Stocks/SPH

SPH

Suburban Propane Partners, L.P.
Utilities·Regulated Gas
$19.40
$1.3B market cap
Claude Rating
4/10UNDERWEIGHT
Revenue
$1.4B
Free Cash Flow
$132.6M
Rev Growth
-6.2%
FCF Margin
9.5%
P/FCF
9.7x
EV/FCF
10.5x
Fwd EV/EBITDA
5.0x
Fair Value
$17.50
Upside
-9.8%

Suburban Propane Partners, L.P., through its subsidiaries, engages in the retail marketing and distribution of propane, fuel oil, and refined fuels. The company operates in four segments: Propane, Fuel Oil and Refined Fuels, Natural Gas and Electricity, and All Other. The Propane segment is involved in the retail distribution of propane to residential, commercial, industrial, and agricultural customers, as well as in the wholesale distribution to industrial end users. It offers propane primarily

2-Year Price History

$20.29+12.5%
$16$17$18$19$20volMay 24Sep 24Jan 25May 25Sep 25Jan 26May 26

Quarterly Financials & Projections

Quarterly Waterfall ($ M)
PeriodRevEBITDAOpInNIOCFFCFCapExCashDebtSharesROICIntCovEV/EBITDA
Est2028-Q2610.0189.1--146.4--54.9-18.3258.1----------
Est2028-Q1385.067.4--27.0---30.8-18.5203.2----------
Est2027-Q4225.06.8---31.5--33.8-13.5234.0----------
Est2027-Q3270.028.4---9.5--81.0-14.3200.3----------
Est2027-Q2600.0183.0--141.0--48.0-19.2119.3----------
Est2027-Q1380.064.6--24.7---38.0-19.071.3----------
Est2026-Q4220.04.4---33.0--30.8-14.3109.3----------
Est2026-Q3265.026.5---10.6--74.2-14.678.5----------
Act2026-Q2551.2175.5159.3137.5116.391.5-24.74.3105.566.9128.8%8.9x5.1x
Act2026-Q1370.482.666.745.8-47.7-67.5-19.83.51,51566.514.9%4.2x9.6x
Act2025-Q4211.41.2-16.8-35.141.827.7-14.13.71,33065.8-4.2%0.1x9.8x
Act2025-Q3260.223.05.6-14.895.580.9-14.74.61,34865.41.3%1.2x11.1x
Act2025-Q2587.7175.3158.4137.140.120.8-19.39.31,42365.336.1%8.5x10.6x
Act2025-Q1373.356.759.119.48.8-15.1-23.84.41,44164.814.2%2.9x12.2x
Act2024-Q4208.6-8.9-22.6-44.636.817.7-19.13.21,35064.8-5.8%-0.5x12.0x
Act2024-Q3254.617.98.2-17.261.446.8-14.74.91,34764.41.9%1.0x11.2x
Act2024-Q2498.1148.2136.9111.575.260.6-14.64.41,36064.832.6%7.4x9.7x
Act2024-Q1365.859.348.824.5-12.8-23.9-11.26.31,38164.412.0%3.3x9.8x
Act2023-Q4226.615.44.0-20.957.946.3-11.63.51,33063.91.0%0.8x8.7x
Act2023-Q3278.629.314.9-5.362.052.6-9.410.01,34863.93.6%1.6x10.5x
Act2023-Q2526.5140.6125.7104.599.185.9-13.37.21,37464.429.9%7.1x10.7x
Act2023-Q1397.575.162.345.46.3-4.5-10.86.11,24463.917.0%4.7x7.9x
Act2022-Q4237.6-24.3-37.7-54.249.438.4-11.14.11,21363.3-10.7%-1.6x8.4x
Act2022-Q3300.326.814.8-2.575.664.6-11.07.11,21663.33.9%1.8x--
Act2022-Q2588.1204.8192.0175.1108.997.2-11.76.81,26063.849.3%13.4x--
Act2022-Q1375.452.437.321.3-13.3-24.0-10.73.51,30263.310.3%3.4x--

