
Genesis Energy (NYSE:GEL) reported a sharp turnaround for the fourth quarter of 2025, as the startup of major offshore production hubs provided a high-margin boost to the partnership’s bottom line.
The Houston-based midstream player posted a net income of $19.9 million for the quarter, a significant recovery from the $49.4 million net loss reported in the same period last year.
The pivot was fueled by the Offshore Pipeline Transportation segment, which benefited from a full quarter of volumes from the Shenandoah development—performing well above minimum volume commitments—and the ongoing ramp-up of the Salamanca field.
Total segment margin grew to $174 million, while operating cash flow climbed to $110.8 million, up 50% year-over-year.
Despite the operational momentum, the partnership reported an adjusted EPS of $0.04, missing the Street’s $0.28 estimate.
However, investors focused on the de-leveraging story; Genesis reduced its bank leverage ratio to 5.12x and virtually cleared its senior secured revolving credit facility, ending the year with just $6.4 million outstanding.
With a cleaner balance sheet and the "heavy lifting" of its offshore capital cycle complete, management is guiding for 15% to 20% adjusted EBITDA growth in 2026.