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Earnings Call: Q4 2022

Feb 16, 2023

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. My name is Brent, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the DT Midstream fourth quarter 2022 earnings conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question at that time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, again, press star one. Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. Todd Lohrmann, Director of Investor Relations. Sir, please go ahead.

Todd Lohrmann
Director of Investor Relations, DT Midstream

Good morning, welcome, everyone. Before we get started, I would like to remind you to read the safe harbor statement on page two of the presentation, including the reference to forward-looking statements. Our presentation also includes references to non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to the reconciliations to GAAP contained in the appendix. Joining me this morning are David Slater, President and CEO, and Jeffrey Jewell, Executive Vice President and CFO. I'll now turn it over to David to start the call.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Thanks, Todd, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us and for your interest in DT Midstream. During today's call, I'll recap our major accomplishments in 2022, highlight our new disclosures, and provide an update on our major development projects that we are currently executing on. I'll close with some remarks on the macro fundamentals and then turn it over to Jeff to review our financial results and new disclosure details. With that, we had a very successful year in 2022, and I'd like to thank all of our employees for their exceptional performance throughout the year. We delivered full year adjusted EBITDA of $830 million, which exceeded our revised guidance range and represents 14% growth from our 2021 original guidance. Commercially, we executed on numerous organic growth opportunities that will deliver long-term growth and value creation.

Foremost among these are expanding our LEAP asset in the Haynesville by 90% to 1.9 Bcf per day, expanding our Appalachia Gathering System by 20%, terming out contracts on NEXUS and our Washington 10 Storage Complex at attractive rates, and filing our Class VI well permit for our Louisiana CCS project. We also closed on the Millennium Pipeline Acquisition, which makes us a majority owner in the asset. On the construction front, we successfully executed our Stonewall and Appalachia Gathering expansions, the Michigan Gathering conversion project, and a portion of our Blue Union expansion. Finally, we published our inaugural sustainability report and were recognized for our exceptional customer service, receiving the top ranking in the Mastio customer service study for midstream companies. Looking ahead to 2023 and beyond, I'm highly confident in our future growth and financial strength.

Jeff rey will provide the details on our new financial disclosures, including our increased 2023 adjusted EBITDA guidance and a strong early outlook for 2024, our increased quarterly dividend, and our updated five-year capital outlook. Before I pass it off, I'd like to quickly address the natural gas fundamentals given the recent pullback in natural gas prices. Firstly, we remain highly confident in our plan. Our portfolio is well contracted with long-term take-or-pay agreements. Our gathering assets serve Tier 1 resource areas that are well-positioned on the drilling cost curve, and we have no direct commodity exposure. Our assets provide outlet capacity to premium demand markets, which are expected to grow significantly between now and the end of the decade. Our customers continue high levels of activity across both of our regions and are looking forward to the completion of our expansion projects.

Over our 20-plus year history, we have a proven track record of strong performance in downward price cycles and are highly confident in the durability of our business, even in this lower commodity price environment. I'll now turn it over to Jeffrey to walk through our financials and our new disclosure details.

Jeffrey Jewell
EVP and CFO, DT Midstream

Thanks, David, and good morning, everyone. In the fourth quarter of 2022, we delivered adjusted EBITDA of $227 million, which is a $20 million increase from the third quarter. Pipeline segment results were driven by the fourth quarter benefit of the Millennium Pipeline Acquisition, higher short-term revenues at the pipeline joint ventures and Washington 10 Storage, and continued high levels of short-term optimization at LEAP. In total, the pipeline segment results included approximately $7 million of favorable optimization and short-term revenues that resulted from the wide basis differentials across many of our assets. Gathering segment results were driven by higher revenue at Appalachia Gathering System, offset by lower revenues at Susquehanna Gathering and the impact of a planned maintenance outage at one of our Blue Union treating facilities.

