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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. But that's the point of this MLP: It is a yield-focused investment.

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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
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AT&T Expects to Return Another $20 Billion in Cash to Investors by 2027 (Just Not Through a Higher Dividend)

The Motley Fool

The telecom giant expects to generate growing free cash flow during that period, much of which it plans to return to shareholders. However, the additional cash returns won't come from increasing its high-yielding dividend (nearly 5% yield). The base return will come from maintaining its current dividend payment of $1.11

Returns 130
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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. Consider when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005.

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Why SQM, Standard Lithium, and Piedmont Lithium Stocks All Dropped Today

The Motley Fool

Well, assuming that JPMorgan is right about its forecast -- which is not certain -- it could very likely mean that SQM won't earn much of anything for the next three years (its year-to-date losses exceed $655 million) as it continues to depreciate capital investments already made.

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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. Total return assumes the reinvestment of dividends and it changes the story in a big way, as the chart below highlights. and Kinder Morgan wasn't one of them!

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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