Discontinued — last reported Q1 '26

Business Segments · Income Loss From Equity Method Investments

Midstream — Income Loss From Equity Method Investments

Energy Transfer Midstream — Income Loss From Equity Method Investments decreased by 75.0% to $2.00M in Q1 2026 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric declined by 33.3%, from $3.00M to $2.00M. This decline may warrant attention — for this metric, higher values are generally preferred.

Analysis

StatementSegment
CategoryProfitability
SignalHigher is better
VolatilityModerate
First reportedQ1 2016
Last reportedQ1 2026

How to read this metric

An increase indicates strong performance from joint venture assets, while a decrease suggests underperformance or operational challenges within those specific partnerships.

Detailed definition

Represents the company's proportional share of the net earnings or losses from unconsolidated affiliates and joint ventu...

Peer comparison

Many midstream operators utilize joint ventures to share capital risk, making this a common line item for peer comparison.

Metric ID: et_segment_midstream_income_loss_from_equity_method_investments

Historical Data

7 periods
 Q1 '24Q2 '24Q3 '24Q1 '25Q2 '25Q3 '25Q1 '26
Value$4.00M$4.00M$2.00M$3.00M$3.00M$8.00M$2.00M
QoQ Change+0.0%-50.0%+50.0%+0.0%+166.7%-75.0%
YoY Change-25.0%-25.0%+300.0%-33.3%
Range$2.00M$8.00M
CAGR-37.0%
Avg YoY Growth+54.2%
Median YoY Growth-25.0%

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Energy Transfer's midstream — income loss from equity method investments?
Energy Transfer (ET) reported midstream — income loss from equity method investments of $2.00M in Q1 2026.
How has Energy Transfer's midstream — income loss from equity method investments changed year-over-year?
Energy Transfer's midstream — income loss from equity method investments decreased by 33.3% year-over-year, from $3.00M to $2.00M.
What does midstream — income loss from equity method investments mean?
The company's share of profits or losses from midstream joint ventures and partnerships that are not fully consolidated.