Operationally, we hit an all-time high this quarter in total gathered volumes, which averaged approximately 3.1 billion cubic feet a day, driven by the in-service of expansion projects in both regions. Partially offset by lower volumes at Susquehanna. Now on to our new disclosures. We are increasing our 2023 adjusted EBITDA guidance to $880 million-$920 million, which reflects the strength and durability in our base business, as well as the expected contribution from our organic growth projects. The midpoint of our revised range represents 14% growth from our 2022 original guidance. Similar to 2022, our plan for 2023 is built on the expectation that volumes and EBITDA will be stronger in the back half of the year as we execute on our expansion projects.

We will also continue to seek opportunities to optimize the small amounts of uncontracted capacity on our assets. Due to our confidence in our portfolio, we are also providing an early outlook for 2024 adjusted EBITDA of $920 million-$970 million, which represents a 9% annual growth rate from our 2022 original guidance. Our growth plan is underpinned by fully contracted expansions with high levels of take-or-pay and no direct commodity exposure. We remain committed to a growing and durable dividend and have declared a quarterly dividend increase to $0.69 per share, which represents an 8% increase from our prior quarterly dividend. Our 2023 capital investment guidance of $605 million-$690 million reflects a heavier construction period as we execute on our contracted growth projects.

The team is off to a great start this year with all projects on budget and on schedule. We are also providing our new five-year capital outlook of $1.7 billion-$2.2 billion. This new outlook is supported by strong contracted cash flow and a backlog of attractive organic projects. Our updated five-year capital outlook can be fully self-funded with no incremental debt or equity issuances, and we expect to naturally delever as the business grows, which will provide additional balance sheet capacity and further value creation optionality. Preserving our balance sheet strength and financial flexibility continues to be our top priority, with the ultimate goal of achieving an investment-grade rating. We remain committed to our long-term leverage ratio ceiling of 4x and possess strategic options to delever further via project financing at our pipeline joint ventures, which are currently underleveraged.

As of year-end, we had nearly $700 million of available liquidity and no debt maturities until 2027. Our decision framework for deploying distributable cash flow is designed to maximize shareholder value with our options, including deploying capital to accretive organic growth projects that fit our investment criteria, return of capital to shareholders through dividends or buybacks, or paying down debt. I'll now pass it back over to David for more details on our growth opportunity set and closing remarks.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Thanks, Jeffrey. We continue to see significant growth opportunities across our existing asset footprint. Active discussions continue for further expansions of LEAP, we recently executed a five-year term extension on 500 million per day of existing capacity. This contract expansion demonstrates the strong market support for this wellhead-to-water pathway and its connectivity to growing LNG markets. We also continue to see momentum for expansions across our Appalachia assets as demand for pathways to strong end user markets remains high. We expect that our energy transition platform will become a meaningful contributor to the business towards the end of our five-year plan, with the near-term priority of advancing our CCS project towards a final investment decision and participation in Hydrogen Hubs opportunities in Appalachia. In summary, we had an exceptional year in 2022.

We have an exciting year in front of us as we execute on our growth projects, which will enable strong EBITDA growth through 2024 and beyond. Our entire team looks forward to continuing our track record of performance for our customers and shareholders. We can now open up the line for questions.

Operator

At this time, I would like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press star followed by number one on your telephone keypad. Your first question comes from the line of Michael Blum with Wells Fargo. Your line is open.

Michael Blum
Managing Director and Senior Equity Analyst, Wells Fargo

Thanks. Good morning, everyone. I wanted to start on the CapEx budget. You mentioned a heavier construction period. I wonder if you could just provide a little more detail. I'm assuming slide 14 is kind of what captures the project, but just wondering if there's anything more to that. Can you also just remind us on what you're targeting for returns?

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Sure, Michael. Good morning. This is David. Yeah. This year will be a heavy CapEx year as many of our projects are executing sort of at the same time this year. Just as you may recall, we reduced our organic capital guidance in previous years, this is around the timing of when we are actually spending the capital for the construction of these new assets. This year is going to be a lumpy year for us. You can sort of see it if you look at the five-year CapEx revised guidance. That $800 million is committed, contracted organic investments, you can see that this year the bulk of that $800 is being deployed. That's just the background around the CapEx disclosure here for 2023.

