The Smartest High-Dividend Energy Stocks to Buy With $1,000 Right Now

Key Points

For investors trying to find high-yield stocks that can help supplement their income, the midstream energy space is one of the best sectors to look at. Meanwhile, $1,000 is a good starting point for investors to begin accumulating positions.

The following stocks all have solid opportunities in front of them, but it's worth noting that they all carry similar risks. Pipeline companies are generally considered energy toll roads with minimal exposure to energy prices. However, lower energy prices can eventually cause lower volumes through their systems, and customer stress can lead to contracts being renegotiated in severe situations. The midstream business is also capital intensive, so these companies do carry debt. As such, the stocks are not risk-free investments.

With that said, let's look at three great stocks you can begin accumulating right now.

Energy Transfer

Energy Transfer (NYSE: ET) has one of the highest yields and one of the cheapest valuations in the midstream space. The stock carries a 7.3% yield, while it's valued at a forward enterprise value (EV) -to- EBITDA multiple of just 8.1 times. Before the pandemic, midstream master limited partnerships (MLPs) traded at an average 13.7x EV/EBITDA multiple between 2011 and 2016. While growth may have slowed slightly in the sector, it has begun to pick back up, and the sector as a whole is in some of the best financial shape it has ever been in.

For its part, Energy Transfer got a bit over its skis with debt during the pandemic's height and had to cut its distribution in half. However, it worked quickly to improve its leverage, and its distribution is now higher than before it reduced it in 2020. Last quarter, Energy Transfer declared that its balance sheet was in the strongest position in its history and that it had its highest ever percentage of take-or-pay contracts. For these contracts, it gets paid whether or not a customer uses its pipelines or services.

The company is also seeing a lot of growth opportunities stemming from increased natural gas demand. As such, it has ramped up its growth capital expenditure (capex) spending from $3 billion last year to $5 billion this year. Most of its growth projects will come online late this year or next, giving it a strong runway of growth for the next couple of years.

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