert Wright, EVP, Chief Financial Officer. You may begin.

Robert Wright, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, Delek Logistics Partners: Good morning, and welcome to the Delek Logistics Partners fourth quarter earnings conference call. Participants joining me on today’s call will include Avigal Soreq, President, Reuven Spiegel, EVP, as well as other members of our management team. As a reminder, this conference call will contain forward-looking statements as defined under the federal securities laws, including statements regarding guidance and future business outlook. Any forward-looking statements made during today’s call involve risks and uncertainties that may cause our actual results to differ materially from today’s comments. Factors that could cause actual results to differ are included in our SEC filings. The company assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements. I will now turn the call over to Avigal for opening remarks. Avigal.

Avigal Soreq, President, Delek Logistics Partners: Thank you, Robert. 2025 was an exceptional year for Delek Logistics, highlighted by the achievement of a record Adjusted EBITDA of $536 million. These results are a reflection of a strong execution across our businesses and the addition of high-quality business such as H2O and Gravity, most importantly, because of our hard work of our great employees. During the year, we continued to advance our key initiative across our natural gas, crude, and water businesses, increasing our position as a premier full-service provider in the Permian Basin. Let me talk about each one of those businesses in detail. Starting with natural gas. During the year, we successfully commissioned the new Libby 2 processing plant, increasing the capacity of the complex to around 160 million scf per day.

The expansion in the processing capacity is being enhanced by the comprehensive acid gas injection and sour gas handling solution we are building. We are very excited about providing this comprehensive capability to our customer, further supporting long-term oil and gas production growth in the Delaware Basin. Moving to crude. Both DPG and DDG crude gathering operation delivered strong performance during the year. We have increased our overall gathering capacity and look forward to further optimize and grow the business in 2026. Our water business is also doing very well. We have largely completed the integration of H2O and Gravity into our operation. The combined gas, crude, and water offering in the Permian Basin has increased our competitive position and build a strong platform of growth. With strategic foundation, strong operation, and record result in 2025, we are well positioned for 2026.

Today, we announced a 2026 EBITDA guidance range of $520 million-$560 million. This reflects the growth opportunity we have while managing leverage and coverage. We also intend to remain good steward of our stakeholder capital. Our board of directors have approved our 52nd consecutive quarterly distribution increase, raising the distribution to $1.125 per unit, marking 13 consecutive years of distribution growth. This is an extraordinary achievement, we’re extremely proud of our team and financial prudence that brought us here. As we close the books on 2025 and begin 2026, Delek Logistics firmly positioned as a strong, independent, full suite midstream service provider. With the foundation we have built and the opportunities ahead, we are confident in our ability to continue delivering sustainable growth and long-term value for our unit holders.

I will now hand it over to Reuven, who will provide more details on our operations.

Reuven Spiegel, Executive Vice President, Delek Logistics Partners: Thank you, Avigdor. As Avigdor mentioned, we’re very excited about DKL’s future and are working to increase our advantage Permian position. Most significantly, I’m very pleased with the rising economic separation we have with our sponsor, DK. In 2026, we expect approximately 80% of our run rate EBITDA will come from third parties. This is an extraordinary achievement for the partnership. Its increased independence will allow us to be more nimble in advancing the strong growth path we have been navigating. Turning to our business. We continue to work hard to bring an industry-leading sour gas solution in the Delaware Basin. The first step in the process was to complete our processing capacity expansion. Currently, we’re working on completing the first AGI well and building the sour gas gathering infrastructure to fully optimize our capacity.

As we have mentioned in the past, while our ramp-up has been slower versus our initial expectations, the need for sour gas solution is urgent, and we expect to see a step change in our utilization once our AGI and sour gas gathering infrastructure is fully complete. We also believe that the step change in utilization is likely to bring forward the need for additional processing capacity. We are looking at our options and have made selected investment that will support future expansions of the Libby complex. We continue to believe that our expanded gas processing and sour gas handling capabilities provide a unique offering to our customers and provides us with a long runway for growth in the Delaware Basin. Our crude gathering volumes had a record fourth quarter. We are growing our crude infrastructure to provide our customers a more comprehensive solution.

Our crude gathering business is in a very strong place, our combined crude and water offering is yielding great results. Moving to our water business. The integration of 2 water gathering system from H2O and Gravity has gone well. We are very excited about the opportunities our larger water footprint is bringing to us. We believe produced water gathering and disposal will require more innovation and different approaches as producer water cuts increase throughout the basin. We look forward to updating the market as we bring forward these solutions. With that, I will pass it on to Robert.