In terms of, you know, looking forward, you know, we continue to focus on organic opportunities. As we look to sanction any of those projects, we're always looking for accretive multiples and accretive to the equity holders when we sanction and deploy that capital for organic opportunities. Well aware that we have two primary businesses here, the pipeline and gathering, and each one of those segments sort of have a different value thresholds around the capital deployment. We're constantly looking at that, make sure that we maintain a disciplined capital allocation regime here.

Michael Blum
Managing Director and Senior Equity Analyst, Wells Fargo

Great. That helps. I appreciate it. Second question I wanted to ask was just on M&A. Obviously, you did the Millennium deal. Wondering, it just seems like there could be more assets in your backyard for sale in the near future. Just curious for your appetite for M&A. Yeah, maybe I'll leave it there.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Sure. I think our first and our first focus for capital deployment is organic opportunities. And, you know, we have been blessed over the last couple of years with an abundance of opportunities that the team has executed on. There's many more early-stage opportunities that we're pursuing. That'll be our number one priority for capital allocation. The way I think of M&A, M&A is option value for us. It has to compete with organic capital allocation, and we have to ensure accretion, shareholder per unit accretion for any M&A transactions. That's how I think about it. I think about it as option value. The market presents these opportunities from time to time, and you can't really predict when they're going to come. For us, it's really just maintain that discipline of capital allocation.

If it makes sense and it fits strategically, it's consistent with our investment thesis, and it creates a clear line of sight to shareholder value accretion, we'll consider it. The plan that we're laying out here today, in our guidance does not require any M&A activity.

Michael Blum
Managing Director and Senior Equity Analyst, Wells Fargo

Got it. Thank you very much.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Marc Solecitto with Barclays. Your line is open.

Marc Solecitto
Equity Research Analyst, Barclays

Hi. Good morning. Maybe just to start on the Haynesville outlook, wonder if you could give us any color on your expectations for basin growth here over the next couple of years. You had a helpful slide there, where you show the break evens on your gathering acreage, and then obviously you have the indirect contractual support on LEAP. Curious if you could maybe just elaborate on the visibility, whether it be MVCs or other factors, and the embedded assumptions you have in the expected volume ramp on Blue Union over the next couple of years.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Sure, Marc. Good morning. Thanks for the question. Yeah. I'm just gonna step back a second and maybe address just the high level fundamentals with sort of the current commodity price environment that we're seeing. I'll say it this way. Our guidance reflects the most current information that we have from all of our customers. It's very fresh and very current. What we are observing in the basin is continued discipline by the producers. They were very disciplined in the $8 price environment. They continue to be very disciplined in the $3 price environment. That being said, just the resource quality in the Haynesville is Tier 1 North America. There is tremendous amount of resource that is highly economic at sub $2 price levels.

When I look at sort of the current rig activity, which is still sitting around that 80 rig level, you've heard what some of the public producers have said recently. They're being disciplined, slowing down the growth rate, but still growing. I would reference some of the Comstock disclosures that I'm sure everyone's following. Even though that producer is lowering rigs, they are still projecting healthy growth, volume growth in the basin. We were seeing volume growth across our assets, in the higher price environment that we had for the last 12 months. We were seeing growth from our core shippers, even when the basin was running, you know, 50-ish rigs. I'm highly confident in the quality of the resource and the resource that we serve, we expect to see growth.

Marc, you alluded to the LEAP contracts and as most investors know, our gathering expansions that we're in flight on, marry into our LEAP expansions that we're in flight on. As we said previously, our LEAP contracts are all demand-based contracts. There's a significant economic incentive for our shippers to fill those contracts. That's exactly what we expect, and that's all been reflected in our 2023 and 2024 guidance.

