Michael Hennigan
Analyst · Goldman Sachs
John, thanks for that question. Let me start because we get that question often. I'll try and be as clear as I can. First off, it starts with generating cash. I mean, you've heard in our prepared remarks that our 3-year CAGR is about 8%, and our first quarter results on DCF and EBITDA were about 8%. So it starts with generating cash. And then the uniqueness to that cash is we kind of color code the cash into 2 buckets. Those buckets that's continuing, we think is going to be there through all types of markets, and I've called that blue bar cash flows. The cash flows that are there, intermittent, that could be there sometimes, not sometimes, I call red bar cash flows. So, understanding the type of cash flows that we generated is really important to go into our capital allocation framework. And the way I think about the red bar, red bar may not be there all the time, but it is a source of equity. Blue bar, I think of it as an ongoing cash flow that's going to support our distribution growth. And we've said a bunch of times that our preferred method of returning capital is primarily distribution growth because we primarily drive blue bar cash flows in our system. But having the flexibility with red bar for buybacks is also important to us. So when we put that all together, the way we think of our capital allocation framework is: number one, we're going to take care of our assets; number two is we're going to continue to grow our distribution, and that's driven by those blue bar cash flows; number three is we're going to look to invest and continue to grow earnings. And hopefully, you've seen our track record on capital discipline and what it's done to earnings. We're very proud of growing this size partnership at about 8% per year over the last 3 years, and it continued into the first quarter. And then the last piece is our buyback. And although it's fourth in the capital allocation framework, it's still a tool that we have at our disposal, and we continue to think about when that makes the most sense versus when it doesn't. So if you think -- if you step all the way back, we color code the cash flows, we prioritize blue, that's the way we run our business, stable, continuing cash flows that will be there all the time. Those are more targeted towards distributions. You've heard us say we've done 10% distribution increases the last two years, you've heard us say we believe we have strong financial capabilities to continue to grow our distributions, but we also have the tool of buybacks when we think it makes sense. I hope that was helpful.