Monday, February 25, 2019

Hot Safest Stocks For 2019

tags:BGS,NXPI,STB,

One of the most common questions we get on Market Foolery -- by far -- is how to invest in the increasing legalization of marijuana.

In this episode, Chris Hill talks with analyst David Kretzmann, who just got back from a marijuana conference in Canada, about what the future holds for marijuana companies and the investors who buy their shares. Find out which market trends to keep an eye on as this story plays out, the safest way to stake your bets in this new frontier, how the U.S. legalization question looks right now, and more.

If you want more from The Motley Fool about investing in marijuana, check out fool.ca/marijuanamoment.

A full transcript follows the video.

This video was recorded on June 11, 2018.

Chris Hill: It's Tuesday, June 12th. Welcome to Market Foolery! I'm Chris Hill. Joining me in studio, it's David Kretzmann, back from the Great White North.

David Kretzmann: Absolutely!

Hill: Good to see you!

Hot Safest Stocks For 2019: B&G Foods, Inc.(BGS)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Max Byerly]

    Macquarie Group Ltd. purchased a new stake in B&G Foods, Inc. (NYSE:BGS) during the 2nd quarter, according to the company in its most recent filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission. The firm purchased 6,200 shares of the company’s stock, valued at approximately $185,000.

  • [By Logan Wallace]

    B&G Foods, Inc. (NYSE:BGS) was the target of some unusual options trading on Thursday. Investors acquired 2,993 put options on the stock. This represents an increase of approximately 1,339% compared to the average daily volume of 208 put options.

  • [By ]

    Cramer was bearish on BGC Partners (BGCP) , Dr Pepper Snapple (DPS) , Sterling Construction Co. Inc.  (STRL) and B&G Foods (BGS) .

    Search Jim Cramer's "Mad Money" trading recommendations using our exclusive "Mad Money" Stock Screener.

Hot Safest Stocks For 2019: NXP Semiconductors N.V.(NXPI)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Anders Bylund]

    Shares of semiconductor giant Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) gained 14.2% in July 2018, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. Investors seemed to breathe a sigh of relief as the proposed $44 billion buyout of automotive computing specialist NXP Semiconductors (NASDAQ:NXPI) finally came to a full stop.

  • [By ]

    Over on Real Money, Cramer explains how Qualcomm's (QCOM) deal for NXP Semi (NXPI) went from a sure winner to disaster. Get more of his insights with a free trial subscription to Real Money.

  • [By Joseph Griffin]

    NXP Semiconductors (NASDAQ:NXPI) saw unusually-strong trading volume on Monday . Approximately 23,163,579 shares changed hands during mid-day trading, an increase of 344% from the previous session’s volume of 5,213,280 shares.The stock last traded at $110.74 and had previously closed at $110.74.

  • [By Leo Sun]

    Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) initially announced its plans to buy Dutch chipmaker NXP Semiconductors (NASDAQ:NXPI) in Oct. 2016. Qualcomm wanted to buy NXP, the largest automotive chipmaker in the world, to diversify its business away from the mobile market.

  • [By ]

    To be fair, M&A concerns appear to be playing some role in the selloff. The unwillingness of Chinese regulators to sign off on either the Qualcomm (QCOM) /NXP (NXPI) deal or a Bain Capital-led deal to buy Toshiba's flash memory unit has stoked fears that the chip industry's M&A wave will be halted until trade tensions between the U.S. and China ease.

  • [By Paul Ausick]

    First thing Monday morning, China resumed its review of the proposed $40 billion merger of Qualcomm Inc. (NASDAQ: QCOM) and NXP Semiconductors N.V. (NASDAQ: NXPI). A happy coincidence no doubt.

Hot Safest Stocks For 2019: Student Transportation Inc(STB)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By ]

    One of the main goals of my premium newsletter High-Yield Investing is stability. I like industries that don't go through unpredictable hot and cold cycles. Student Transportation (NYSE: STB) is a textbook example.

  • [By ]

    That was certainly the case with Student Transportation (NYSE: STB). My former High-Yield Investing holding was trading at $6.00 per share at the closing bell on February 27. The next morning, it opened near $7.50 following a surprise takeover offer from a privately held Canadian company -- giving us a nice 25% gain overnight.

  • [By Logan Wallace]

    Student Transportation Inc. (NASDAQ:STB) (TSE:STB) has been given an average rating of “Hold” by the eight brokerages that are currently covering the stock, Marketbeat reports. One analyst has rated the stock with a sell rating, four have given a hold rating and three have issued a buy rating on the company. The average twelve-month target price among brokerages that have updated their coverage on the stock in the last year is $7.20.

  • [By Logan Wallace]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Student Transportation (STB)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Cybereits (CRE) Reaches 24 Hour Trading Volume of $7,166.00

Cybereits (CURRENCY:CRE) traded up 10.4% against the US dollar during the twenty-four hour period ending at 18:00 PM E.T. on February 21st. Cybereits has a market cap of $0.00 and approximately $7,166.00 worth of Cybereits was traded on exchanges in the last day. In the last seven days, Cybereits has traded 13.6% higher against the US dollar. One Cybereits token can now be purchased for $0.0016 or 0.00000040 BTC on major exchanges including BigONE, Bit-Z and BitForex.

Here is how related cryptocurrencies have performed in the last day:

Get Cybereits alerts: Distributed Credit Chain (DCC) traded down 2% against the dollar and now trades at $0.0014 or 0.00000035 BTC. Bitcoin Atom (BCA) traded down 0.8% against the dollar and now trades at $0.15 or 0.00003830 BTC. EDRCoin (EDRC) traded 1.4% lower against the dollar and now trades at $0.71 or 0.00017902 BTC. Bean Cash (BITB) traded down 1.7% against the dollar and now trades at $0.0008 or 0.00000020 BTC. Measurable Data Token (MDT) traded up 2.4% against the dollar and now trades at $0.0040 or 0.00000102 BTC. Qbao (QBT) traded 2.2% higher against the dollar and now trades at $0.0158 or 0.00000401 BTC. Pascal Lite (PASL) traded flat against the dollar and now trades at $0.0065 or 0.00000177 BTC. X-Coin (XCO) traded 1.8% higher against the dollar and now trades at $0.0015 or 0.00000037 BTC. High Voltage (HVCO) traded 4.3% higher against the dollar and now trades at $0.0103 or 0.00000260 BTC. Fonziecoin (FONZ) traded flat against the dollar and now trades at $0.0012 or 0.00000013 BTC.

Cybereits Profile

Cybereits (CRE) is a PoW/PoS token that uses the SHA256 hashing algorithm. It was first traded on April 25th, 2015. Cybereits’ total supply is 1,000,000,000 tokens. Cybereits’ official website is cybereits.com. Cybereits’ official Twitter account is @cybereits.

Buying and Selling Cybereits

Cybereits can be purchased on these cryptocurrency exchanges: BitForex, BigONE and Bit-Z. It is usually not currently possible to purchase alternative cryptocurrencies such as Cybereits directly using U.S. dollars. Investors seeking to acquire Cybereits should first purchase Bitcoin or Ethereum using an exchange that deals in U.S. dollars such as Gemini, GDAX or Coinbase. Investors can then use their newly-acquired Bitcoin or Ethereum to purchase Cybereits using one of the aforementioned exchanges.

Thursday, February 21, 2019

EnLink Midstream LLC (ENLC) Q4 2018 Earnings Conference Call Transcript

Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

EnLink Midstream LLC  (NYSE:ENLC)Q4 2018 Earnings Conference CallFeb. 20, 2019, 9:00 a.m. ET

Contents: Prepared Remarks Questions and Answers Call Participants Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the EnLink Midstream Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2018 Earnings Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. (Operator Instructions). After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. (Operator Instructions) Please note that this event is being recorded today Wednesday, February 20th, 2019, at 9 AM Eastern Time.

I would now like to turn the meeting over to Kate Walsh, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead ma'am.

Kate Walsh -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today to discuss EnLink Midstream's fourth Quarter and full year 2018 earnings and our future outlook. Participating on the call today are Barry Davis, Executive Chairman; Mike Garberding, President and Chief Executive Officer; Eric Batchelder, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; and Ben Lamb, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer.

To accompany today's call we have posted our earnings press release and operations report to the Investor Relations portion of our website. Shortly after today's call, we will also make available a webcast replay on our website.

I will remind you that statements made during this conference call about the future, including our expectations or predictions, should be considered forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Actual results may differ materially from what is described in these forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this call, and we undertake no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements.

Additional information on factors that could cause actual results to differ from what is described in these forward-looking statements and sources for certain statements we make in here are available in the earnings press release and the operations report accompanying this call located at enlink.com and in our SEC filings.

This call also includes certain non-GAAP financial measures. Definitions of these measures as well as reconciliations of comparable GAAP measures are available in our earnings press release and our operations report on enlink.com. We encourage you to review the cautionary statements and other disclosures made in our earnings press release and our SEC filings including those under the heading Risk Factors.

The structure of the call will be to start with prepared remarks by Barry, Mike and Eric, and then leave the remainder of the call open for a question-and-answer period.

With that, I would now like to turn the call over to Barry Davis.

Barry E. Davis -- Executive Chairman

Thank you, Kate, and good morning, everyone. Thank you all for joining us to discuss our strong fourth quarter results, our exceptional fiscal 2018 performance, and the exciting 2019 and beyond outlook we have for our newly simplified EnLink.

Before I turn the call over to Mike and the team, I'll make a few quick remarks. In March of 2019, we will celebrate our fifth year as EnLink. Looking back at the past five years, I can proudly say that we have created a differentiated midstream platform built for long-term sustainable value creation. As you can see from our excellent 2018 results and our future outlook, EnLink's assets are generating strong and growing cash flow. We have been disciplined, intentional, and proactive in building our large, integrated, asset platform. We are located in premier production basins, and we are connected to key growing demand centers like the Gulf Coast.

We're incredibly well positioned in a market that we believe is poised to improve. Although EnLink is only five years old, EnLink's management team and Board are seasoned energy professionals. What we've seen recently is that investors across the energy value chain are heightening their focus on value creation. Value creation is exactly what EnLink has always been focused on. Financial markets continue to push for corporate simplification, effective capital allocation, and ultimately value creation.

In my opinion, midstream companies are undervalued by the market and have considerable upside and tremendous opportunities in front of them. There will be opportunities both at the asset level and at the corporate level. And those with efficient economic access to capital and the ability to execute will thrive.

Our team has done a tremendous job executing on EnLink's growth to date, and I know they will capitalize on upcoming opportunities for midstream. When I look at the bright future ahead for EnLink, I see the deep, strong relationships we've developed with our customers driving our next phase of growth. I'll characterize this next phase of growth as the type of growth unitholders want us to focus on. It's the low-risk, high-return, bolt-on project growth that is right in our backyard and right in our wheelhouse.

And I see our strategic partner, Global Infrastructure Partners, supporting us every step of the way. We have a strong track record of expanding relationships with our high-quality customers and partners across all commodities to execute mutually beneficial growth, and we'll continue to make that happen with a low-risk, high-return projects I just mentioned.

To bring that all back together, I'll leave you with this. We have a very strong team operating a purposely built asset platform with discipline and intention. This, coupled with our impressive roster of customers and deep industry relationships, sets us up to create value over the long term. There is tremendous upside in midstream valuations for well-positioned companies and today EnLink could not be better positioned to deliver growth and to deliver attractive total returns for our unitholders.

Mike, over to you.

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Barry, and good morning, everyone. If there's one thing I want everyone to take away, it is our belief in how well positioned we are for long-term sustainable value creation. That is our focus as a business. You will see that in our 2018 execution and our team's near-term focus on low-risk, high-return projects on our platform, and in our deep customer relationships. We feel great about the strategic position of our business.

Focusing on 2018 results, the fourth quarter capped off a tremendous year for EnLink. We significantly grew our asset base. We continued to find very attractive multi-commodity opportunities to expand our purposely built asset platform and further integrate the value chain. We strengthened our balance sheet. We increased our distribution at ENLC. We simplified our corporate structure and ultimately we executed on the high end of previously increased adjusted EBITDA guidance for the year. EnLink also delivered record volumes during 2018, which drove the outstanding adjusted EBITDA results.

We had great performance in our Oklahoma segment, which is now our largest segment. Average natural gas processing volumes increased 50% during 2018. We own and operate one of the largest fully integrated midstream businesses in the STACK. We continue to enhance value chain integration. We take title to a significant amount of growing natural gas liquids produced from our Oklahoma operations and like those liquids to our growing Louisiana NGL platform. As a result, our Louisiana segment experienced strong NGL volume growth in 2018 of around 15%.

We are increasing our crude gathering operations in Central Oklahoma and have the Black Coyote system and the Redbud system in full service serving two of the largest producers, Devon and Marathon. Our Permian Basin operations also had a very strong 2018 with crude gathering and gas processing volumes growing around 40% year-over-year.