Marc Solecitto
Equity Research Analyst, Barclays

Great. That's helpful. If we look at the gathering segment, volumes were up in Q4, EBITDA was down a little, and you referenced some plan treating capacity maintenance in Q4. Can you talk about how much of the sequential decline in EBITDA was on the OpEx side versus margin dilution from the treating maintenance? I'm curious if you have the treating capacity expansion on Blue Union coming on later this year in Q4. Really what that does for the margin profile and your gathering growth on Blue Union here.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Yeah. I'll take that in two parts, Marc. First, what you said, what you said it was accurate in terms of Q4. We, you know, one of the reasons why I think we won the number one midstream company in North America is because of the reliability of our assets. That's very important to us and very important to our customers. We had planned maintenance at our largest treater in the Haynesville in Q4. Yes, you're exactly right. There is a cost component to that planned maintenance, and there's a revenue impact of that planned maintenance. It's very important for us to do that to retain reliability for our customers.

In terms of looking forward, yes, we will be bringing gathering and treating facilities on, in 2023 and 2024, and volumes will ramp as those facilities come online. I'll just leave it at that.

Marc Solecitto
Equity Research Analyst, Barclays

Got it. Appreciate the time.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Thank you, Marc.

Operator

Your next question is from the line of John Mackay with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

John Mackay
VP of Equity Research, Goldman Sachs

Hey, good morning. Thanks for the time. I wanted to just go back to the spending guidance and how it kind of factors into this new five-year outlook. Like if we're looking at 2023 and thinking about kind of free cash flow and then the dividend on top of that, it's a fair amount of outspend this year. I guess is the message that, you know, we'll see a fair amount of outspend this year, but for 2024 plus that should reverse pretty materially? I'm just trying to think of kind of that outspend versus your comments on no incremental debt or equity. Thanks.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Thanks, John. I'll start, and then I'm going to pass it over to Jeffrey to maybe provide a little more color. John, I think the best way to understand this is just the lumpiness of the way the business and the timing of the CapEx spend. I think it's no more than that. I think in previous years, we backed down our CapEx guidance as we were shifting spend and actually delaying spend, it actually improves the returns of the projects when we do that. This year is a heavy year. We have the big bump here in the CapEx related to all the contracted organic opportunities that we're in flight executing on. If you look at our deck, I'm going to refer you to slide 13 and slide...

actually it's slide 12 and slide 13. You can see that, $800 million of existing committed organic investment. The vast majority of that's getting spent this year. When you look at the difference between those two numbers, that's what's contracted and committed for future years. You're exactly right. What's committed today, will be much less next year than what we're executing on this year. Truly, this is a timing issue. I'll pass it over to Jeffrey to talk about the ins and outs of the balance sheet as it relates to this.

Jeffrey Jewell
EVP and CFO, DT Midstream

Yeah. Good morning, John. This is Jeffrey. Again, this is in line with, you know, just following what David said. You know, this is in line with our plan that our ceiling is four times on our leverage, and we're very comfortable with that. As we move into 2024 and beyond, we continue to see, as we've been communicating before, that deleveraging down into the mid to low 3s, as you get into the, you know, the later part of 2024. Also things that we have available to us, not only is our very strong contracted cash flow and the like, but we've also got under leverage at our JVs.

That's something that, you know, again, we're looking at all the various tools that we have available to us because again those are, you know, would be investment-grade sort of potential vehicles that we could also utilize, you know, as we think about our balance sheet and maintaining the strong posture that we have. That's kind of how we're viewing it.

John Mackay
VP of Equity Research, Goldman Sachs

Okay. I appreciate that. Thanks for the color. Maybe just one. I'd love to hear an update on NEXUS, just how recontracting is going, whether or not you've made any progress on some of the kind of smaller scale, let's call it kind of expansion opportunities, particularly with MVP seeming to continue to lag.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Yeah. Great question, John. Yeah, we continue to see the MVP lag in the market, and, you know, my sense is the market has sort of moved on from there. NEXUS had a phenomenal year in 2022. I'm sure as you guys pore through all the details, the financial details, you'll see that as well. We're very happy with how that asset has been sort of how we had it positioned and how we repositioned it contractually in this new market structure that's in front of us right now. As I said in my opening remarks, we continue to see this very strong desire for pathways out of Appalachia to, you know, to the strong market centers that all of our assets serve.

