Should You Buy Enbridge Income Fund Holdings Inc. Instead of Enbridge Inc.?

Enbridge Inc.’s (TSX:ENB)(NYSE:ENB) subsidiary Enbridge Income Fund Holdings Inc. (TSX:ENF) offers a better yield than Enbridge, with solid growth prospects. Is it a better buy?

| More on:
The Motley Fool
You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s premium investing services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn moresdf

There has been much news recently about Enbridge Inc.’s (TSX:ENB)(NYSE:ENB) large $30.4 billion drop-down of assets to its Enbridge Income Fund Holdings Inc. (TSX:ENF) subsidiary. While the transaction is complex, it involves Enbridge Inc. essentially selling a large portion of its assets to Enbridge Income Fund. These assets include the Canadian liquids pipeline business, the regional oil sands system, renewable energy assets, and $15 billion in capital growth projects.

In 2014 Enbridge Inc. dropped-down a further $1.8 billion in assets to Enbridge Income Fund. These included the Southern Lights Pipeline as well as the Alliance pipeline, both of which are low-risk, high-cash flow assets secured by long-term contracts, and in Southern Lights’s case, included a regulation that provides a guaranteed 10% return on equity.

Drop-downs of this sort from Enbridge Inc. have been occurring since 2011, and the end result is that Enbridge Income Fund has generated a 24.5% total shareholder return over the past five years, even outperforming Enbridge Inc. by about 1.5%. Does this mean Enbridge Income Fund is a better buy?

How Enbridge Income Fund benefits from drop-downs

Looking at Enbridge Income Fund’s total shareholder return demonstrates that the drop-down strategy has been clearly beneficial. The reason is largely because the steady stream of drop-downs is creating a low-risk, high-payout, high-yielding Canadian energy infrastructure income play.

Enbridge Income Fund currently yields 4.09%, ahead of Enbridge Inc.’s 2.75%, and this is largely a result of the drop-downs from Enbridge Inc. Enbridge Inc. is dropping down assets that have a high initial payout ratio and extremely reliable cash flows (secured by long-term contracts and regulated assets). These assets are favoured by Enbridge Income Fund investors, unlike Enbridge Inc. shareholders, who are focused on a mix of income and price growth, Enbridge Income Fund shareholders are focused largely on having a high, stable, and growing dividend.

The recent $30 billion drop-down secures the growing part of this equation. With $15 billion in secured growth projects being included in the drop-down package—all set to be in service before 2017—the income fund is able to boost its dividend-per-share growth from a small 1% to approximately 10% between 2015 and 2019.

With visible dividend growth, a high yield, and a high, secure payout ratio, Enbridge Income Fund is poised for its valuation expand as a result of drop-downs.

Should you buy Enbridge Income Fund instead of Enbridge Inc.?

While Enbridge Income Fund certainly benefits from these drop-downs, it can be argued that Enbridge Inc. benefits even more. By dropping down its assets, Enbridge Inc. takes back equity in Enbridge Income Fund, and after the drop-down is complete, it is estimated that Enbridge Inc. will own 90% of the fund.

This means Enbridge Inc. will still retain most of the cash flows from the assets it drops down. Even better, however, is that the fund will raise equity on behalf of Enbridge Inc. for its capital projects, so that Enbridge Inc. does not have to. Enbridge Income Fund will be raising $600-800 million in equity per year to fund the capital growth projects, and this will amount to $3 billion in equity that Enbridge Inc. does not have to issue.

The end result is that Enbridge Inc. is funding its capital program at an extremely low cost. Enbridge Inc. will have greater accretion due to the fact that it does not have to issue as many shares, and it will still receive growing distributions from its ownership in the fund.

Enbridge Inc. also receives a special incentive fee from the fund, which gives Enbridge Inc. 25% of the funds cash flow above a certain point, which means it benefits above and beyond simply what it owns in the fund. As a result, it seems that Enbridge Inc. is a smarter buy than Enbridge Income Fund, especially for investors looking for growth.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Adam Mancini has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.

More on Energy Stocks

Group of industrial workers in a refinery - oil processing equipment and machinery
Energy Stocks

Up by 25%: Is Cenovus Stock a Good Buy in February 2023?

After a powerful bullish run, the energy sector in Canada has finally stabilized, and it might be ripe for a…

Read more »

A worker overlooks an oil refinery plant.
Energy Stocks

Cenovus Stock: Here’s What’s Coming Next

Cenovus stock has rallied strong along with commodity prices. Expect more as the company continues to digest its Husky acquisition.

Read more »

A stock price graph showing growth over time
Energy Stocks

What Share Buybacks Mean for Energy Investors in 2023 and 1 TSX Stock That Could Outperform

Will TSX energy stocks continue to delight investors in 2023?

Read more »

Arrowings ascending on a chalkboard
Energy Stocks

2 Top TSX Energy Stocks That Could Beat Vermilion Energy

TSX energy stocks will likely outperform in 2023. But not all are equally well placed.

Read more »

Gas pipelines
Energy Stocks

Suncor Stock: How High Could it Go in 2023?

Suncor stock is starting off 2023 as an undervalued underdog, but after a record year, the company is standing strong…

Read more »

oil and natural gas
Energy Stocks

Should You Buy Emera Stock in February 2023?

Emera stock has returned 9% compounded annually in the last 10 years, including dividends.

Read more »

grow money, wealth build
Energy Stocks

TFSA: Investing $8,000 in Enbridge Stock Today Could Bring $500 in Tax-Free Dividends

TSX dividend stocks such as Enbridge can be held in a TFSA to allow shareholders generate tax-free dividend income each…

Read more »

oil and natural gas
Energy Stocks

3 TSX Energy Stocks to Buy if the Slump Continues

Three energy stocks trading at depressed prices due to the oil slump are buying opportunities before demand returns.

Read more »