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Pipeline operator Kinder Morgan misses first-quarter profit estimates

Kinder Morgan, the U.S. operator of pipelines and terminals, narrowly missed Wall Street's expectations for its first-quarter profits on Wednesday. This was due to a decline in its pipeline products segment and increased costs.

The energy industry is bracing for the impact of U.S. president Donald Trump's tariffs against most Canadian and Mexican imports. These include levies on imports of steel, "reciprocal tariffs" on other nations as well as falling oil prices.

Kinder Morgan, however, left its profit forecasts unchanged because it continues to bet on a rise in the demand for natural gas. The terminal operator said that tariffs will not have a major impact on the project's economics.

Kim Dang, CEO, said: "We started efforts to mitigate potential impacts early in the third quarter by preordering key project components, negotiating cost caps, and securing local steel and mill capacities for our larger project backlog, which represents two-thirds our project backlog."

The first-quarter adjusted earnings at its Products Pipelines segment fell by 5.8%, to $274M, due to the planned 10-year turnaround of a petroleum condensate treatment facility on the Houston Ship Channel, as well as the lower oil price.

Kinder Morgan's operating costs increased to $3.1 billion from $2.62 in the first quarter of last year.

According to data compiled and analyzed by LSEG, the Houston-based company posted an adjusted profit per share of 34 cents for the three-month period ended March 31. This was lower than analysts' estimates of 35 cents. Reporting by Vallari Shrivastava, Bengaluru. Editing by Alan Barona.

(source: Reuters)