That pathway saw a lot of activity in 2022. We expect more going forward in 2023 and 2024. I'm gonna ask for a little more time before I provide more color around some of the work that we're doing around NEXUS. I'll just say this, John, what we've talked about in the past, we are continuing to work on and execute around, which is how can we create more capacity on NEXUS without going through a FERC process. The team is working intentionally on that right now, and very optimistic that we're gonna have some positive results from those efforts.

John Mackay
VP of Equity Research, Goldman Sachs

All right. That's great. Appreciate it.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Jeremy Tonet with JPMorgan. Your line is open.

Jeremy Tonet
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, JP Morgan

Hi. Good morning.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Morning, Jeremy.

Jeremy Tonet
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, JP Morgan

I just wanted to pivot to the CapEx a little bit, if I could. Just wanted to know if you could give us any sense for a little bit more detail as far as what buckets or where the CapEx is going, be it gathering versus interstate versus, you know, energy transition or Haynesville versus Appalachia or even specific project kind of scoping size. Just trying to dig in a little bit more.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Jeremy, I'll try to break that into two answers. One is the committed capital, so what we contractually have committed today. The vast majority of that is currently focused on the Haynesville, so it's LEAP and it's, you know, the gathering expansions that we're in flight on that are going to feed LEAP. I'd say probably, you know, the weighting is heavier towards the pipeline segment than it is towards the gathering segment in terms of the capital deployment. I'll leave it at that. If we look at that five-year forward look, so the, you know, I call it the $2 billion, the midpoint there of the guidance in terms of how I think about where that will get deployed, I fully expect a chunk of that's gonna go into the energy transition.

You know, in the opening comments, we sort of, we're putting that towards the back end of our five-year plan. The CCS project is maturing in Louisiana. We filed the Class VI well application last year. We're in deep consultation with the agencies right now as we progress that project. We expect that that project will progress to a point where we'll FID it. When we FID it, we'll provide the investors more color around the CapEx and some more of the details. Feeling very good about that project, very optimistic. There's lots of interesting things happening in our northern region, especially in and around Appalachia with various Hydrogen Hubs applications that we're participating in. We're feeling really optimistic there.

It's very much in line with our core competencies and a lot of tangential correlation to our existing asset footprint and customer base. Again, I think those are still early cycle projects, but I do expect a chunk of that will deploy into that segment.

Jeremy Tonet
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, JP Morgan

Got it. That's helpful. Maybe picking up with the CCS side there, appreciate this is later dated in the decade, but just wanted to see thoughts you had at this point with regards to the total addressable market, or even more specifically as it relates to the Haynesville. It seems like economies of scale could really, you know, help economics here. There's a number of other, you know, treaters in the Haynesville. How do you see this kind of unfolding? It seems like you'd be focused on your own emissions first. If there's others in proximity, would you look to work with them? Would they be JV partners, or you think you just provide the service for them?

Just trying to get any sense that you might be able to share with how that could, develop over time.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Yeah, that's a great question. You're right. Our focus to date has been on our own emissions and cleaning up our own emissions. You know, we've provided some color around this project that we're targeting one million metric tons a year, in terms of the what I'll call the the storage or the sequestration capacity of the formation. We are very much thinking to design and develop a project that has an extended runway that would go beyond our own internal needs. You're right, there are other neighbors in our neighborhood that have similar plants, but they may not have the concentration that we have of CO2. You're very accurate in your statement that scale is important here.

You have to have scale for the economics to box out with the Section 45Q tax credit. I view that as an opportunity that will come. That'll be like a phase two opportunity for us is once we take care of our own needs, look at potentially offering to third parties. I think it's premature to foresee how that third-party business would evolve, whether it would be a fee for service, whether it would be potential JV partner. I think the market still needs to evolve a little bit around that. The other exciting part around CCS that we see is it's transportable to other geographic areas in our footprint.