Executing on our base business growth and bolt-on opportunities this past year drove close to 20% growth year-over-year in adjusted EBITDA at EnLink. And it's the strength of our business that gives us confidence in our guidance outlook for 2019 and our growth drivers for the next three years. One, projected 2019 adjusted EBITDA of $1.13 billion, 10% to 20% growth from 2018 after the roll off of around $100 million in related party deficiency payments; two, projected Oklahoma segment profit three-year cumulative annual growth of approximately 10%; and three, projected Permian segment profit three-year cumulative annual growth of approximately 20%. Solid growth that is supported by the strong fundamentals we are seeing in the business today.

In Oklahoma, our expansive operations have a core position in three of the best producing counties in the state. From a basin standpoint, Anadarko Basin liquids growth is expected to exceed 100% growth from 2018 through to 2022, and we are very well positioned to benefit from this liquids and associated gas production.

In the Permian, dynamics are strong and growing with the Permian expected to account for 33% of US domestic oil production in 2019 and growing to 41% in 2020. Again, our Permian platform is ideally positioned to capitalize on this production growth.

Much of this upcoming supply growth will be transported to the Gulf Coast where demand growth is expected to remain strong. Our infrastructure network in Louisiana is optimally positioned to connect gas, NGL, and crude to the high-demand regions, and we're actively working on a number of exciting opportunities across all commodities.

With improving fundamentals as a backdrop for our next phase of growth, we're working closely with our strong roster of customers to provide innovative growth solutions and best-in-basin services. If we take a look back at some of our most significant successes, many of them are essentially repeat business with customers with whom we have been working closely for years. Deep customer relationships will continue to drive repeat opportunities, repeat business, and repeat growth.

One of my favorite projects that we announced recently is our Cajun-Sibon III expansion. This is a perfect example of an innovative solution where we took existing assets and were able to expand them quickly, efficiently, with very little capital. This project is expected to provide a tremendous return with an adjusted EBITDA multiple of two to three times and an in-service timeframe of nine months, and our existing customers are there and ready to take the increased product from us.

This expansion has also positioned us for further growth in the Louisiana market with excess fractionation. We have contracted with an existing third-party facility for additional fractionation starting in 2020. If you pair this with the excess capacity we'll have with our Mont Belvieu GCF facility starting in 2020, we're in a great position for near-term fractionation while preserving optionality for the next leg of growth.

Our purposely built strategic asset platforms sets us up so well for near-term capital-efficient growth and longer-term multi-commodity opportunities. The projects that are driving growth over the next three years are things such as well connects and compression around our existing platform. They are incredibly capital efficient and lower risk with adjusted EBITDA multiples of five to six times on projected total capital spend of $1.2 billion to $1.5 billion over the next three years. These are projects that are straight down the fairway of what we do every day.

Our platform also sets us up well for the next leg of growth. I mentioned Louisiana as an incredible opportunity given its growing demand market supported by the strong fundamentals of domestic production growth. Our assets could not be better positioned, and we have deep relationships with the market participants. Opportunities can come in many forms across all commodities; expansion of our purity product transportation, expansion of our exports, expansion of our fractionation position, and expansion of our end-use gas demand delivery. We have the right team executing on these longer-term opportunities.

And this all leads us back to our focus on long-term value creation. Our strategic asset platform clearly provides us near-term capital-efficient growth through focusing on projects with five to six times adjusted EBITDA multiples, our deep customer relationships have provided and will continue to provide multi-commodity opportunities, and our strong team and culture will continue to drive execution excellence.

I'll now turn the call over to Eric to give an overview of our financial performance and our philosophy around capital allocation.

Eric David Batchelder -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Mike, and good morning, everyone. Before I start on the numbers, I will remind everyone that we successfully closed our simplification transaction on January 25, 2019, and going forward, we'll report our results for ENLC on a consolidated basis. We have also updated our segment reporting into four operational segments: Oklahoma, Permian, North Texas, and Louisiana. We feel that these primarily geographically based segments better align with how we are managing the business.

As Barry and Mike have highlighted, EnLink delivered strong financial results for both the fourth quarter and full year 2018. I'll start with ENLC, which reported annual results of $231 million of cash available for distribution, representing 7% growth from full year 2017. ENLC continued to increase its quarterly distributions throughout 2018 with annual declared distributions for 2018 increasing by 5% over 2017 annual declared distributions.

From an ENLK perspective, we achieved adjusted EBITDA net to ENLK of approximately $274 million for the fourth quarter and approximately $1.042 billion for full year 2018, which represents 15% and 19% growth, respectively, from the comparable 2017 periods. Our financial success is a direct result of the outstanding job the entire EnLink team has done executing on our plan.

Our double-digit growth was largely driven by our gathering and processing operations in Oklahoma and the Permian and our Crude and Condensate segment. Oklahoma segment profit, net of the one-time contract restructuring, was up by 28% as compared to the fourth quarter of 2017 and up 46% as compared to full year 2017. Permian results were up over 50% as compared to the fourth quarter of 2017 and up over 40% as compared to full year 2017. Crude and Condensate results were up by 63% as compared to the fourth quarter of 2017 and up over 70% as compared to full year 2017.

From a cash flow perspective, ENLK's distributable cash flow was up 17% from the fourth quarter of 2017 as well as for the full year 2017. DCF growth exceeded our expectations coming in at the high end of our guidance range that we previously increased in 2018. DCF is a key metric that demonstrates the strong cash flow we are seeing from the business.

ENLK also continued to improve distribution coverage achieving coverage of 1.24 times for the fourth quarter of 2018 and 1.18 times for full-year 2018. Strengthening our distribution coverage ratio has been a key financial priority for us, and we are very pleased with the results we achieved this year. A stronger distribution coverage ratio points to a stronger balance sheet which gives us the flexibility to self-fund an increasing amount of our growth capital expenditures and allows us to effectively navigate the capital markets.

From a leverage perspective, we ended the year in a better position than expected with debt-to-adjusted EBITDA of 3.78 times as calculated under the terms of our credit facility. Due to the strong cash flows from the business, we also raised very little equity via our aftermarket program during the year. In total, we issued approximately $46 million of ENLK equity in 2018.

We continue to maintain a flexible liquidity position and exited the year with ENLK revolver availability of close to $1.5 billion. As we enter 2019, we continue to have significant liquidity and flexibility to finance our growth projects. Upon closing of simplification, we refinanced the ENLK and ENLC credit facilities into a single, consolidated $1.75 billion five-year revolving credit facility. In December of 2018, we closed on an $850 million three-year term loan. The combination of these two financings sets us up to execute on our growth projects in 2019 and significantly reduces our reliance on capital markets.

Our 2019 capital program will be funded with excess cash flow after payment of distributions, borrowings under our revolving credit facility, and limited non-core asset sales as well as limited equity issuances under our aftermarket program. Our financial tenets remain unchanged and we continue to target distributable cash flow per unit growth of 10%-plus from 2019 through 2021, long-term distribution coverage of 1.3 times to 1.5 times, and debt-to-adjusted EBITDA of 3.5 times to 4 times.

By growing distributable cash flow per unit by 10% or more each year from 2019 through 2021, we are significantly strengthening our balance sheet and increasing our power to enhance long-term distribution growth. We will continue to allocate capital prudently and are targeting 5% to 10% distribution growth per year through 2021.

Before I turn it back to Mike, I'll touch on one other point that I think is worth reinforcing in the wake of our simplification. EnLink continues to be a very tax-efficient investment strategy for a lot of investors. We currently expect the quarterly distributions that EnLink anticipates paying out to be characterized as a non-taxable return of capital for tax purposes over the next three years, which provides an attractive tax deferral vehicle for many investors. Our strong financial outlook gives clarity around and visibility into our commitment to sustainably creating and returning value over the long-term.

With that, I'll now turn it back over to Mike.

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Eric. To sum it all up, value creation is what we are focused on. EnLink has purposely built asset platforms and a team dedicated to executing our plan with excellence each and every day. We have deep industry and customer relationships that have provided and will continue to provide robust opportunities. And our assets plus our people plus our relationships will drive strong results in the future, just like we delivered in 2018.

With that you may open the call up for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you, sir. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. (Operator Instructions) And your first question will be from Shneur Gershuni of UBS. Please go ahead.

Shneur Z. Gershuni -- UBS Securities LLC -- Analyst

Hey. Good morning, guys. I guess I just wanted to start off on the guidance for 2019. I was wondering if you can give us some sensitivities on how we should think about changes in rig count and how that would impact growth rates? And if you can also put it in context to the most recent update from Devon was that available when you originally put everything out when you were going through the simplification transaction?

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Hi, Shneur. This is Mike. Let me start and I'll let Ben walk through the details, but I think when you think about the 2019 guidance, we have great confidence in the platform we've built to drive this growth. And to give context to that, think about '18 and '19. '18 was tremendous execution across all commodities and then ultimately results across all the platforms, so we could not be better positioned. It also set us up from a project standpoint to where you have Thunderbird, Lobo III, Oklahoma Crude, (inaudible) systems, Delaware Crude, Avenger and Cajun-Sibon III all coming into service over the first half of '19, again the continuation of building on those platforms. So we believe we've set ourselves up incredibly well going into '19 really for that capital efficient growth because the majority of the large-scale projects will be in place over the first half of the year. And I'll let Ben walk through the volume piece, which we're equally as confident on.

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

Yeah. Hey, Shneur. So I think what you're referring to on Devon is they have a statement in their ops report that they expect flat production in the STACK, and you're seeing us guide to 25% increase in gathered volume, and you're trying to figure out how those can be simultaneously true.

So the critical thing to start with is, Devon's guiding to 85 to 95 wells turned to sales in the STACK. Our guidance is premised on about 90 wells turned to sales for Devon in the STACK. The reason that they can guide to flat and we guide to growth is because they're two different numbers. For Devon, it's net production and so you have to consider what their net revenue interest is and the wells they're drilling this year versus last year, it's lower this year.

You have to consider what they're doing on their non-op position which impacts them but doesn't impact us. And you have to consider what they're doing in terms of asset sales. So last year they sold a package in the very far northwest part of the play that looks like less production for them because it's sold but it doesn't change anything for us because we continue to serve the new owner. So what we focus on is what's their gross operated production, and we're in line with their expectation at about 90 wells.

Something else I'll say, too, Shneur, on your question about rig count sensitivity. This is going to get harder for you guys to track because as everybody goes into development mode, you're going to be less focused on rig count and more focused on well count. So again, if you just stay with Devon for a minute, they are looking at a four to five rig program in the STACK turning 85 to 95 wells to sales and there's a few decks in there, but just remember that number. Go over in the Delaware and they're running twice the capital program, 11 rigs running, but they're guiding to a 100 to 110 wells. So there is a difference in the rig efficiency and the play just given their focus in a small area in the STACK and the efficiency that that creates versus (inaudible) Delaware and all those factors.

Shneur Z. Gershuni -- UBS Securities LLC -- Analyst

Okay. Appreciate all the color, but maybe just to sort of extend the question a little bit. I mean does the Devon updates -- and I understand that they're moving on and off acreage and so forth and all the answers that you gave. But does any of their statements or the New Devon, however you want to position it, does that change your longer-term guidance as to how you think about the business in '20 and '21?

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

No, it doesn't. But let me talk about what I think big picture what I think the New Devon means for us. I think that their proposed exit from the Barnett is a positive for us, and I think that for two reasons. First, I think they've done a wonderful job of laying out the roadmap for the next owner of the Barnett assets and how to maximize the value of that asset, and they've done that through a successful refrac program that they've told us anecdotally is so good it competes with the Delaware in their capital STACK. They've done that by drilling a number of new wells and showing people what a modern completion can do in the Barnett, and then they've done it by showing how a buyer could do it in a very capital-efficient manner with a partnership with a party like DowDupont.

So I think they've actually been quite intentional over the last couple of years in laying out the roadmap piece by piece for the next owner, whether that's another operator or whether it ends up being some kind of a spin-off or split-off and operating as an independent company. And all of that is to the positive for us. But the other side when you think about what's left at New Devon, it's more focused than ever on developing the Delaware and developing the STACK, which are two basins where we have a significant relationship with them. So I think it's good on both sides of the house.

Shneur Z. Gershuni -- UBS Securities LLC -- Analyst

Okay, fair enough. And maybe a bigger picture question. EnLink over the last couple of quarters, you've cited kind of been focused on a bunch of different strategies. If I remember from last year, it was the six or seven different items and so forth. You have a lot of different basins that you're working in and so forth. When I sort of think about the broader market right now, we saw a transaction yesterday done at a very high multiple, is there any thought to actually exiting one of your productive basins where you, let's say, have lower market share, get these crazy high prices, and then reinvest the capital in an area where you have stronger market share and you could potentially pick up assets as well, too, in terms of trying to refocus the Company and to be more nimble and more focused than kind of the broad strategy approach you have right now.