AI Analysis

LLM Evaluations

Claude4/10UNDERWEIGHTFV: $17.50

SPH is a mature, highly leveraged MLP distributing propane in a structurally declining market as electrification of heating accelerates. The 8.3% yield appears attractive but is funded by a weather-dependent, capital-intensive business carrying 4.3x leverage and $1.17B in goodwill. The RNG pivot has produced multiple investment write-offs (Oberon, Independence Hydrogen) and the remaining projects are pre-ramp. Customer sentiment is alarmingly negative, with pricing complaints suggesting the company is extracting maximum value from a captive customer base — a strategy that accelerates churn to electric alternatives. While Q2 2026 EBITDA was stable, revenue significantly missed expectations, and the refinancing to higher-cost 2035 notes signals limited deleveraging optionality. At ~10x EV/FCF, the stock is not egregiously expensive for a utility-like yield vehicle, but the fundamental trajectory is deteriorating, and better risk-adjusted income opportunities exist elsewhere.

Catalyst Successful ramp of New York and Ohio RNG facilities in 2H 2026, combined with rising LCFS credit and D3 RIN prices, could provide an earnings inflection that demonstrates the viability of the green energy pivot and justifies the goodwill balance.
Risk A warm winter combined with continued customer churn to electric heating alternatives could compress propane volumes 5-10%, threatening distribution coverage and potentially triggering a goodwill impairment review on the $1.17B balance.
Trend
STABLE
Mgmt
5/10
Quarter
4/10
Exp. Move
-3.0%

Latest Earnings Call

Transcript Summary

Suburban Propane Partners (SPH) delivered solid fiscal 2026 second quarter results, with Adjusted EBITDA of $175.3 million, matching the prior year. The quarter was marked by geographic weather divergence: strong heating demand in the cold Eastern U.S. successfully offset record warmth in the West, resulting in flat overall propane volumes. Management effectively navigated a volatile commodity environment, as propane prices climbed to $0.90 per gallon late in the quarter due to Middle Eastern tensions. In the Renewable Natural Gas (RNG) segment, SPH saw a 16% sequential increase in injections and recognized $3.5 million in Section 45Z Production Tax Credits following favorable Treasury guidance. Expansion projects in New York and Ohio remain on schedule for 2H 2026. The partnership prioritized balance sheet strength, paying down $64.3 million in debt and improving its leverage ratio to 4.34x. SPH maintained its $0.325 per unit distribution with 2.2x coverage. CEO Mike Stivala highlighted the company's "suburbanizing" of its RNG platform and new propane applications like EV charging as keys to long-term growth. The earnings call concluded with no analyst questions, indicating a clear reporting of the company's strategy.

Valuation & Metrics

Market Stats

Price$19.40
Market Cap$1.3B
Enterprise Value$1.4B
P/S Ratio0.9x
P/FCF9.7x
EV/FCF10.5x
FCF Margin (TTM)9.5%
FCF Yield10.3%
Dividend Yield (TTM)--
Annual Dilution2.5%
CurrencyUSD

TTM Financial Snapshot

Revenue$1.4B
Net Income$133.3M
Free Cash Flow$132.6M

Revenue Growth (YoY)-6.2%
EBITDA Margin20.3%
Net Margin9.6%
FCF Margin9.5%
CapEx % of Revenue5.3%
SBC % of Revenue0.4%
ROIC35.2%
WC Change % Rev0.2%
Interest Coverage3.7x

DCF Fair Value Estimate

$15.06
-22.3% upside
Fair Enterprise Value$1.1B
− Net Debt$101M
= Fair Equity$1.0B
Revenue Growth1.7% → 1.0%
FCF Margin9.5% → 10.0%
Discount Rate14.0%
Terminal EV/FCF9.0x

Forward Outlook & Risk

Short Interest

Short % of Float0.6%
Short Shares0.4M
Days to Cover3.8
Change (vs Prior)-8.0%
Short % Float History
0.60%-0.90pp
0.6%0.8%1.0%1.2%1.4%04-3007-1509-1511-1401-1504-30