Robert Wright, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, Delek Logistics Partners: Thank you, Reuven. As Avigal and Reuven highlighted, we continue to make strong progress advancing the Delek Logistics growth story. While we are driving meaningful financial and operational growth across the partnership, we remain equally focused on achieving our long-term leverage and coverage objectives. 2025 was a significant year for the partnership. We successfully closed the acquisition of Gravity Water Midstream, which, together with the 2024 acquisition of H2O Midstream, were well-timed from a purchase multiple perspective. We completed construction of the Libby 2 gas plant and are now in the process of converting operations to support sour gas treating, handling, and processing capabilities. Our focus now shifts to fully capturing the value of these investments by optimizing synergies and executing our strategic priorities. At the Libby complex, this includes completing the sour gas conversion and realizing the associated EBITDA uplift over time.

From a balance sheet perspective, we ended 2025 in a strong financial position with approximately $940 million available liquidity under our credit facilities. This provides us with significant flexibility to continue executing our growth agenda while maintaining financial discipline. Turning to our fourth quarter results, Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was a record at approximately $142 million, up from $114 million in the same period last year, and $6 million higher than the previous record set in the third quarter of this year. Distributable cash flow as adjusted totaled $73 million, and our DCF coverage ratio as adjusted was approximately 1.22 times. In the Gathering and Processing segment, Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $71 million compared to $66 million in the fourth quarter of 2024.

The increase was primarily due to the acquisitions of H2O and Gravity. Wholesale marketing and terminalling Adjusted EBITDA was $21 million compared to $21 million in the prior year. Storage and transportation Adjusted EBITDA in the quarter was $35 million compared with $18 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. The increase primarily reflects the impacts of the sale of certain assets to DK as agreed to under the May 2025 intercompany transaction. Finally, the investments in pipeline joint venture segment contributed $26 million this quarter, compared with $18 million in the fourth quarter of 2024, driven by strong performance from the Wink to Webster joint venture. Turning to capital expenditures, total capital spending for the fourth quarter was approximately $32 million.

Of this amount, $26 million was growth capital, primarily relating to initiating sour gas capabilities at the Libby complex. The remainder of the spend was directed towards other growth projects, including advancing new connections across our Midland and Delaware gathering systems. Looking ahead to 2026, as Avigal Soreq mentioned, we remain confident in our earnings trajectory and are initiating our full year 2026 EBITDA guidance to a range of $520 million-$560 million. With that, we’ll open the call for questions.

Jael, Conference Operator: Thank you. The floor is now open for questions. If you have dialed in and would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad to raise your hand and join the queue. If you’d like to withdraw your question, simply press star one again. If you’re called upon to ask a question and are listening via loudspeaker on your device, please pick up your handset and ensure that your phone is not on mute when asking your question. Again, to ask a question, it is star one. Your first question comes from line of Doug Irwin of Citi. Your line is open.

Doug Irwin, Analyst, Citi: Hey, team. Thanks for the question. I just want to start on guidance and maybe more specifically on growth expectations for the GMT segment. Could you maybe just help quantify how much of the variance within the high and low end of the guidance range is dependent on GMT performance and your ability to ramp up sale gas later this year? Then just with regard to the multi-year growth benchmarks that you put out there, how should we be thinking about the ramp to that $70 million of incremental EBITDA over the next couple of years?

Avigal Soreq, President, Delek Logistics Partners: Hey, Doug. Thank you for the question. I think it’s a great question. I will touch exactly what you asked. I would like to start from a big picture standpoint. We defined a very clear, concise strategy of crude gas and water in the most prolific area of the Permian Basin. If I want to highlight one number in the guidance we gave is the return on the investment that we see with the capital we invest now. You see it around 1-3 times on the investment we see, which is very good. It’s good to our coverage ratio, it’s good to leverage ratio. Very accretive to EBITDA.

You see that over the course of more than one year, on a run rate basis, a very accretive number. The main outcome of that is the results of our strategy. Second point I want to highlight is the growth and yield combination that we are seeing.

That’s probably best in class. If not best in class, probably among other best in class, but very, very good. We are on very, very good trajectory in pattern. We are very happy about that. The last point I wanna make sure coming across, and then I will hand it to Reuven Spiegel, will be more specific around the sour gas, is the fact that if you are taking the intrinsic value of each asset that we either build or bought, we need to get 7 handle on our unit price. There is way much more room to go. We are very consistent with rewarding our investor. We have a very clear target for leverage ratio and coverage ratio, and we are prudently moving to those targets. Reuven Spiegel, you wanna talk about sour gas just a little bit?