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, Shneur, this is Mike. So you again you're referencing the seven (ph) strategies, but let me step back from that. We've been incredibly purposeful in what we've built when you think about it as far as just look over the last five years and the core multi-commodity positions we've built in the STACK and the Permian as well as the demand position that we've built out in Louisiana. So -- and Ben referenced the Barnett, and we think of the Barnett as an incredibly capital-efficient, more stable cash flow, or a nice asset to add to that mix.

So for us what that setup ultimately is building those strong platforms and then continuing to have really high-efficient capital on top of that. The numbers we reference longer term on that is a $1.2 billion to $1.5 billion of growth capital focused on five to six times returns around those platforms. When I say around those platforms, it's almost solely focused on the supply platforms, and we have a huge optionality of growth really serving that demand market in Louisiana that's not included in that number.

And if you look at the Louisiana guidance, you'll see also it's a stable cash flow. We feel great about the upside we see there among all commodities. I talked about the different things we can do. We can look at whether it's purity product expansion, whether it's export expansion, fractionation expansion, some sort of all those. That's what we're doing. So our focus is on ultimately is creating value from those platforms through executing on those high-return, lower-risk projects with the optionality of demand growth in Louisiana. And so we feel really, really well positioned and very focused on that.

Shneur Z. Gershuni -- UBS Securities LLC -- Analyst

All right, great. Thank you very much. I'll jump back in the queue.

Operator

The next question will be from Jeremy Tonet of JPMorgan. Please go ahead.

Jeremy Bryan Tonet -- JPMorgan Securities LLC -- Analyst

Good morning. Thanks for all the color and your thoughts on the STACK there. Just wanted to build off of that a little bit more. Besides Devon, we're seeing some of the other customers there, Cimarex and Marathon, laying down some rigs. And so just wondering when you guys look forward into the STACK, are you guys -- do you see the potential to kind of capture more market share and that's kind of what you see also aiding to the growth? Or if you could kind of expand on what you're seeing outside of Devon in the STACK?

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

Yeah. Hey, Jeremy. It's Ben. So outside of Devon and the STACK, remember, overall we've got about 30 producer customers on these systems. Cimarex really isn't a very big one for us other than their joint operations with Devon in the Cana-Woodford. So there are changes in the STACK that (ph) don't really impact us. And Marathon is far more active on our dedicated acreage for crude than they are for gas. And as you know, our crude system in Oklahoma is just getting up and running. This will be, I guess, the third full quarter of operations will be the quarter we're in right now. But look beyond that and you're thinking about Encana as successor to Newfield. You're thinking about Roan down in the merge (ph). You're thinking about a portfolio of smaller publics and private companies all over the play.

I mean we have the largest market share in the STACK today. I don't see that changing. And while there's not a ton of acreage left to be up for grabs in the STACK, I think that over the last couple of years we've won more than our fair share of what is up for grabs. And I don't see that changing, and that's -- Mike likes to talk about our purposely built platforms. That's because we have the biggest system in the play and a very expansive footprint. It sets us up to win more than our fair share of what's left dedication (ph).

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

But, Jeremy, to answer your question longer term, the plan we've laid out is completely focused on executing on what we have today. So it's not -- there's not an assumption of greater market share or pulling this customer. It's about executing on the customers we have today and focused execution around that.

Jeremy Bryan Tonet -- JPMorgan Securities LLC -- Analyst

That's helpful. Thanks. And I see in the PR you guys have kept the language as far as with -- your funding plans being increasingly self-funding there, but just wondering for the portion that's not, if that's going to be -- how do you think about going for more equity issuance on the ATM versus non-core asset sales kind of balancing those two.

Eric David Batchelder -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hey, Jeremy, it's Eric. That's a great question. I think that one of the things that occurs to me as I hear Mike and Ben talk about purposely built assets, we have purposely built balance sheet as well. As I'm sure you're aware, late last year we put in an $850 million term loan, which allowed us to provide over $1.6 billion of liquidity coming into 2019 on our revolving credit facility and so when we think about the combination of those two pieces as well as the excess cash flow from the business, we feel very good about the liquidity and financial flexibility to execute on the plan that we talked about in terms of these quick-to-return cash growth projects that Mike and Ben have been referencing. And we can do that in a way that isn't dependent on the capital markets.

As we've talked about in the past, though, we will certainly keep the ATM option open because we want to make sure we have all the available levers to pull on, and we'll continue to monitor that. But as you saw in 2018, we issued less than $50 million of equity on that.

So as it relates to non-core asset sales, again those are very small assets that are off the run and truly non-core that perhaps most of you may not even be familiar with, and we'll continue to evaluate those in the context of everything else.

Jeremy Bryan Tonet -- JPMorgan Securities LLC -- Analyst

Great. One last one if I could, just coming back to the STACK. Looks like Thunderbird move back just one quarter. Just wondering if that's timing, being capital efficient, and matching timing with producer activity there, or anything else that's happened?

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

No, it's a minor delay and the construction process is all it is. As you appreciate, when you're doing $100 plus million projects, not everything goes on the day that you'd like it to. So it was scheduled to be late in the second quarter -- pardon me, in the first quarter. Now it's going to be a little bit into the second quarter. We're looking at a delay of a few weeks driven by contractor and vendor issues, same thing that a lot of -- a lot of us are dealing with in this industry.

Jeremy Bryan Tonet -- JPMorgan Securities LLC -- Analyst

Great. That's it for me.

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

But to pick up, though, on where you might go next, I have no concern whatsoever at being able to handle the gas during the few weeks of delay, either between our own assets or a portfolio of offloads (ph) that we have with others in the play. I have no concern at all about being able to handle the volume.

Jeremy Bryan Tonet -- JPMorgan Securities LLC -- Analyst

Great. That's it for me. Thanks for taking my questions.

Operator

The next question will be from Spiro Dounis of Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.

Spiro Michael Dounis -- Credit Suisse Securities LLC -- Analyst

Hey, good morning, everyone. Maybe just want to go back to some of Devon's comments, if we could, quickly. I guess some of the things that came out of the release was just around this renewed focus in the Delaware. And so I know while you're investing heavily in the Permian, Oklahoma is still the largest bucket for CapEx. And so I guess is there an appetite or an ability to divert more CapEx to the Permian I guess instead of Oklahoma over time?

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

Well, I'll start and then Mike may want to add on. Spiro, it's Ben. We love our Permian business and we are investing there and we're investing there to support Devon. And the big area that we are investing in right now is our Avenger system, which is in service. It serves the Todd area of the Delaware Basin. And as of this morning, we're moving about 20,000 barrels a day of crude for them, and we expect to see that grow because Todd is one of their biggest focus items as a company this year.

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I'd also say we love the -- we love the diversity of producers we have out there too. And you see the continued growth we expect in the Delaware, not only over '19, but over the next three years. So we feel we're in great position with that portfolio of customers. And with Devon, go back to their presentation on Todd, 20 wells and a high focus, and that's stuff we're moving today and we'll continue to move and grow.

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

If we widen the lens a bit on the Delaware, the second phase, the Lobo III plant is just about to come online, what we call Lobo III-X (ph) that will take us up to 375 million cubic feet a day of processing capacity. And I think we have good line of sight to seeing continued growth in that asset for the long term.

Spiro Michael Dounis -- Credit Suisse Securities LLC -- Analyst

Got it. Appreciate that color. Switching gears a bit here, and sorry if I missed it in your prepared remarks. But I think you're still pursuing three options for expanding your fractionation offering. I guess any update you can provide there and are you leaning in any particular direction?

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

Yeah, let me start again. Mike may want to add on. So when you think about our fractionation position, the first piece that comes into play is Cajun-Sibon III. That'll be online in the first half of this year. And at that point, we'll have access to a 193,000 barrels of nameplate capacity depending on composition, everything else, 180,000 barrels a day, 185,000 barrels a day is what we expect, OK.

Then you get into 2020 and you have two more things happen. First is, as you know, we own 38.75% (ph) of Gulf Coast fractionators in Mont Belvieu, which is 56,000 barrels a day net. That capacity has been under contract to a third party. That contract expires at the end of this year. And we're working with that third-party to decide how much capacity they want and how much capacity we want at GCF. But we certainly expect we're going to have a considerable amount of capacity to use for our equity volumes at GCF and Belvieu.

Then the third piece, and Mike alluded to this in his prepared remarks, is this quarter we signed a medium-term fractionation deal with a third-party fractionator in Louisiana that we are able to access that most others are not able to access. And because of that we were able to do that at very attractive rates. So when you stack those three pieces up, we don't see a need for fractionation capacity for our equity volumes until the second half of 2021. And so that's going to afford us some flexibility to see how the fractionation market develops because with everyone building them two at a time, I think it'd be good to see how the volume curve that everyone expects actually develops over time before we make a decision about building our own asset.

The second thing I'd say is don't be too focused on fractionation as our next step on NGLs in Louisiana, because again, as Mike alluded to in his prepared remarks, fractionation is one piece of the puzzle. Another piece of the puzzle is purity pipeline projects like our Ascension JV that we did with Marathon a couple years ago. Another element can be expansion of our LPG export capability. We had record LPG export volumes this past year, but it's still fairly small relative to others, and we are looking at ways that we can make that much bigger.

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I think the thing to take away there is that I think people in the last quarter heard Cajun-Sibon III and were looking at it in isolation and were expecting maybe a bigger project. But we've set this (ph) up to ensure we make good capital-efficient decisions while preserving optionality for that next leg of growth, and I think Ben set that up well, meaning that most people did not think about the excess third-party fractionation that already existed in Louisiana and what we did was allow ourselves to utilize that at effective rates versus the market in Mont Belvieu or newbuild. And like Ben mentioned, this positions us well for that next leg of decision, which is all those opportunities. And so I know we're solely focused on fractionation a lot of times, but I would say is that portfolio has equal options of happening and it's not just one of those.

Spiro Michael Dounis -- Credit Suisse Securities LLC -- Analyst

Understood. Appreciate the color. Thanks, guys.

Operator

(Operator Instructions) The next question will be from T.J. Schultz of RBC. Please go ahead.

Torrey Joseph Schultz -- RBC Capital Markets LLC -- Analyst

Hey, guys. Good morning. I think just -- you hit on most of the stuff in Oklahoma. Just one follow-up, your assumption is based on a field development of six wells per section. What is the impact if there is any really -- if field development is at something less than six wells per section? I think Devon was saying four to six wells. So just want to understand the sensitivity to that for you all, if there is any.

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

Yeah. Hey, T.J. It's Ben. If that were to be the case, there would not be a near-term impact. What it would mean would be a reduction in long-term inventory. But given that Devon and others who we do business with have multi-decades, in some cases, inventory, I don't think that would be a near-term concern. But I would also say that given the results that we've seen, the near-term results that we've seen from Devon, the Safaris, the Northwoods the Pony Express wells, Safari and Northwoods were five infills with a parent in the section, so that's six. Scott was five wells with a parent in the section, so that's six. Those have all been really good results.

And so our expectation is on average across the field we'll see about six wells per section. Some places, like as you go farther to the northwest up to where like Chipmunk and Faith Marie are you're going to have fewer wells in the section, but they're going to be really big dynamite wells. Some areas -- perhaps some operators are going to be able to put eight or even more wells in, but average across the play it looks like six and we feel good about that number.

Torrey Joseph Schultz -- RBC Capital Markets LLC -- Analyst

Okay, great. And then I just want go back to what you were talking about before on the kind of frac solutions. And I guess the comment on the evolving dynamics there and kind of waiting to see how the volume curve develops, I just want to square that with the three-year CapEx guidance you all gave previously. Was there a frac solution in that number before and maybe that's being replaced with some of these other purity projects or expansions? Just trying to understand what's all in that kind of three-year CapEx number.

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, it's Mike. Let me give you an overview just to make sure we're all level set on how to think about this and then I'll let Ben walk through details. But we keep referencing this $1.2 billion to $1.5 billion three-year CapEx. 85% of that is well connects and compression, so again blocking and tackling capital around our core positions.

So I mentioned earlier about the Louisiana being upside. Louisiana, as you saw really from 2018 to 2019, really was flat and we've alluded to that. We're going to see over-performance like we did in '18 based on what we're seeing in the demand market, but we believe that is just a tremendous opportunity for that next leg of growth. All the different things we've talked about -- we talked a lot about NGL but equally in gas and crude.

But none of that is included in there. And so what we've tried to do is continue to do capital-efficient decisions to continue to preserve that optionality to make the best and most efficient capitals decision long term for the business. And that's what this Louisiana frac solution has done so far for us because we're utilizing what we have and underutilized markets is step one of the broader solution.

Torrey Joseph Schultz -- RBC Capital Markets LLC -- Analyst

Got it, helpful. Just lastly, any impact to you all from the Grand Prix Pipeline extension into the STACK? Whether that's an option for you all to utilize for takeaway or if it's competition, anything you have considered or have in place?