Options

Call IV (ATM)44%
Put IV (ATM)--
ATM Spread14.8%
Call $OI (near money)$60K
Put $OI (near money)$20K
ATM ExpiryJuly 17, 2026 (56D)
ATM Strike$20.0
Major Expirations2
Near-money chain · July 17, 2026
StrikeCall Bid/AskCall OIPut Bid/AskPut OI
$10.00$8.10/$12.300--/$2.150
$12.50$6.00/$9.500--/$2.150
$15.00$3.10/$7.300--/$0.950
$17.50$1.50/$4.900--/$2.250
$20.00$0.10/$3.100--/$2.8522
$22.50--/$0.9515$0.30/$4.600
$25.00--/$0.950$2.80/$6.900
$30.00--/$0.750$7.70/$11.900
Snapshot: 2026-05-22

Forward Projections & Estimates

NTM Revenue Growth+5.2%
Forward FCF Margin7.8%
Forward EBITDA Margin19.0%
Forward P/FCF11.2x
Forward EV/FCF12.1x
Forward Int. Coverage3.7x
Model Risk Score6/10
Bankruptcy Odds4%
Est. Borrow Rate7.5%
Terminal EV/FCF9.0x
LT Growth1.0%
LT FCF Margin10.0%

Employees

Headcount3,098
Revenue / Employee$449,683
Gross Profit / Employee$144,810
2022: 3,174 → 2023: 3,240 → 2024: 3,283 → 2025: 3,376 (2% CAGR)

Institutional Ownership

Headline & net flow

NET BUYING

In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are net buyers — bought 1.6% of float, sold 0.3%.

Net flow · Q1 2026still filing
+1.3% of float (net)
Bought 1.6% · Sold 0.3%
143 filers reported (last quarter: 159)

Ownership composition

Active
42.1%(+1.0% YoY)
138 filers
hedge / family / endowment
Retail funds
Fidelity, Schwab, 401(k)
Passive
0.0%(+0.0% YoY)
1 filers
Vanguard, iShares, SPDR
Market makers
0.1%(+0.0% YoY)
3 filers
Citadel, Susquehanna
Insiders
2.0%
Form 4 — latest per insider
0%25%50%75%100%2022-062023-032023-122024-092025-062026-03
ActiveRetail fundsPassiveMarket makersRetail direct

Top holders

Fund$ valueCost basisΔ QoQΔ YoYα lifeFund AUM
ALPS ADVISORS INC$303M$16.22+$6.4M+$24.3M+0.2%$21.23B
MIRAE ASSET GLOBAL ETFS HOLDINGS Ltd.$87.6M$17.55+$6.0M+$3.9M+1.7%$73.71B
JPMORGAN CHASE & CO$28.3M$15.22+$1.7M+$6.8M-0.2%$1.47T
GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC$28.0M$14.60+$632K+$1.0M-0.2%$760.93B
BOWEN HANES & CO INC$20.0M$15.19+$0+$3.9M-0.1%$4.11B
MORGAN STANLEY$18.2M$14.05+$930K−$233K-0.3%$1.65T
Blackstone Group L.P.$8.7M$14.20+$527K+$569K+3.0%$24.20B
UBS Group AG$7.3M$15.50−$1.8M−$299K-0.3%$562.11B
RAYMOND JAMES FINANCIAL INC$4.3M$16.17+$284K+$378K-0.0%$322.69B
Fractal Investments LLC$4.2M$15.09+$0+$0+2.3%$845M
Lido Advisors, LLC$3.9M$13.90−$0+$586K+1.9%$25.47B
COMMONWEALTH EQUITY SERVICES, LLC$3.8M$15.90+$397K−$235K-0.3%$71.14B
LEVIN CAPITAL STRATEGIES, L.P.$3.0M$12.39−$115K−$134K+0.3%$1.31B
LPL Financial LLC$2.8M$14.89−$40K+$496K-0.2%$372.65B
ING GROEP NV$2.3M$15.88−$451K+$2.3M-0.2%$16.35B
Private Advisor Group, LLC$1.5M$16.49−$80K+$339K-0.1%$21.04B
Cambridge Investment Research Advisors, Inc.$1.5M$15.38+$48K+$314K-0.4%$38.49B
BANK OF AMERICA CORP /DE/$1.4M$13.88+$294K+$267K-0.1%$1.36T
FEDERATED HERMES, INC.$1.4M$15.65−$52K−$741K-1.1%$61.33B
WELLS FARGO & COMPANY/MN$1.3M$13.86+$104K−$555K-0.2%$497.71B
Cost basis is a volume-weighted estimate from accumulation periods within our 13F history; holders who built their position before our window started will show a stale basis. % above the cost basis is the unrealized gain at the current price.