Reuven Spiegel, Executive Vice President, Delek Logistics Partners: Yes. Thank you, Avigal Soreq. We’re actually very excited about the growth opportunity that gas will provide us. We mentioned in previous calls that gas in the region is turning to be more sour than originally anticipated, which made us accelerate our sour project’s timeline. Presently, we are drilling the AGI well and constructing our associated sour gas gathering and compression system. As we mentioned in the prepared remarks, we expect to see increased utilization as these projects are completed throughout the year. Even with the completion of this project, we still anticipate incremental processing capacity needed in our area. This is a long answer, but the short answer is we expect to be completed over the next few months, and the Delaware gas business will be one of our growth engines for years to come.

Doug Irwin, Analyst, Citi: Got it. Thanks for that detail. Maybe as a follow-up on an item from the DK release, you called out a transaction with DK for some assets such as the Tyler and El Dorado facilities. Just curious if you could talk about the EBITDA impact to DKL from those transactions and the use of proceeds. Just looking forward, are there more opportunities like this that you could potentially do between the two companies?

Avigal Soreq, President, Delek Logistics Partners: Yeah, absolutely, Zach. I will let Robert take that question.

Robert Wright, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, Delek Logistics Partners: Yeah. Thanks, Avigal Soreq. Yeah, these transactions really just helped us further the economic separation of the two entities. You know, you’ll see in our slides that DKL now has 82% of their EBITDAs now from third party businesses as a result of this transaction. You know, with this, our view is that, you know, we’re materially complete with the inside the fence assets being sold to DK. We kinda have the right assets under the right roof now. From an EBITDA perspective, it’s really not material to either entity.

Doug Irwin, Analyst, Citi: Got it. Thanks for the time.

Avigal Soreq, President, Delek Logistics Partners: Thank you, Zach. Appreciate you.

Jael, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Gabriel Moreen of Mizuho. Your line is open.

Avigal Soreq, President, Delek Logistics Partners: Hi, Gabe.

Gabriel Moreen, Analyst, Mizuho: Morning, Avigal Soreq. Hey, how are you?

Avigal Soreq, President, Delek Logistics Partners: I’m well. You?

Gabriel Moreen, Analyst, Mizuho: Good, thanks. Just gonna ask in terms of maybe just pressing you guys a little bit on what the next steps would be on the Libby processing expansion. How big you would think the next chunk of processing addition would be, and what would need to happen and when to make that come to fruition?

Avigal Soreq, President, Delek Logistics Partners: I will tell you two things. First, you probably remember that we said few quarters ago about the investment we already put for future expansion for Libby. You remember $15 million. We will not try to take advantage around that. That’s the first nugget I’m gonna give you. The other one that I’m gonna tell you, that we are looking very, very carefully, and it’s all public information, what our customer and producer are doing in the area. In our area looks very good, and which means two things, which mean more sour and which mean more volume, both on the crude and gas. I’m not gonna commit to a timeline like you asked, but you didn’t expect me to fall into this trap.

I’m gonna tell you that, we are looking very good in, all the macro that we are seeing and also the micro from our customer. Stay tuned.

Gabriel Moreen, Analyst, Mizuho: Will do. Thank you, Avigal.

Avigal Soreq, President, Delek Logistics Partners: Yeah.

Gabriel Moreen, Analyst, Mizuho: Of course, I have to ask you, there’s been a lot of what I would say sour gas midstream M&A over the last couple of months. I’m just curious what your thoughts are on that, what you’re seeing potentially out there in terms of packages on gas or water that may or may not be out there.

Avigal Soreq, President, Delek Logistics Partners: The cheapest company in the area, it’s called DKL. We still don’t see, we are still not close to the valuation versus our peers. Obviously, you probably were very happy about the 2 midstream acquisition that we did, both Edgestore and Gravity. We do that both on the right timing, on the right valuation. We are not shy of doing that, we are not gonna force ourself into a deal that it’s too expensive. More to come. Every deal that we do needs to be accretive to free cash flow, leverage ratio, and coverage ratio, and we are not gonna shy from those principle in the future. I will leave it to that.

Gabriel Moreen, Analyst, Mizuho: Great. Great. Thanks, Avigal. Appreciate it.

Avigal Soreq, President, Delek Logistics Partners: Yes.

Jael, Conference Operator: With no further questions, I’d like to pass it back to Avigal for closing remarks.

Avigal Soreq, President, Delek Logistics Partners: Yeah. Thank you. Thank you. I just wanna thank the great team here in this room. Thank you to great board of directors that with their great support for the DKL journey. To the investors, and mostly the great employees we have, I’m really proud of the progress we are doing and more to come. Thank you.

Jael, Conference Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. You may now disconnect.