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

Hey T.J. It's not. If you think back to guess what the summer of '17 we announced our partnership with ONEOK where we committed to ship large majority of our Oklahoma liquids on their system and in return they agreed to a very attractive transportation rate but also to construct a physical connection between their system to the front door Cajun-Sibon. So that's all done, and I don't see that changing and we're seeing the dividends of that pay off today. I think there is a factoid in the operations report that about 50% of Cajun-Sibon volume last year was our equity volumes. I think today we would say that's closer to 60% and the biggest part of that is coming from Oklahoma.

Torrey Joseph Schultz -- RBC Capital Markets LLC -- Analyst

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

And the next question will come from Colton Bean of Tudor, Pickering, Holt. Please go ahead.

Colton Bean -- Colton Bean, Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. -- Analyst

Good morning. So just to follow-up on the discussion there around well spacing. If the up-space (ph) designs that we've seen do contribute to any reduction in core inventory, how does that impact your thinking around capital allocation? I think you've referenced that a lot of this capital is tied to well connects and maybe still less -- little bit less risk of straining (ph) capital there. But just wanted to get the philosophical views.

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

Yeah, Colton, it's Ben. I'll start again and Mike may want to add on. The six wells per section average across the play is something that we've now been expecting for a number of quarters. So that's not news to us. So I would say that the way we think about capital allocation, the six-well average assumption is baked in. It's not a new -- a new factor for us. And I don't see it having any kind of near-term impact. The question that you're ultimately are going with how much room does the play have to run. Even at six wells per, I think we are less than 20% of the total potential locations in the play have been drilled. So there's a lot of room left for the play to ride. I don't see any negative implication on capital allocation for us.

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

No. And I think you can look at Devon's presentation. They referenced a 130,000 net acres ultimately and that doesn't include their Woodford optionality. So I don't think as we sit here today we have concerns about that. But like you referenced in the beginning of your question, all the stuff we're doing is five to six times capital. This is the capital you want us to spend quick to cash, highly effective. And so we feel very good about that.

Colton Bean -- Colton Bean, Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. -- Analyst

Got it. That's helpful. And then just on Louisiana, I'm just looking at the guidance there. Your volumes were effectively flat to up, with a little bit of a step down there in segment profit. Is that primarily ORV or maybe a reduction in the Pelican keep-whole margins?

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

Well, it's a couple of pieces, Colton. One is that we don't expect the processing economics to be quite as robust this year than last year as you touched on there. It's not really keep-whole. It's more -- it's a straddle plant, right. So it's not under contract. If there is no margin, we just don't process it, like a keep-whole contract. So we expect there to be less gas that is economically processable and the gas that is economically processable we expect to have a lower margin associated with it.

Another factor there is -- and this is for the gas. You've covered us a long time. This is an old story. We have some legacy transportation contracts in the north part of our system that are rolling off over time. Those are now almost completely gone. But when you make a '19 to '18 comparison, there is an element of volume commitment exploration that hits us in Louisiana.

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. I think that it's important also to think about this business and performance in '18 versus guidance. You can see that the option for value does not go away. We're just being conservative based on what we're seeing today and how we're thinking about it. The last couple years in Louisiana gas, we've had over-performance both the years and continue to have that option. So it's just more about how we're thinking the business as we're going into this year.

Colton Bean -- Colton Bean, Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. -- Analyst

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

And the next question will be from Dennis Coleman of Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Please go ahead.

Dennis Coleman -- Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. -- Analyst

Hi, good morning. Thank you. I want to just hit on distribution growth a little bit here. You've kept the 5% to 10% guidance range. But I think elsewhere in the commentary you talked about an example where you used 5%. Given sort of just trying to matrix this all, given the coverage range target still sort of to the midpoint of your guidance range, should we be thinking 5% for the -- I guess for the three-year period and sort of that let's you ramp up and achieve the no equity issuance kind of things that you're talking about?

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Hey, Dennis. This is Mike. I'm going to start on something I said to multiple questions. But again, the platform we have sitting here today really allows us to do incredibly effective capital, which drives cash quickly and efficiently, at the five to six times multiple. So our focus, as you can see, is really on value creation. And that's going to be the core driver, and you saw that in '18, ultimately with the over-performance of the business from a cash flow standpoint, from a volume standpoint, from a distribution coverage standpoint. As we move into '19 and think about '19 and also think about that longer-term, I think we want people to hear is that we feel confident in the value creation of the business, and we're very, very focused on ensuring that we're doing the right thing with that, so what is that right capital allocation.

And so as we -- as we stand here today, we've had the 5% distribution growth on ENLC and feel very comfortable with that -- with the growing coverage, which got to 1.24 in the fourth quarter for ENLK. As you look forward, what we want to ensure is how do we -- how do we return value to stakeholders the right way, and that's what we're working through. So you referenced 5% for the next three years. What we're saying is with the business we have and how we see that business going forward, we've talked about that longer-term growth in that business, we have the capability to have distributions 5% or greater, up to 10%. But what we need to do is be very effective on how we think about the capital allocation, is that the right thing to do.

We'll look at that and say is that the best way to return value to stakeholders. Is it to invest in projects at five to six times? Is it best to think about share repurchases, which is a comment the market is starting to think about? And we need to keep an eye on all those. So what I want you to hear, A, is we have the capability to grow distributions between 5% to 10%, but B is we've got to be very smart on capital allocation and returning value to stakeholders. And that's really what's driving us.

Dennis Coleman -- Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. -- Analyst

Okay. That's all I have. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. And ladies and gentlemen, this will conclude our question-and-answer session. I would like to hand the conference back over to Michael Garberding for his closing remarks.

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Denise, for facilitating our call this morning and for everyone on the call today. Thank you for your participation and for your support. We look forward to updating you with our first quarter results on May 1st.

Operator

Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, the conference has concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. At this time, you may disconnect your lines.

Duration: 53 minutes

Call participants:

Kate Walsh -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Barry E. Davis -- Executive Chairman

Michael J. Garberding -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Eric David Batchelder -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Shneur Z. Gershuni -- UBS Securities LLC -- Analyst

Benjamin D. Lamb -- Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

Jeremy Bryan Tonet -- JPMorgan Securities LLC -- Analyst

Spiro Michael Dounis -- Credit Suisse Securities LLC -- Analyst

Torrey Joseph Schultz -- RBC Capital Markets LLC -- Analyst

Colton Bean -- Colton Bean, Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. -- Analyst

Dennis Coleman -- Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. -- Analyst

More ENLC analysis

Transcript powered by AlphaStreet

This article is a transcript of this conference call produced for The Motley Fool. While we strive for our Foolish Best, there may be errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in this transcript. As with all our articles, The Motley Fool does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company's SEC filings. Please see our Terms and Conditions for additional details, including our Obligatory Capitalized Disclaimers of Liability.

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Top 5 Tech Stocks For 2019

tags:LXFT,BLIN ,SIFY,SLAB,GSB,

Twilio Inc (NYSE:TWLO) – Investment analysts at Piper Jaffray Companies issued their Q2 2018 earnings per share (EPS) estimates for Twilio in a note issued to investors on Monday, June 25th. Piper Jaffray Companies analyst A. Zukin forecasts that the technology company will earn ($0.22) per share for the quarter. Piper Jaffray Companies currently has a “Overweight” rating on the stock.

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Several other equities analysts have also weighed in on the company. Robert W. Baird reissued a “buy” rating on shares of Twilio in a research note on Thursday, March 15th. Canaccord Genuity raised their price target on Twilio from $38.00 to $52.00 and gave the stock a “buy” rating in a research report on Wednesday, May 9th. ValuEngine upgraded Twilio from a “hold” rating to a “buy” rating in a report on Wednesday, May 2nd. Monness Crespi & Hardt began coverage on Twilio in a report on Wednesday, April 11th. They set a “buy” rating and a $60.00 price objective for the company. Finally, Dougherty & Co assumed coverage on Twilio in a research note on Tuesday, April 10th. They issued a “buy” rating and a $45.00 price target for the company. Two research analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating, three have issued a hold rating and eighteen have issued a buy rating to the company. The stock currently has a consensus rating of “Buy” and an average target price of $45.44.

Top 5 Tech Stocks For 2019: Luxoft Holding, Inc.(LXFT)

Advisors' Opinion:
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    Luxoft Holding Inc (NYSE:LXFT) has been given an average rating of “Hold” by the fourteen brokerages that are presently covering the company, Marketbeat Ratings reports. Three investment analysts have rated the stock with a sell recommendation, six have given a hold recommendation and five have issued a buy recommendation on the company. The average 1 year price target among analysts that have issued ratings on the stock in the last year is $53.33.

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    Barings LLC lifted its stake in shares of Luxoft Holding Inc (NYSE:LXFT) by 125.1% in the 1st quarter, according to the company in its most recent filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission. The firm owned 348,398 shares of the software maker’s stock after buying an additional 193,657 shares during the quarter. Barings LLC owned about 1.03% of Luxoft worth $14,267,000 as of its most recent filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission.

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Top 5 Tech Stocks For 2019: Bridgeline Digital, Inc.(BLIN )

Advisors' Opinion:
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    Headlines about Bridgeline Digital (NASDAQ:BLIN) have trended somewhat positive on Sunday, Accern Sentiment reports. The research firm ranks the sentiment of news coverage by analyzing more than twenty million news and blog sources in real time. Accern ranks coverage of publicly-traded companies on a scale of negative one to positive one, with scores closest to one being the most favorable. Bridgeline Digital earned a daily sentiment score of 0.17 on Accern’s scale. Accern also gave media coverage about the software maker an impact score of 46.3358005969314 out of 100, indicating that recent news coverage is somewhat unlikely to have an impact on the stock’s share price in the immediate future.

  • [By Alexander Bird]

    Here are the top performers from last week…

    Penny Stock Current Share Price Last Week's Gain Staffing 360 Solutions Inc. (Nasdaq: STAF) $2.58 96.35% IZEA Inc. (Nasdaq: IZEA) $1.65 85.19% ShiftPixy Inc. (Nasdaq: PIXY) $3.35 78.38% MER Telemanagement Solutions Ltd. (Nasdaq: MTSL) $3.31 41.07% IsoRay Inc. (NYSE: ISR) $0.60 38.64% TransGlobe Energy Corp. (Nasdaq: TGA) $3.74 37.76% Actinium Pharmaceuticals Inc. (OTCMKTS: ATNM) $0.27 26.31% Blonder Tongue Labs Inc. (NYSE: BDR) $1.56 24.58% Bridgeline Digital Inc. (Nasdaq: BLIN) $1.51 24.51% Cel-Sci Corp. (NYSE: CVM) $0.91 24.03%

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    BLIN traded down $0.12 during trading on Tuesday, hitting $1.04. 455,300 shares of the company’s stock traded hands, compared to its average volume of 548,370. The company has a current ratio of 0.98, a quick ratio of 0.98 and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.53. Bridgeline Digital has a 12-month low of $0.79 and a 12-month high of $4.45. The company has a market cap of $4.92 million, a price-to-earnings ratio of -4.33 and a beta of 0.14.

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Top 5 Tech Stocks For 2019: Sify Technologies Limited(SIFY)

Advisors' Opinion:
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  • [By Lisa Levin]

    Friday afternoon, the telecommunication services shares rose 2.1 percent. Meanwhile, top gainers in the sector included Intelsat S.A. (NYSE: I), up 11 percent, and Sify Technologies Limited (NASDAQ: SIFY) up 4 percent.

Top 5 Tech Stocks For 2019: Silicon Laboratories Inc.(SLAB)

Advisors' Opinion:
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    Stephens Investment Management Group LLC purchased a new stake in Silicon Labs (NASDAQ:SLAB) during the 1st quarter, according to the company in its most recent Form 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The fund purchased 314,950 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock, valued at approximately $28,314,000. Stephens Investment Management Group LLC owned 0.73% of Silicon Labs at the end of the most recent reporting period.

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  • [By Logan Wallace]

    Rothschild Asset Management Inc. reduced its position in Silicon Laboratories (NASDAQ:SLAB) by 0.2% in the 2nd quarter, according to the company in its most recent 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The institutional investor owned 383,160 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock after selling 627 shares during the quarter. Rothschild Asset Management Inc.’s holdings in Silicon Laboratories were worth $38,163,000 as of its most recent SEC filing.

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  • [By Joseph Griffin]

    OppenheimerFunds Inc. increased its holdings in Silicon Laboratories (NASDAQ:SLAB) by 8.7% in the first quarter, HoldingsChannel reports. The institutional investor owned 302,063 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock after purchasing an additional 24,207 shares during the quarter. OppenheimerFunds Inc.’s holdings in Silicon Laboratories were worth $27,155,000 as of its most recent SEC filing.