Trading behavior

Smart-money alpha (lifetime, %/qtr)BULLISH
Holders
+0.41%
avg per quarter
Holders (ex-self)
+0.42%
excl. this stock
Buyers (this Q)
+0.52%
50 buyers · $0.05B in
Sellers (this Q)
-0.56%
31 sellers · $0.00B out
alpha coverage: 100% of $ has a lifetime-alpha record
Holder behavior on this stocksource: stock
On big dips (−10%+)
+8.7%
how holders react when this stock falls
On quiet Qs
+3.4%
−10% to +10% baseline
On rallies (+10%+)
-9.2%
how they react when this stock rises
Holders' portfolio flow this Q
+319.3%
inflows — adds are organic
Sellers' portfolio flow this Q
+11.9%
Sellers grew AUM elsewhere — opinionated cut of this stock.
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Holder dip (any stock)
-0.6%
Holder mid (any stock)
-3.2%
Holder rally (any stock)
-1.4%

Top Holders Over Time

5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price

06.2M12.5M18.7M25.0M$12$14$16$18$202021-062022-062023-062024-062025-062026-03
hover the chart for per-quarter detailprice (right axis)
ALPS ADVISORS INC15.4MMIRAE ASSET GLOBAL ETFS HOLDINGS Ltd.4.4MInvesco Ltd.MORGAN STANLEY922KGOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC1.4MJPMORGAN CHASE & CO1.4MUBS Group AG373KBOWEN HANES & CO INC1.0MMirae Asset Global Investments Co., Ltd.NATIXIS

Corporate

Executive Compensation (2012-2014)

Direct Pay$5.6M
Incentive & Other$2.8M
Total Compensation$8.4M
% of Revenue0.2%

Insider Trading (last 12mo)

Open-market only (Form 4 P-Purchase + S-Sale). Excludes grants, option exercises, tax withholding, gifts.
Officers & directors
Buys ($, 12mo)
$0
0 txns · 0 insiders · 0 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$333K
2 txns · 2 insiders · 17,500 sh
Recent transactions
DateSideInsiderTitleSharesPriceDollarsOwned $
2025-12-02SELLChanin Matthew Jdirector10,000$19.31$193K$1.22M
2025-08-13SELLLOGAN HAROLD R JRdirector7,500$18.66$140K$592K

Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)

43.8%retail+9.0pp
7.9%dark+0.4pp
week of 2026-04-13
10%20%30%40%50%24-1125-0225-0525-0825-1126-0226-04retail (non-ATS)dark (ATS)
Off-exchange volume from FINRA. Retail = non-ATS (wholesaler PFOF + broker internalization). Dark = ATS (dark-pool crossing networks, institutional). Lit-exchange = remainder.

Revenue Breakdown

Revenue Segments

By Product (2026-Q2)
Propane$491.1M-7%
Fuel Oil And Refined Fuels$32.4M-3%
Natural Gas And Electricity$8.8M-3%
By Geography (2012-Q3)
All other$7.3MNEW

Filing Risk Analysis

Filing Risk Scores

Suburban Propane Partners: Kicking the Debt Can and Padding Profits with Retroactive Tax Credits

Overall Risk
6/10
Fraud
3/10
Dilution
4/10
Insolvency
6/10
Earnings Overstated
5/10
Hidden Liabilities
4/10
Legal
3/10
Audit Warnings
4/10
Hidden Upside
3/10
Contextually Acceptable
7/10

Counter-Thesis

Counter-Thesis & Recent News

📰 Recent News

On May 7, 2026, SPH reported Q2 2026 earnings that missed both EPS and revenue expectations. Revenue of $491.14 million significantly missed the $571 million forecast (a -13.99% surprise), while EPS of $2.06 trailed the $2.10 estimate. Despite a flat year-over-year volume performance, regional weather volatility saw a 10% volume decline in Western territories (Investing.com, MarketBeat).

