Remove Amortization Remove Capital Investments Remove Depreciation
article thumbnail

KSL Capital acquires in a $1.4bn deal the owner of 25 U.S. luxury hotels

Private Equity Insights

Its value was 14 times Hersha’s estimated year-to-date earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization of $99m for 2023, according to S&P Capital IQ. KSL has focused on travel and leisure businesses, deploying about $21bn of capital across its equity, credit, and tactical opportunities funds since 2005.

article thumbnail

2 S&P 500 Dividend Stocks With Yields Above 6% That You Can Buy With $100

The Motley Fool

times adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization ( EBITDA ) last year, from 3.19 The heavy investments that built AT&T's 5G network are finally subsiding. Management expects capital investments to shrink from $23.6 Net debt fell to 2.97 times adjusted EBITDA in 2022.

Debt 246
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Is It Too Late to Buy High-Yield Enterprise Products Partners Stock?

The Motley Fool

Not only does the MLP earn an investment-grade rating, but its ratio of debt to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization ( EBITDA ) of 3.1 billion worth of capital investment projects. Should you invest $1,000 in Enterprise Products Partners right now?

article thumbnail

Why Energy Transfer Is My Top Investment for Passive Income

The Motley Fool

An elite income investment Energy Transfer checks all the boxes for me. Roughly 90% of its adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization ( EBITDA ) come from stable, fee-based sources. With growth in capital spending expected to be about $3.1 The MLP also has a well-balanced asset mix.

Investing 246
article thumbnail

Why Enterprise Products Partners Isn't the Same Company It Was 5 Years Ago

The Motley Fool

Investors are no longer quite as positive about funding capital investments in the midstream sector despite the still vital nature of the services it provides to the global economy. The end goal was for Enterprise to replace its use of issuing equity with internal cash flow to fund more of its own capital investment projects.

Companies 246
article thumbnail

Is Kinder Morgan Stock a Buy?

The Motley Fool

This was done because management had to choose between paying the dividend or putting money to work in capital investment projects that would grow the company. This was the case for Kinder Morgan in 2016, when it cut its dividend by roughly 75%.

article thumbnail

Meet the 5.4%-Yielding Dividend Stock That Is Crushing the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite in 2024

The Motley Fool

Kinder Morgan has done a good job of balancing investments and financial discipline. It has continued to reduce its leverage and now plans to finish the year with a net debt-to-adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization ( EBITDA ) ratio of just 3.9.