Top 5 Tech Stocks For 2019: GlobalSCAPE, Inc.(GSB)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Lisa Levin]

    Check out these big penny stock gainers and losers

    Losers Akorn, Inc. (NASDAQ: AKRX) fell 32.7 percent to $13.25 in pre-market trading after Fresenius terminated its merger deal with Akorn. Chicago Bridge & Iron Company N.V. (NYSE: CBI) fell 15.7 percent to $12.30 in pre-market trading. Subsea 7 confirmed a $7.00 per share proposal to acquire Mcdermott, pending termination of merger agreement with CB&I. Myomo, Inc. (NYSE: MYO) fell 9 percent to $3.65 in pre-market trading after rising 11.39 percent on Friday. Hasbro, Inc. (NASDAQ: HAS) fell 8 percent to $88.36 in pre-market trading after the company reported weaker-than-expected results for its first quarter on Monday. SunPower Corporation (NASDAQ: SPWR) fell 7.1 percent to $9.00 in pre-market trading. Endeavour Silver Corp. (NYSE: EXK) shares fell 5.9 percent to $2.88 in pre-market trading after declining 3.16 percent on Friday. Mattel, Inc. (NASDAQ: MAT) shares fell 5.5 percent to $12.25 in pre-market trading. Valeritas Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: VLRX) shares fell 5.1 percent to $2.96 in pre-market trading after rising 76.27 percent on Friday. GlobalSCAPE, Inc. (NYSE: GSB) fell 5.1 percent to $3.57 in pre-market trading. Fresenius Medical Care AG & Co. KGaA (NYSE: FMS) shares fell 4.1 percent to $49.93 in pre-market trading. Oasis Petroleum Inc. (NYSE: OAS) fell 4.1 percent to $9.75 in pre-market trading. SunTrust Robinson Humphrey downgraded Oasis Petroleum from Hold to Sell

Top 5 Growth Stocks To Invest In 2019

tags:BWLD,MED,TBI,JWN,ISRG,

The global market for alternative energy soared to $1.35 trillion last year, and that's just the beginning of this explosive industry growth.

For savvy investors, right now is the perfect time to get in early on alternative energy investments as renewable energy begins overtaking the energy market.

You see, the need for energy is a constant across the globe. And demand for energy is only going up. In fact, the EIA forecasts the demand for energy worldwide will rise another 25% by 2040.

That sort of growth alone makes investing in energy a profitable strategy. But the source of the world's energy is rapidly changing.

The EIA forecasts clean energy investments like solar, wind, and hydro could pass coal and natural gas as the top source for electrical power in the United States by 2040.

Top 5 Growth Stocks To Invest In 2019: Buffalo Wild Wings Inc.(BWLD)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Steve Symington]

    That's not to say it was a quiet day for every stock on the market. With earnings season ramping up, brewing giant Anheuser-Busch InBev (NYSE:BUD) and restaurant chain Buffalo Wild Wings (NASDAQ:BWLD) served as an exercise in contrast as investors reacted to their respective quarterly reports.

  • [By Peter Graham]

    A long term performance chart shows Dave & Busters Entertainment tripling in value before falling back while small cap upscale gentlemen's clubs and restaurant owner RCI Hospitality Holdings, Inc (NASDAQ: RICK) began taking off in 2016 and small cap Buffalo Wild Wings (NASDAQ: BWLD) is being acquired by Arby's Restaurant Group:

Top 5 Growth Stocks To Invest In 2019: MEDIFAST INC(MED)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Logan Wallace]

    MediBloc [QRC20] (MED) is a proof-of-work (PoW) token that uses the HybridScryptHash256 hashing algorithm. It was first traded on January 3rd, 2014. MediBloc [QRC20]’s total supply is 4,097,545,844 tokens and its circulating supply is 2,966,384,100 tokens. MediBloc [QRC20]’s official website is medibloc.org/en. MediBloc [QRC20]’s official Twitter account is @MEDDevTeam. The official message board for MediBloc [QRC20] is medium.com/@MediBloc. The Reddit community for MediBloc [QRC20] is /r/MediBloc and the currency’s Github account can be viewed here.

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    MediBloc (CURRENCY:MED) traded 3.9% lower against the U.S. dollar during the 1-day period ending at 20:00 PM E.T. on June 13th. One MediBloc token can now be purchased for $0.0083 or 0.00000131 BTC on major cryptocurrency exchanges including Coinrail, Gate.io and Bibox. During the last seven days, MediBloc has traded 36.5% lower against the U.S. dollar. MediBloc has a total market cap of $24.58 million and $216,935.00 worth of MediBloc was traded on exchanges in the last day.

  • [By Lisa Levin]

    Medifast, Inc. (NYSE: MED) shares were also up, gaining 25 percent to $124.60 after the company reported strong Q1 results and raised its FY18 guidance.

  • [By Logan Wallace]

    MediBloc [MED] (CURRENCY:MED) traded 11.7% lower against the U.S. dollar during the 1 day period ending at 20:00 PM ET on February 16th. MediBloc [MED] has a total market capitalization of $19.63 million and $281,103.00 worth of MediBloc [MED] was traded on exchanges in the last 24 hours. During the last seven days, MediBloc [MED] has traded down 27.6% against the U.S. dollar. One MediBloc [MED] token can currently be bought for $0.0066 or 0.00000100 BTC on major exchanges including Coinrail, Bibox and Gate.io.

  • [By Lisa Levin]

    Medifast, Inc. (NYSE: MED) shares were also up, gaining 22 percent to $121.06 after the company reported strong Q1 results and raised its FY18 guidance.

  • [By Lisa Levin] Gainers Biostar Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: BSPM) shares rose 35.8 percent to $3.00. Commercial Vehicle Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: CVGI) shares surged 32 percent to $8.94 after reporting upbeat Q1 earnings. Carbon Black, Inc. (NASDAQ: CBLK) gained 29.6 percent to $24.62. Carbon Black priced its IPO at $19 per share. California Resources Corporation (NYSE: CRC) shares rose 26.8 percent to $32.70 following upbeat Q1 earnings. Pandora Media, Inc. (NYSE: P) gained 25 percent to $7.185 after reporting strong quarterly results. Medifast, Inc. (NYSE: MED) shares climbed 23.7 percent to $122.87 after the company reported strong Q1 results and raised its FY18 guidance. Natural Grocers by Vitamin Cottage, Inc. (NYSE: NGVC) rose 23.2 percent to $8.4999 after reporting Q2 results. Portola Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: PTLA) gained 22.2 percent to $41.27 after the FDA approved the company's Andexxa, the only antidote indicated for patients treated with rivaroxaban and apixaban. Shake Shack Inc (NYSE: SHAK) rose 22.2 percent to $57.955 after the company reported upbeat results for its first quarter and raised its FY18 guidance. Atomera Incorporated (NASDAQ: ATOM) jumped 19.7 percent to $6.12 after reporting Q1 results. Super Micro Computer, Inc. (NASDAQ: SMCI) rose 16.4 percent to $21.00 after reporting strong preliminary results for the third quarter. Titan International, Inc. (NYSE: TWI) shares rose 16.4 percent to $12.21 following Q1 earnings. Integer Holdings Corporation (NYSE: ITGR) shares gained 14.9 percent to $63.75 following Q1 results. Control4 Corporation (NASDAQ: CTRL) shares climbed 14.5 percent to $23.98 folloiwng strong Q1 results. B&G Foods, Inc. (NYSE: BGS) climbed 12.6 percent to $25.40 after reporting Q1 earnings. HMS Holdings Corp (NASDAQ: HMSY) shares gained 10 percent to $19.59 after reporting upbeat quarterly earnings. Viavi Solutions Inc. (NASDAQ: VIAV) rose 7 percent to $10.09 following Q3 r

Top 5 Growth Stocks To Invest In 2019: TrueBlue Inc.(TBI)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Motley Fool Transcribers]

    TrueBlue Inc  (NYSE:TBI)Q4 2018 Earnings Conference CallFeb. 07, 2019, 5:00 p.m. ET

    Contents: Prepared Remarks Questions and Answers Call Participants Prepared Remarks:

    Operator

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    American Century Companies Inc. grew its holdings in shares of Trueblue Inc (NYSE:TBI) by 24.4% in the 1st quarter, according to its most recent disclosure with the SEC. The fund owned 95,307 shares of the business services provider’s stock after purchasing an additional 18,680 shares during the period. American Century Companies Inc. owned approximately 0.23% of Trueblue worth $2,468,000 as of its most recent SEC filing.

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Russell Investments Group Ltd. grew its stake in Trueblue Inc (NYSE:TBI) by 21.2% during the first quarter, HoldingsChannel reports. The fund owned 137,178 shares of the business services provider’s stock after purchasing an additional 23,951 shares during the quarter. Russell Investments Group Ltd.’s holdings in Trueblue were worth $3,553,000 at the end of the most recent quarter.

  • [By Logan Wallace]

    Media stories about Trueblue (NYSE:TBI) have trended somewhat positive on Monday, according to Accern Sentiment. The research firm rates the sentiment of news coverage by reviewing more than 20 million news and blog sources in real time. Accern ranks coverage of publicly-traded companies on a scale of negative one to one, with scores closest to one being the most favorable. Trueblue earned a media sentiment score of 0.09 on Accern’s scale. Accern also assigned media stories about the business services provider an impact score of 45.3296498009881 out of 100, meaning that recent news coverage is somewhat unlikely to have an effect on the stock’s share price in the near future.

  • [By Logan Wallace]

    Trueblue (NYSE: TBI) is one of 23 public companies in the “Help supply services” industry, but how does it contrast to its rivals? We will compare Trueblue to similar businesses based on the strength of its analyst recommendations, institutional ownership, valuation, profitability, dividends, earnings and risk.

Top 5 Growth Stocks To Invest In 2019: Nordstrom Inc.(JWN)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By JJ Kinahan]

    This week brings a string of retail results with reports from Macy’s Inc. (NYSE: M) on Wednesday morning and Nordstrom, Inc. (NYSE: JWN) after market close on Thursday. Next week, big-box retailer Target Corporation (NYSE: TGT) and home improvement retailer Lowe’s Inc. (NYSE: LOW) both report before market open on Wednesday, May 23. For a look at what else is going on across markets, check out today’s market update if you have time.

  • [By Adam Levine-Weinberg]

    Nordstrom (NYSE:JWN) never expanded as much as its lower-price competitors, and since all of its stores are profitable, it hasn't felt the need to shrink dramatically. Nevertheless, it is closing stores here and there. Given that the Nordstrom store base is heavily skewed toward the best malls in North America, even a relatively small number of store closures and asset sales could provide a meaningful windfall for the company and its investors.

  • [By Jeremy Bowman]

    Shares of department store stocks, including Macy's (NYSE:M), Nordstrom (NYSE:JWN), Kohl's (NYSE:KSS), and J.C. Penney (NYSE:JCP), were down broadly today after Macy's reported second-quarter earnings this morning. Oddly, Macy's turned in a strong quarter. But the market seemed to see an opportunity to take profits in the sector as department store stocks have already run up considerably so far this year, and fears about the threat from e-commerce persist.

  • [By Lisa Levin]

    Breaking news

    Deere & Company (NYSE: DE) reported weaker-than-expected results for its second quarter. Applied Materials, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMAT) reported stronger-than-expected results for its second quarter, but issued weak sales outlook for the third quarter. Nordstrom, Inc. (NYSE: JWN) reported upbeat results for its first quarter. Comparable-store sales rose 0.6 percent. Boot Barn Holdings Inc (NYSE: BOOT) disclosed a 7.2 million common stock offering.

  • [By Paul Ausick]

    Nordstrom Inc. (NYSE: JWN) reported fourth-quarter and full fiscal-year 2017 results after markets closed Thursday evening. The department store giant posted quarterly diluted earnings per share (EPS) of $0.89 on revenues of $4.7 billion. In the same period a year ago, Nordstrom reported EPS of $1.27 on revenues of $4.32 billion. Fourth-quarter results compare to the consensus estimates for EPS of $1.24 and $4.62 billion in revenue. EPS includes a negative impact of $0.31 per share related to changes in U.S. tax law.

  • [By Taylor Cox]

    Notable Earnings

    Walmart, Inc (NYSE: WMT) Q1 premarket J. C. Penney (NYSE: JCP) Q1 premarket Nordstrom, Inc (NYSE: JWN) Q1 after hours Applied Materials, Inc (NASDAQ: AMAT) Q2 after hours

    IPOs

Top 5 Growth Stocks To Invest In 2019: Intuitive Surgical Inc.(ISRG)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Anders Bylund, Leo Sun, and Demitrios Kalogeropoulos]

    Read on to see why you should forget about bitcoin and Ethereum in favor of Taiwan Semiconductor (NYSE:TSM), eBay (NASDAQ:EBAY), and Intuitive Surgical (NASDAQ:ISRG) -- at least when it comes to serious investments for the long term.

  • [By Motley Fool Staff]

    Stock No. 3: Let's go back to the well. So, April last year what was the "I?" Quick quiz at home? That's right. It was Intuitive Surgical (NASDAQ:ISRG). I own the company, and in front of my gathered fellow Heels last week, I put Intuitive Surgical on this list, as well, so I present it for you again today. It reminds us to continue to add to our winners. It was a winner a year ago. It had a three for one stock split, something that I don't personally care about. I don't think we should spend a lot of time talking about stock splits. I realize some people think they're exciting or are confused by them.