🐻 Bear Case

The core bear case centers on a 'questionable business model' that is almost entirely weather-dependent with high leverage. Total debt remains a concern with a consolidated leverage ratio of 4.34x, necessitating the use of excess cash for debt reduction rather than growth. Furthermore, U.S. propane inventories are roughly 75% higher than last year, leading to wholesale price volatility that squeezes retail margins (Seeking Alpha, MarketBeat).

🚩 Red Flags

Regulatory scrutiny is rising; as of February 2026, State Attorney General offices (notably in the Northeast) received dozens of complaints regarding delivery failures and price gouging. Additionally, a class action settlement (Morey v. Suburban Propane) regarding wage disclosure violations reached preliminary approval in February 2025, highlighting ongoing litigation risks (YouTube/News, SuburbanPropaneEPOSettlement.com).

⚔️ Competitive Threats

SPH faces intense competition from smaller, local propane providers who are successfully undercutting SPH's retail prices, which customers report as being up to 2x the market average. Additionally, extreme customer dissatisfaction is driving 'churn' toward electric heating alternatives; multiple reports cite customers switching to electric stoves and heat pumps specifically to escape SPH's fee structure (BBB, Reddit).

💬 Customer Sentiment

Sentiment is overwhelmingly negative. Recent BBB reviews (Feb–April 2026) are dominated by 1-star ratings citing 'scam' pricing, unauthorized 'minimum bill' charges, and failures to deliver fuel during sub-zero temperatures. Customers frequently report being charged over $5.00–$6.99 per gallon while competitors offer rates under $3.50 (BBB.org).