Particularly up here in the, in the northern part of our footprint, many opportunities for CCS. We have lots of early stage conversations going with clients, where this would be probably the most economical way for them to mitigate their carbon emissions. Again, you know, our goal, establish the beachhead, get this project FIDed, take care of our own needs, and then replicate and export that to other jurisdictions where you have, you know, high concentrations of customers where this is an economic solution for them to decarbonize, and you have the right geology in the region to accommodate it. Very excited about this, quite frankly. I think this is going to be an emerging area for us and others that will really help the country as we navigate the pathway to a lower carbon future.

Jeremy Tonet
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, JP Morgan

Got it. If I could just pick up on part of the last part there. With your northern footprint in CCS and customer outreach there, is this internal, or is this within the oil and gas industry, or is this outside the oil and gas industry as far as customer conversations are concerned?

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

It's all of the above, Jeremy. It's, you know, both internal, in terms of sector, but, you know, there's a lot of heavy industry up here that emits a lot of CO2. Again, when you look at the current tax regime and the capital investments that some of these industries have, this is a very viable and economical pathway for them to materially decarbonize their operations. You know, there's lots of conversations in all sectors of the economy, you know, the power sector, the industrial sector, you know, the chem sector, the ag sector, where this is very applicable. Yeah, that's what makes me so excited about it, Jeremy.

Jeremy Tonet
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, JP Morgan

just... Sorry.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

No, go ahead.

Jeremy Tonet
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, JP Morgan

Just to clarify, when you say up here, are you saying Michigan or Appalachian Northeast?

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Yeah, my apologies. I'm sitting in Detroit, so when I say up here, I'm referring to our northern footprint. What I'll call, you know, from New York right through to the Midwest, where all of our assets are.

Jeremy Tonet
Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst, JP Morgan

Got it. Very helpful. Thank you.

Operator

Your final question comes from Alex Kania with Wolfe Research. Your line is open.

Alex Kania
Director and SVP, Wolfe Research

Thanks. Good morning. You mentioned just the active discussions still going on with the incremental LEAP expansion. Would you be able to have any kind of color thinking about what the opportunity is, maybe even with respect to timing? You know, do you think that it's fair to assume that would be something that maybe coincides more with the LNG capacity coming into play in the back half of the decade, or is there a chance that could happen earlier? Maybe if you could just talk a little bit just about what you're hearing with respect to LNG, you know, terminal development right now.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Thanks for the question, Alex. Well, maybe I'll just start with just kind of going back to what I said on the earlier remarks. You know, for one of our anchored shippers, we extended half a Bcf a day of their contract for five additional years. You know, that makes that contract, you know, being a 15-year term contract. I think that really spoke volumes to us of the importance of this asset, its connectivity, where it's connecting the basin to the LNG corridor, and the just the strength in the LNG market here in North America, period, that customer wanted to do that with us. We're very encouraged by that.

In terms of the next wave of expansion on LEAP, as I said in my opening remarks, we're in active conversations with a number of clients around that. You know, we were making a lot of headway over the last year in terms of just incrementally expanding. As you would expect, these are big commitments with customers that typically match up with commitments downstream of our assets. They're long-term contracts that have to be put together. I always liken ourselves to, you know, we're at the high school dance, and everyone's finding their dance partners, and we're facilitating it, you know, by connecting the two counterparties together with the asset. It takes time. I don't wanna predict the time here.

I think we just give that the time that it takes for good, rational business to transact, and we're confident that there's gonna be more to come. Our asset is well-positioned, and the way we're doing the expansion, we have a runway out to 3 Bcf a day with this asset. We can continue to expand in bite-size increments, which I think is very distinctive in the basin versus some of the other projects that are out there that require large-scale commitments before they can FID. We're really encouraged about our position. We're in the ground, we're flowing gas today, and we're incrementally expanding this year and next year. Feeling really good about where we're sitting with LEAP right now. Like I said, I do expect more.

It's just, we'll let the market decide the timing. So...

Alex Kania
Director and SVP, Wolfe Research

Great. Thank you.

Operator

There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back over to Mr. David Slater.

David Slater
President and CEO, DT Midstream

Well, thank you, everybody. We truly appreciate your time and attention and interest in DT Midstream. Have a great day.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating. This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.

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