  • [By Danny Vena]

    Robotic surgery pioneer Intuitive Surgical (NASDAQ:ISRG) has been a big winner, up 38% since the beginning of the year. Two companies that haven't been so fortunate are footwear maker Skechers (NYSE:SKX) and flooring retailer Tile Shop Holdings (NASDAQ:TTS), which have fallen 18% and 13% year to date, respectively. Here are some key metrics to watch when these companies report earnings in July.

  • [By Motley Fool Staff]

    In the healthcare world, one of those has to be the impressive quarterly report from Intuitive Surgical (NASDAQ:ISRG). The company increased its revenue by 25%, and accelerated its sales of the da Vinci robotic surgical systems that made it famous. But it's not just the expensive hardware that is allowing it to prosper -- it's that every machine needs a steady supply of the disposable instruments and accessories used during its procedures. The Fools consider the recent numbers, the outlook, and the investment thesis for Intuitive Surgical stock. But in the, say, anti-healthcare space, cigarette slinger Philip Morris International (NYSE:PM) took a big hit as demand slackened in major foreign markets. Sales of its e-cig devices are also not growing the way management had hoped.

Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Wayfair Has a Lot to Prove This Week

After a brief slump at the end of 2018, Wayfair (NYSE:W) stock is back in rally mode heading into its key fourth-quarter 2018 earnings report. Investors have some sound reasons to expect impressive growth results from the home furnishings retailer over the holiday shopping season. The company has been consolidating market share at an accelerating rate for much of the past year, after all.

However, it will take more than just revenue growth to extend Wayfair's rally deeper into 2019. With that caveat in mind, let's look at the main metrics shareholders will be watching in Friday's earnings announcement.

A customer enters credit card information into a laptop.

Image source: Getty Images.

Sales gains

Wayfair's 43% year-over-year sales increase last quarter comfortably surpassed management's outlook for the third straight period. Yet the holiday period brings additional challenges that might make it difficult to produce a fourth consecutive beat. The retailer faces a comparison with a stellar prior-year period that saw sales jump 48%, for one. Meanwhile, competition traditionally spikes across the e-commerce industry during the holiday season as rivals all fight to unload the inventory they've accumulated.

Most investors who follow the stock are expecting sales gains to slow to about 37% to reach $1.97 billion. Looking behind that figure, shareholders will want to see continued improvement in Wayfair's engagement metrics, including a rising customer base, increased average order value, and healthy repeat business. The early indications suggest the company fared well across each of these important areas.

Costs are rising

Growth metrics aren't valuable in isolation, since they don't indicate whether Wayfair is constructing a profitable business from all the merchandise it ships out to shoppers. That's why it's critical to watch gross profit margin and advertising spending, which together will show just how well the company defended its market share from competition.

Wayfair held off major challenges from Overstock and others for most of the year, but executives said in early November that they were prepared to forego short-term profits to match rivals' promotional stances, if necessary. That move would show up in gross profitability falling below the 23% rate from recent quarters. Heavier competition might also force Wayfair to scale up advertising and marketing spending to higher than 12% of sales, which would be constitute another potential red flag for the business.

When will losses stabilize?

When the books close on 2018, investors are expecting the company to post significant annual losses for yet another year. That situation hasn't alarmed Wall Street so far, since it's not hard to see how the elevated spending rates are helping Wayfair build scale in an attractive market that keeps getting bigger. The shipping and marketing platform the organization is creating, for example, should allow it to edge into adjacent product areas, just as it has with bathroom vanities recently.

Those spending needs might increase over the short term since Wayfair's latest growth success is giving CEO Niraj Shah and his team extra confidence to get aggressive in seeking to build global scale before rivals can catch up. Still, investors will want to see at least the outlines of a path toward sustainable profits for the business. The first step in that direction will be when Wayfair predicts stabilized or declining annual losses, which executives may do when they issue their 2019 outlook on Friday.

Sunday, February 17, 2019

Best Clean Energy Stocks To Buy Right Now

tags:DCO,ORAN,LKFN,SYKE,

Australia, one of the world’s biggest users of rooftop solar panels, likely added the most new capacity on record last year as electricity users sought to ease escalating power bills.

A preliminary estimate by Australia’s Clean Energy Regulator of 1.05 gigawatts installed last year would be a record for the country, the government body said in an emailed statement Friday. While subsidies and generous feed-in tariffs helped boost growth earlier this decade, last year’s gains were driven by users seeking to sidestep a surge in the cost of electricity and a push by vendors into the commercial sector, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

Getting Cheaper

Average cost for residential solar power system in Australia is fallling

Source: Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF), Solar Choice

Note: Costs are for a 4kW system after Small-scale Renewable Energy Scheme (SRES) subsidy

Best Clean Energy Stocks To Buy Right Now: Ducommun Incorporated(DCO)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Allianz Asset Management GmbH lessened its stake in Ducommun Incorporated (NYSE:DCO) by 27.9% during the first quarter, according to its most recent Form 13F filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission. The institutional investor owned 35,623 shares of the aerospace company’s stock after selling 13,753 shares during the quarter. Allianz Asset Management GmbH owned approximately 0.31% of Ducommun worth $1,082,000 at the end of the most recent reporting period.

  • [By Shane Hupp]

    Ducommun (NYSE:DCO) had its target price lifted by Canaccord Genuity from $36.00 to $38.00 in a report released on Monday morning. They currently have a buy rating on the aerospace company’s stock.

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    Astronics (NASDAQ: ATRO) and Ducommun (NYSE:DCO) are both small-cap aerospace companies, but which is the better investment? We will compare the two businesses based on the strength of their dividends, risk, earnings, profitability, institutional ownership, valuation and analyst recommendations.

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Astronics (NASDAQ: ATRO) and Ducommun (NYSE:DCO) are both small-cap aerospace companies, but which is the better stock? We will compare the two companies based on the strength of their dividends, valuation, analyst recommendations, profitability, risk, earnings and institutional ownership.

  • [By Money Morning Staff Reports]

    Our first defense stock to own is aerospace and defense giant Ducommun Inc. (NYSE: DCO).

    The defense contractor manufactures components used in commercial, military, and space aircraft. This list includes popular vehicles like the Boeing 737 NG and 777 airliners, the C-17 heavy lift cargo plane, the Apache, Chinook, and Blackhawk helicopters, and the Space Shuttle.

Best Clean Energy Stocks To Buy Right Now: Orange(ORAN)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Joseph Griffin]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Orange (ORAN)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Shane Hupp]

    Bank of America Corp DE boosted its holdings in Orange SA (NYSE:ORAN) by 5.9% in the second quarter, according to the company in its most recent Form 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The firm owned 5,916,094 shares of the technology company’s stock after purchasing an additional 330,125 shares during the quarter. Bank of America Corp DE owned approximately 0.22% of Orange worth $98,621,000 at the end of the most recent quarter.

  • [By Shane Hupp]

    ValuEngine downgraded shares of Orange (NYSE:ORAN) from a buy rating to a hold rating in a research report released on Monday morning.

    ORAN has been the topic of several other reports. Zacks Investment Research cut Orange from a hold rating to a sell rating in a research report on Wednesday, April 25th. BNP Paribas raised Orange from an underperform rating to a neutral rating in a research report on Tuesday, January 23rd. Two analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating, three have given a hold rating and two have given a buy rating to the stock. Orange has a consensus rating of Hold and an average price target of $19.00.

  • [By Anders Bylund, Timothy Green, and Dan Caplinger]

    The trick is to separate high-quality income generators from their lower-quality peers. So we asked a few of your fellow investors here at The Motley Fool to share their best dividend ideas with yields of 4% or more. Read on to see why they recommend tech titan International Business Machines (NYSE:IBM), international telecom Orange (NYSE:ORAN), and energy giant ExxonMobil (NYSE:XOM).

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Orange (ORAN)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

Best Clean Energy Stocks To Buy Right Now: Lakeland Financial Corporation(LKFN)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Logan Wallace]

    Lakeland Financial (NASDAQ:LKFN) and Live Oak Bancshares (NASDAQ:LOB) are both small-cap finance companies, but which is the superior investment? We will contrast the two businesses based on the strength of their institutional ownership, risk, dividends, analyst recommendations, profitability, earnings and valuation.

  • [By Shane Hupp]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Lakeland Financial (LKFN)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Shane Hupp]

    Vaughan Nelson Investment Management L.P. lifted its position in shares of Lakeland Financial Co. (NASDAQ:LKFN) by 3.6% during the 1st quarter, according to its most recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The institutional investor owned 878,934 shares of the financial services provider’s stock after purchasing an additional 30,687 shares during the quarter. Vaughan Nelson Investment Management L.P. owned approximately 3.48% of Lakeland Financial worth $40,634,000 as of its most recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

  • [By Max Byerly]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Lakeland Financial (LKFN)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

Best Clean Energy Stocks To Buy Right Now: Sykes Enterprises, Incorporated(SYKE)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Max Byerly]

    Raymond James & Associates boosted its position in shares of Sykes Enterprises, Incorporated (NASDAQ:SYKE) by 29.5% in the 2nd quarter, according to its most recent filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission. The institutional investor owned 67,982 shares of the information technology services provider’s stock after acquiring an additional 15,471 shares during the period. Raymond James & Associates owned about 0.16% of Sykes Enterprises worth $1,957,000 as of its most recent SEC filing.

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    Barrington Research reiterated their hold rating on shares of Sykes Enterprises (NASDAQ:SYKE) in a research note issued to investors on Thursday morning.

  • [By Logan Wallace]

    Wells Fargo & Company MN boosted its stake in Sykes Enterprises, Incorporated (NASDAQ:SYKE) by 0.5% during the second quarter, according to its most recent 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The institutional investor owned 1,209,615 shares of the information technology services provider’s stock after buying an additional 5,839 shares during the quarter. Wells Fargo & Company MN owned approximately 2.83% of Sykes Enterprises worth $34,813,000 at the end of the most recent reporting period.

Saturday, February 16, 2019

Antero Resources Corporation Network, Inc. (AR) Q4 2018 Earnings Conference Call Transcript

Logo of jester cap with thought bubble with words 'Fool Transcripts' below it

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Antero Resources Corp. (NYSE:AR)Q4 2018 Earnings Conference CallFebruary 14, 2019, 11:00 a.m. ET

Contents: Prepared Remarks Questions and Answers Call Participants Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good day, and welcome to Antero Resources Fourth Quarter and Year End 2018 Earnings Conference and Webcast. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the * key followed by 0. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press * then 1 on your touchtone phone. To withdraw your question, please press * then 2. Please note this event is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to Sir Michael Kennedy, Vice President of Finance and Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Michael Kennedy -- Vice President of Finance and Head of Investor Relations

Thank you for joining us for Antero's fourth quarter 2018 investor conference call. We'll spend a few minutes going through the financial and operational highlights and then we'll open it up for Q&A. I'd also like to direct you to the homepage of our new website at www.anteroresources.com, where we have provided a separate earnings call presentation that will be reviewed during today's call.

Before we start our comments, I'd like to first remind you that during this call, Antero management will make forward-looking statements. Such statements are based on our current judgments regarding factors that will impact the future performance of Antero and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond Antero's control. Actual outcomes and results could materially differ from what is expressed, implied, or forecast in such statements. Today's call may also contain certain non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to our earnings press release for important disclosures regarding such measures including reconciliations for the most comparable GAAP financial measures.

Joining me on the call today are Paul Rady, Chairman and CEO and Glen Warren, President and CFO. I will now turn the call over to Paul.

Paul Rady -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Mike. And thank you to everyone for listening to the call today. In my comments, I'm going to review our 2018 development activity including the cost efficiencies we have achieved and discuss our recently announced 2019 capital budget and flexible long-term development outlook. Glen will then highlight our fourth quarter and full year financial achievements and discuss the expected change in financial reporting to decosolidated Antero Midstream from AR following the simplification. Glen will also touch on our 2018 proved reserves and provide some additional color around our long-term outlook and firm transportation portfolio.

Let's begin by discussing the efficiency improvements we made during the quarter and throughout 2018. Once again, Antero set new operational records during the fourth quarter. Looking at slide number 4 titled Drilling and Completion Efficiencies During the Fourth Quarter, completion stages per day in the Marcellus set another company record for a full quarter, averaging 5.7 stages per day. For the full year of 2018, completion stages per day in the Marcellus averaged 5.2 stages per day, which was an increase of 1 full stage per day from the 2107 average of 4.2 stages per day.

Looking at our 2019 budget, we are assuming 5.2 stages per day. So, this is certainly an area we think we can out-perform resulting in additional well cost savings. To provide some detail on these savings, an increase of 1 additional stage per day would result in about $200 thousand of savings per well.

Moving on to some of our recent operational results. During the fourth quarter, we turned to sales several outstanding Marcellus liquids-rich pads. One particular pad was a 10 well pad with an average lateral length of 9700 feet and an average Btu of 1230. This pad produced approximately 195 million cubic feet equivalent per day during the first 60 days, or 19.5 million cubic feet equivalent per day per well. The liquids rate on this pad was nearly 10,100 barrels a day during the first 60 days, consisting of 1400 barrels of oil, 5700 barrels a day of C3-plus NGLs, and 3000 barrels a day of recovered ethane representing about a 25% ethane recovery.

Another strong data point from the quarter was from a well we completed in our highest Btu regime that was drilled with a lateral length of nearly 15,100 feet. This well produced a 60-day rate of nearly 29 million cubic feet equivalent per day, including approximately 2100 barrels of total liquids.

As we enter 2019, we like where we are positioned from both a scale and commodity diversification standpoint. As illustrated on slide number 5 titled Antero's Balance Position on The Commodities Spectrum, we are the largest NGL producer in the US and the fifth largest natural gas producer. This scale across both commodities provides us with the ability to manage through commodity price volatility and prosper with an increase in either commodity.

Antero holds 40% of the core undrilled liquids-rich locations in Appalachia, over 2.5 times more than the closest competitor by our analysis. This extensive liquids inventory is a clear competitive advantage.

Now let's turn to our 2019 development plan and long-term outlook, which we announced on January 8th. We are expecting annual production growth during 2019 in the range of 16%-20% while spending within cash flow. Slide number 6 titled Disciplined Long-term Development Plan highlights our production growth through 2023 under multiple commodity price scenarios ranging from $50-$65 per barrel WTI and $2.85-$3.15 per MMBtu NYMEX natural gas pricing. The important take away here is that Antero will remain flexible depending on the commodity price outlook. We will remain disciplined, spending within cash flow in a low case but have the ability to prudently grow production to maximize free cash flow if commodity prices improve, ultimately delivering an appropriate mix of return of capital to shareholders and further deleverage.

To provide some more details on capital and our well costs, I'll point you to slide number 7 titled Path to 2019 Well Cost Efficiencies. On this page, you can see a bridge from our stand-alone Marcellus well costs when we entered 2018 to our target in 2019 for a 12,000-foot lateral. Entering 2018, our stand-alone Marcellus budgeted well costs were $950 per foot. As oil prices rose throughout the year, the well costs were impacted by 6% inflationary costs primarily related to increases in water hauling costs and production facility expenses. We were able to primarily offset the inflation in 2018 with reduced sand costs through self-sourcing and overall completion costs through a 25% increase in stages per day and renegotiated contracts.

Our 2019 target of $930 per foot assumes savings from additional sand self-sourcing contracts, a further increase in stage efficiencies, and optimized water handling, as well as improvements at the Clearwater facility. Further, we expect the D&C capital cost reductions by multiple public operators to date to lead to deflationary pressure on service and material costs.

All that being said, it's important to point out that our 2019 budget does not assume any of these additional operational or deflationary savings I just mentioned. I would also like to mention that these stand-alone well costs include all pad and facilities costs and all flow back water costs, which our peers may not include in their reported well costs.

We remain focused on efficient capital spending in 2019, which will benefit from certain capital expenditures made during the fourth quarter of this last year of 2018. In particular, with better construction weather conditions than we typically see in the latter part of the year, we invested $78 million for pads, roads, and facilities in the fourth quarter. And we now have 18 pads that are in progress and planned to be turned to sales in 2019 and 2020. Additionally, as we discussed in our analyst day in early 2018, we've transitioned to primarily building our pads today on larger footprints. Our larger footprints allow us to be more capital efficient as we are able to operate under different scenarios such as drilling and completing pads concurrently or continuing to produce from wells on one side of the pad while drilling or completing wells on the other side of the pad. This ultimately resulted in a meaningful reduction in cycle time from spud to first sales and results in better alignment between capital spending and cash flow.

Looking ahead to 2019, as a result of the focused spending on pad infrastructure and equipment in 2018, we expect to be at the low end of our previously announced drilling and completion capital budget of $1.3-$1.45 billion on a stand-alone basis and $1.1-$1.25 billion on a consolidated basis.

Turning to slide number 8 titled Mariner East 2 Uplift, we're excited to have ME2 now in service. February represented the first month that we nominated our committed volume of 50,000 barrels a day of propane and butane at the Marcus Hook docks. Based on our contracts in place and current market pricing, we expect to receive a premium to Mont Belvieu pricing of at least $0.05 a gallon at the dock. As illustrated on this slide, this translates into an uplift of about $2-$4 a barrel when compared to the railing to the Mont Belvieu or Conway markets. It's also important to note that, in addition to the $2-$4 per barrel uplift on a netback basis, the price received for the volume shift on ME2 will reflect the price at the dock and the ME2 costs will be recorded as a transportation expense.

If you think about the 52% of WTI realized pricing in the fourth quarter for our C3-plus NGLs, the shift in sales point related to ME2 volume alone would have resulted in about a 7% pick up in realized pricing relative to WTI. When you include the uplift, that adds another 2%-4% on a percent of WTI basis or north of 60% WTI.

We like the position we are now in as the largest NGL producer in the US with significant exposure in the international market out of Marcus Hook. In summary, we had a strong year in 2018 reducing our financial leverage to 2.2 times and we grew production nearly 900 million cubic feet equivalent per day over the last 12 months to over 3 BCF equivalent a day. And also, another accomplishment is that we announced the simplification of our Midstream organization.

Entering 2019, we now have significant scale, product diversification, and a strong balance sheet to manage through commodity price volatility. Our long-term strategy centers on prudent capital deployment, continued focus on full cycle rates of return, and generating free cash flow all while maintaining a strong balance sheet.

With that, I will turn it over to Glen for his comments.

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Paul. In my comments today, I will briefly touch on the expected change to our financial reporting following the simplification transaction, highlight our fourth quarter and full year financial results, and discuss our 2018 reserves. I will also provide some additional thoughts around our 2019 guidance and moderated long-term outlook and finish with a discussion around how we are positioned to succeed in the years ahead.

Let's first talk about our plans to deconsolidated AM from AR from a financial reporting perspective. Upon closing of the Midstream simplification transaction, AR will no longer consolidate AM on its GAAP financial statements but will rather record its interest in AM through the equity method of accounting. We think this is a very good outcome for AR for a number of reasons.

First, it will greatly improve the transparency and disclosure for AR on a stand-alone E&P basis. This will enable investors to more easily compare and contrast AR with its peers without having to dive into the complexities of the consolidated accounting rules. As an example, as of year-end 2018, Antero's consolidated net debt to adjusted EBITDAX was 2.7 times, which is what shows up on financial data screening services such as Bloomberg or FactSet. On a stand-alone E&P basis, which is a more appropriate measure given AM's debt is non-recourse to AR, Antero Resource's stand-alone leverage was 2.2 times or .5x lower than how it is viewed from a street perspective. In our view, this transition will minimize future inconsistencies among analyst, investors, and financial screening services on AR's leverage, EBITDA, capital, and free cash flow to name a few, and therefore significantly improve our transparency.

It is important to point out that AR will still own approximately 31% of new AM upon closing of the simplification transaction assuming the cash and stock mix is received by all parties and that we continue to believe in the benefits of integrated model and visibility and cooperation between our upstream and midstream businesses. With that said, we are excited these changes will occur from an accounting standpoint as we think it is another important step in helping to simplify the story.

Now moving on to the fourth quarter. During the quarter, net production averaged a record 3.213 Bcfe per day, delivering 30% year over year growth and 18% sequential growth including a record 163,000 barrels a day of liquids. Liquids production increased 51% year over year and 25% sequentially reflecting continued emphasis on developing our liquids-rich acreage. Net liquids production included 12,200 barrels a day of oil, 103,000 barrels a day of C3-plus NGLs, and 47,000 barrels of ethane; all new records for Antero.

During the fourth quarter, Antero realized the natural gas price was $3.83 per MCF before hedges, representing a $0.19 per MCF premium to the average NYMEX Henry Hub price. We expect to continue delivering pure leading natural gas realizations in 2019 as reflected in our guidance for natural gas realizations before hedges at a $0.15-$0.20 per MCF premium to Henry Hub.

As we announced in December, during the fourth quarter we did opt to monetize and restructure a portion of our natural gas portfolio for $357 million in net proceeds. This transaction allowed us to further deliver while maintaining upside to the natural gas strip in 2019.

Our resulting hedge portfolio is shown in slide number 9 protects 100% of 2019 and 55%-60% of 2020 targeted natural gas production with an average floor of $3 per MMBtu. It is notable that we remain the only publicly traded US producer that is 100% hedged on expected natural gas production in 2019.

Moving on to liquids pricing during the quarter, we realized an unhedged C3-plus NGL price of $30.92 per barrel. As Paul previously highlighted, we expect our realized NGL prices to strengthen on a relative basis to Mont Belvieu with ME2 now in service. This is an important piece to our business in 2019 and beyond as every $5 per barrel increase in realized C3-plus NGL prices results in an incremental $180 million in cash flow based on the midpoint of our 2019 C3-plus NGL production guidance of 100,000 barrels per day.

Now let me touch a bit more on our long-term outlook and what that means relative to our firm transport portfolio. As outlined in slide number 10 titled Attractive Firm Transportation Portfolio, we are targeting a 10%-15% production growth CAGR through 2023; so, the next five years beyond this year. As you can see on this slide, all of our committed firm transportation is now in service. This provides us with significant visibility into our expected pricing for the foreseeable future.

For 2019, we are forecasting a $0.15-$0.20 premium to NYMEX on our gas production and expect to realize premiums to NYMEX for the next several years as you can see in green on that chart. While we are not fully utilizing the pipelines today, we expect our net marketing expense to decline from a manageable peak in 2019 of approximately $0.20 per Mcfe to less than $0.05 per Mcfe by 2022 when we expect to fill our firm transport, other than the low-cost regional FTE we are committed to.

As you can see, our net marketing expense is essentially fully offset by the benefits that this portfolio provides by delivering our volumes into premium-priced regions. These estimated net marketing expenses exclude the potential for third-party mitigation that Antero has taken advantage of in prior periods by marketing third party gas and capturing the spread. Further, our hedge portfolio to market value of approximately $600 million, which was put in place at the same time as these FTE commitments, more than offsets the $500 million of projected net marketing expense. In summary, we expect to continue realizing premiums to NYMEX and declining net marketing expenses as we fill our commitments over the next several years, a great pathway to growth.

Shifting gears a bit, I would like to discuss some of the takeaways from my 2018 reserves. As highlighted on slide number 11 titled Consistent Reserve Growth and Attractive Recycle Ratio, we increased 2018 proved reserves 4% from 2017 including a 22% increase in proved reserves. The PV-10 of our proved reserves at SEC pricing was $12.6 billion and the PV-10 of our proved developed reserves was $8.4 billion.

As we look ahead to the development of our reserves, it is important to point out that the future costs associated with this development are expected to be approximately $0.48 per Mcfe on a stand-alone basis or $0.44 on a consolidated basis. When you compare this expected development cost with our fourth quarter actual results, we are generating a very attractive unhedged recycle ratio of 3.6 times. Overall, we were pleased with the growth of our 2018 reserves and look forward to continuing generating additional value based on our long-term outlook.

Before I conclude, I did want to mention that we recently added a natural gas fundamentals presentation to our website. Slide number 12 provides a summary of this presentation. In short, we do not believe that the natural gas strip appropriately reflects market fundamentals. A strong demand combined with the sheer magnitude of the base decline is underappreciated by the market. Secondly, there are a number of technical factors that would depress the long-term strip. Further, in an effort to align spending with cash flow projections, both Appalachian and Permian producers are reducing 2019 capital budgets which will result in lower supply growth in 2019 with an even more meaningful supply impact in 2020. If you've not yet taken a look, we invite you to visit our website to review our macro thoughts on natural gas in more detail.

As we enter 2019 with significant scale, low leverage, and well hedged, we are well positioned to navigate through changing commodity price environments. We look forward to closing the Midstream simplification in early March, which will provide Antero Resources with a minimum of $300 million in cash. We expect to remain disciplined on our 2019 development plan throughout the year, targeting the lower end of the CapEx guidance range, a plan that represents a 20% reduction in expected spending levels compared to 2018.

On the liquids front, we are excited about Mariner East 2 being placed in service which allows us to move nearly half of our C3-plus NGL production to the export market and realize stronger NGL netback pricing than what we had been receiving over the last several years. We are focused on executing on the 2019 plan that we believe will deliver superior returns to shareholders over the long-term while also investing within cash flow.

With that, I will now turn the call over to Paul for a few more comments.

Paul Rady -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Glen. Before we turn it over to the operator for questions, we'd like to make a few comments regarding a recent piece of news regarding our recent $3.15 million settlement with the EPA and the Department of Justice regarding an environmental violation. We were a little disappointed that the Department of Justice press release did not clarify that the incidents occurred just short of 9 years ago in June of 2011. We do take our company reputation seriously and are extremely proud of our stellar operating track record.

I'd like to turn the call over to Al Schopp, our Chief Administrative Officer and Senior Vice President West Virginia, to provide a little bit more detail. Al?

Al Schopp -- Chief Administration Officer and Senior Vice President West Virginia

Thank you, Paul. This is Al Schopp. I would just concur with Paul in that we were a little disappointed in the characterization and the people who really did not take the time to understand the story.

Back in spring of 2011, we had hired third-party consultants to do our delineations, which is the prudent thing to do. Midstream had hired some and Upstream had hired some. It ended up at one of our sites that had the pressure pad being built and well pad being built, and there was a disagreement about what the interpretation of ephemeral and intermittent streams and some wetlands would be back in that time. There was a lot going on in the industry at that time. You probably recollect seeing some others, XPO, Chesapeake and alike, had also gone through this characterization problem. The EPA did come out and they clarified how they would like those to be interpreted and had cited about 9 of our sites for what they called "fill into stream to wetland", which is basically dirt when you're building the construction pad or the compressor pad.

And so, at that time, we then took what the EPA wanted as interpretations and we voluntarily went back through to 2009, to the very first pad we had ever built, and we used this more stringent set of criteria to reevaluate every site that Antero had ever built. Now, from June 30, 2011, when we met with EPA and volunteered to go backwards, we changed our entire process, our entire delineation consultant program to make sure we had one EPA approved consultant and that they certainly understood the requirements of the EPA for ephemeral intermittent streams and associated wetlands. And from that time forward, the only environmental issues we've really had in that extent have been with slips.

We have received hundreds of Army Corp of Engineer permits with all of our delineations and have had no problem since June 30, 2011. So, basically the two items that were put out there was a $3 million penalty and then they said associated reclamation costs of $8 million. We basically believe that the reclamation costs over the next 5 years will be closer to $3-$4 million. Some of the sites, literally, the estimates are $7 thousand. Most of these, if not all of them, will be in our normal course of reclamation of the pads. These pads are now 10 years old. We have not been able to reclaim them in the ordinary course of business because of the ongoing negotiation with the Department of Justice. We now will be able to do that over the next three years.

The other part of what they call their $8 million, which we did not give them that number, is we need to determine what mitigation. We're still looking for what that mitigation would be, but we do believe it would be under $5 million. And so, certainly, we believe that this whole project will be done in under the $8 million that they talked about.

So, those issues, unfortunately, have been mischaracterized I would say a good part in the press. This is not fracking waste. This is not frack dumping. This was literally dirt into an intermittent or ephemeral stream for the most in the spring of 2011. We certainly are very proud of our environmental record here in West Virginia since that time of mid-2011.

Paul Rady -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Al. And now we'll turn the call over to the operator for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press * then 1 on your touchtone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press * then 2.

Our first question comes from Subash Chandra with Guggenheim Partners. Please, go ahead.

Subash Chandra -- Guggenheim -- Managing Director

Yeah. Hi. Good morning. Maybe for Paul. The marketing expense, just curious how I assume you mitigate a good amount of that unused FTE capacity cost by either subletting capacity or purchasing gas. I'm just curious as you look into 2019, does anything change those dynamics, such as converging basis dips in the Basin, or slower growth objectives from third parties?

Paul Rady -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, that's a good question, Subash. So, in our little further back past when there were pretty strong spreads, we were able to buy third-party gas of as much as 0.5 Bcf a day and move it through our pipe and collect the spread. So, we were offsetting a good many tens of million dollars of demand charges. At the moment, there's approximately 2.5 Bcf of available capacity really between the Mountaineer Xpress pipe and NEXUS, and so the basis differentials have narrowed.

We do see as we and our peers grow that the pipe will begin to fill again and if so, we do expect to see basis differentials and spreads improve. In the meantime, we are taking on certain third parties and moving gas around just to optimize our transportation. So, right now, narrow spreads but the pipes will fill over the medium term.

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

And just to be clear on the numbers that we put out there, the net marketing numbers on a per NGL basis, those include no mitigation whatsoever. So, there's no assumption that we buy/sell gas or sublet capacity, Subash. So, that's kind of the worst-case scenario and I think we will probably find some ways to mitigate that.

Subash Chandra -- Guggenheim -- Managing Director

Okay. Got it. I assumed it did. I can go offline on this because when I sort of looked at the 10k you talk about a billion of annual FTE charges, I think there might be some NGLs in there and then I sort of divide by gross production in a year. It works out to about $1 or so, but the math could be off. So, I thought that there was a fair number that was reflected in your guide. But if it isn't, that's even more positive.

Michael Kennedy -- Vice President of Finance and Head of Investor Relations

Yeah, Subash, this is Mike. Your math is off. Simply give me a call and I'll help you out.

Subash Chandra -- Guggenheim -- Managing Director

Will do.

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, that total number is going to be something a little over $200 million in gross dollars this year for a firm that we do not utilize it. So, it's as simple as that. It's very straightforward.

Subash Chandra -- Guggenheim -- Managing Director

Got you. Okay, that's the whole number. Got it. And then, Paul, you mentioned the larger pads and spud to sales improving. Could you sort of give us a frame of reference as to what it has been, what do you think this could do?

Paul Rady -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I think for the very largest pads if you do the drilling one by one, completing one by one, the drill out of the plugs one by one for a 10 or 12 well pad you can really stretch things out 200-300 days before you put it online. And so, with what we call concurrent operations and bigger pads, we can do all three things at once. So, we can drill on one part of the pad and then move the rig over and drill another line of wells while we move the frack spread in. It's conceivable, although we haven't done it yet at least I can't think an example, where we have two frack spreads on the same pad, one working one line of wells, one working the other. We can also do drill outs. We have done this where we have completion drill outs where we're drilling out plugs on different lines of wells at the same time.

How much can we shorten the cycle time? I think we can shorten, let's say at the extreme, of something calculated to 300 days before it can be 180 days now of cycle time. So, on these big pads, which definitely deliver a tremendous amount of production, it does take time to do it. So, with larger pads and I guess I would say also definitely there is a correlation between more stages per day and the larger the pad just because there is so much logistic staging as we deliver sand to the mixers.

Subash Chandra -- Guggenheim -- Managing Director

Okay. Thanks a lot, guys.

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Subash.

Operator

Our next question comes from Sean Sneeden with Guggenheim. Please, go ahead.

Sean Sneeden -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

Hi, good morning, gentlemen. Thanks for taking the questions.

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure.

Sean Sneeden -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

You guys highlight the benefit of Marcus Hook and there is quite a bit of uplift there. Can you help us just kind of understand the marketing dynamics of some of that? Should we be thinking that a lot of those volumes are going to Europe? Sometimes the spreads between Europe and Asia kind of jump around. How should be kind of thing about that over the long-term?

Paul Rady -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

So, we're in our first year of marketing out of Marcus Hook. So, you've got to divide it up a couple of different ways. Two different marketing companies that buy at the dock. So, roughly I think you could say one-third of our product will go to Northwest Europe, another third will go to the Far East, and then the third portion will be LPF in the Atlantic Basin, so that goes to the east coast of South America, west coast of Africa. So, we have it divided up. Certainly, there is freedom as the marketing companies take the shiploads off the dock that they can divert based on indices. But that's it. Third, third, third conceptually. The marketing companies do the logistics and obviously go to the best netbacks.

Sean Sneeden -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

Got it. That's helpful. Can you remind me how you guys think about and what kind of impact there is on some of the longer-term guidance for your assumptions around once you get the full scale out of Marcus Hook what that means for in Basin realizations there?

Paul Rady -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well, that's a good question. It remains to be seen. As we've said, our current net sales price within the sales pool, if we keep the liquids at home, we know one price that it has been historically. When we export out of the dock there is a good uptick that equates to somewhere between $4-$8 a barrel of NGL. So, we know there's a price improvement, but we'll have to see empirically as we drain the Basin, as we make the liquids more scarce, the liquids that get left behind. Because it's roughly half of our liquids will be to Marcus Hook and half will stay within the Basin and take advantage of tighter differentials. We'll just see, but we don't have a track record yet as to all the exporting out of Marcus Hook; what that will do to the net sales price within the Basin. But it should improve it, obviously.

Sean Sneeden -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

Right. Yeah. Just remind us, you haven't definitely assumed any benefit in some of your longer-term guidance. Is that how we should think about it for what remains in Basin?

Paul Rady -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

That's exactly right. So, we've made assumptions on what gets exported, but we've not made any assumptions on improvement on what gets left behind.

Sean Sneeden -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

Got it. That's very helpful. Thanks for all the time, guys.

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. Just to follow up on that, we think the Basin is producing about 400,000 barrels a day of C3-plus NGLs. So, when you pull upwards of 100,000 maybe 145,000 barrels a day on the initial ME2 line out of the Basin, that should have a positive impact. That will just improve over time as ME2 gets fully up and running, gets to its full capacity and more is able to be drawn to the water shift.

Operator

Our next question comes from Holly Stewart with Scotia Howard and Weil. Please, go ahead.

Holly Stewart -- Scotia Howard Weil -- Analyst

Good morning, gentlemen.

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Hi, Holly.

Holly Stewart -- Scotia Howard Weil -- Analyst

Maybe Glen, just following up on that last ME2 comment. How much are you flowing today and when do you expect to reach your full capacity on ME2?

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

I believe we're in the 40,000 barrel a day plus today and probably approaching 50,000 barrels on some days. So, we're close to our firm transport capacity on ME2 now.

Holly Stewart -- Scotia Howard Weil -- Analyst

Is there availability for you to do more?

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Could be in the short-term, I think. It's possible depending on how quickly other shippers step up and use their capacity. As we talked about a number of times, we think by year end that Energy Transfer will have this fully opened, the 20 inches all the way. Then the capacity steps up from 145,000 barrels a day to 275,000 barrels a day hopefully by year end this year, maybe sooner.

Paul Rady -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

And we think that, Holly, we'd have certain tranches that we can exercise our overflow rights. So, we could move more should we decide to.

Holly Stewart -- Scotia Howard Weil -- Analyst

Great. That's good color. Maybe just kind of looking at this slide 4, you highlight a lot of company records versus where you ended up in 4Q. Just thinking about what's implied in the guidance right now, even on the completion stages per day, your record is almost twice what you did in 4Q. So, can you just maybe talk through a few of those items and what's implied in the guidance currently and just kind of bridging that gap for us?

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, Holly. Thanks. In the guidance, we're assuming 5.5 stages a day, I believe. Right?

Paul Rady -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

5.2.

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

5.2. Excuse me, 5.25 a day in the guidance. So, we feel good about being able to beat that. I think if you can add another stage a day, that saves about $200 thousand per well. So, if we can get that 5.25 to 6.25 throughout the year then that would save another $200 thousand per well.

Holly Stewart -- Scotia Howard Weil -- Analyst

Got it. That's a good color. Finally, just sort of a little higher level, Paul, on the last. I see presentations are taking a bit more of a bullish stance on gas. I'm kind of curious how you're balancing this versus the out year hedge book.

Paul Rady -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well, the out year hedge book we're certainly looking at beyond 2020. We still have some volumes hedged there. We, like so many others, watch pretty closely rig count in the different basins. We're watching production by the different basins. We've seen things level off a little bit over the last few months. Is that just winter conditions?

But as our natural gas piece that Glen and the finance department put out there, there is a big decline on the nation's reserve base, and it has to be replaced of course. It also has to meet the new demand to go from the mid 80s to the low 90s Bcf a day. And that's going to take drilling. So, many of the blaze, about half of the blaze, will be dragged along by liquids, maybe if Scoop Stack, Permian, and NGL producers such as ourselves. But it's really the dry gas plays that are vulnerable and can they make up the other half in the difference in not only overcoming the decline but meeting the growth.

So, we pride ourselves in understanding a lot of different plays and how much inventory might remain and the quality of what people are drilling. Usually quality declines as people drill up their inventory. So, with that, we're watching production itself plus the build up in each of the different basins and we're feeling that there is a reason that prices will need to rise to encourage more drilling and more production. So, with that, we're watching the possibility of hedging in the outer years but looking for just which way to do it and the opportunities that we see out there.

Holly Stewart -- Scotia Howard Weil -- Analyst

Great. That's helpful. Thanks, guys.

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Holly.

Operator

This concludes our question and answer session. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Mr Michael Kennedy for any closing remarks.

Michael Kennedy -- Vice President of Finance and Head of Investor Relations

Thank you for joining us on our call today. If there are any further questions, please feel free to reach out to us. Thanks again.

Operator

The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation and you may now disconnect.

Duration: 46 minutes

Call participants:

Michael Kennedy -- Vice President of Finance and Head of Investor Relations

Paul Rady -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Glen Warren -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Al Schopp -- Chief Administration Officer and Senior Vice President West Virginia

Subash Chandra -- Guggenheim -- Managing Director

Sean Sneeden -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

Holly Stewart -- Scotia Howard Weil -- Analyst

More AR analysis

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