Full Earnings Call Transcript

Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q2 • 2026-05-07

Operator: Thank you for standing by. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Suburban Propane Second Quarter Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to turn the conference over to Davin D'Ambrosio, Vice President and Treasurer. The floor is yours.
A. D'Ambrosio: Morgan, thank you. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us this morning for our fiscal 2026 second quarter earnings conference call. Joining me this morning are Mike Stivala, our President and Chief Executive Officer; Mike Kuglin, Chief Financial Officer; and Alex Centeno, Senior Vice President of Operations. This morning, we will review our second quarter financial results, along with our current outlook for the business. Once we've concluded our prepared remarks, we will open the session to questions. Our conference call contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as amended, relating to the partnership's future business expectations and predictions and financial condition and results of operations. These forward-looking statements involve certain risks and uncertainties. We have listed some of the important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed in such forward-looking statements, which are referred to as cautionary statements in our earnings press release, which can be viewed on our website at suburbanpropane.com. All subsequent written and oral forward-looking statements attributable to the partnership or persons acting on its behalf are expressly qualified in their entirety by such cautionary statements. Our annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended September 27, 2025, and our Form 10-Q for the period ended March 28, 2026, which will be filed by the end of business today, contain additional disclosure regarding forward-looking statements and risk factors. Copies may be obtained by contacting the partnership or the SEC. Certain non-GAAP measures will be discussed on this call. We have provided a description of why these measures as well as a discussion of why we believe this information to be useful in our Form 8-K, which was furnished to the SEC this morning. Form 8-K will be available through a link in the Investor Relations section of our website. At this point, I will turn the call over to Mike Stivala for some opening remarks. Mike?
Michael A. Stivala: Thanks, Davin. Good morning. Thank you all for joining us today. The fiscal 2026 second quarter was another solid quarter for Suburban Propane. Our core propane business performed extremely well in a very challenging heating season. We made great progress stabilizing production and advancing our expansion projects in our renewable natural gas business. And with our excess cash flows from operations, we continued to reduce our total outstanding debt. With respect to our propane operations, this year's heating season was a tale of two halves. The eastern half of our footprint experienced some of the most sustained colder temperatures in the heart of the heating season than we've experienced in decades, along with several harsh winter storms. Our Western half, on the other hand, reported near record warm temperatures throughout most of the winter. Where we got weather, customer demand surged and our teams worked tirelessly to safely and reliably meet the needs of our customers, many times in some very harsh weather with challenging road conditions. Volumes in our Eastern territories were approximately 3% higher than the prior year second quarter on average heating degree days that were 3% colder than the same period. In the West, volumes were approximately 10% lower on average heating degree days that were 17% warmer. As always, our operating personnel were well prepared to manage the surge in demand in our Eastern markets, supplemented by resources redeployed from certain locations in our Western territories to provide the additional support, and I am so proud of how our teams responded to meet our customers' needs under these conditions while also maintaining their focus on our customer base growth and retention initiatives. In addition to solid volume performance, we effectively managed selling prices amid a volatile commodity price environment influenced in March by the conflict in the Middle East while also maintaining disciplined expense control. In our renewable natural gas operations, average daily D3 RNG injection during the second quarter of fiscal 2026 increased 16% compared to the prior sequential quarter and more than 12% compared to the prior year second quarter, driven by improved facility uptime and the benefits of our capital investments and process improvements that we have implemented since our acquisition of our anaerobic digester facility in Stanfield, Arizona. Additionally, with our new anaerobic digester facility in Upstate New York and our gas upgrading system at our facility in Columbus, Ohio, both of which remain on schedule for completion during the second half of fiscal 2026, we expect to add approximately 200,000 MMBtus of annual production to our RNG platform. We are also pursuing opportunities to increase feedstock intake for both manure and food waste at the Stanfield facility in order to take advantage of additional production capacity at the plant. While environmental credit values, particularly California LCFS prices have been depressed over the past couple of years, we are encouraged by the regulatory steps taken by the California Air Resources Board to create a better balance in the supply-demand equation for environmental credits, which is starting to favorably impact LCFS credit values. We were also pleased to see the Treasury release draft regulations in February 2026 that favorably addressed ambiguities in previous guidance related to the eligibility to earn production tax credits or PTCs under Section 45Z of the Internal Revenue Code as promulgated in the Inflation Reduction Act. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act also extended the window for PTCs by two years until December 2029. During the second quarter of fiscal 2026, we recognized $3.5 million of PTCs earned on D3 RNG injections at our Stanfield facility for the period from January 2025 through March 2026, and we continue to earn PTCs on production going forward. As D3 production at our Upstate New York facility comes online, we expect to be eligible to earn PTCs for RNG injected from that facility as well. So for the second quarter of fiscal 2026, adjusted EBITDA of $175.3 million was essentially flat to the prior year. And combined with our fiscal first quarter results, adjusted EBITDA totaled $258.7 million for the first half of the fiscal year. That's an increase of $8.4 million or 3.4% compared to the first two quarters of the prior year. And with another quarter of strong operating performance and with capital expenditures for our RNG facilities that are nearing completion, we used excess cash flow generated during the second quarter to reduce our total outstanding debt by more than $64 million. We remain disciplined in our capital allocation, balancing investments in the growth of our core propane business and renewable energy platform with preserving balance sheet strength and flexibility in support of our long-term strategic growth initiatives and for enhancing unitholder value. In a moment, I'll come back for some closing remarks. However, let me turn the call over to Mike Kuglin to discuss the second quarter results in more detail. Mike?
Mike Kuglin: Thanks, Mike, and good morning, everyone. To be consistent with previous reporting, as I discuss our second quarter results and exclude the impact of unrealized mark-to-market adjustments on our commodity hedges, which resulted in unrealized loss of $1.4 million for the second quarter compared to an unrealized gain of $700,000 in the prior year second quarter. Excluding these and certain other noncash items, adjusted net income for the second quarter was $139.3 million or $2.09 per common unit compared to adjusted net income of $136.9 million or $2.11 per common unit in the prior year second quarter. Adjusted EBITDA for the second quarter was $175.3 million, which was flat compared to the prior year second quarter. Retail propane gallons sold in the second quarter were 161.6 million gallons, essentially unchanged compared to the prior year as the impact of colder temperatures across much of the eastern half of the country on heat-related demand, together with contributions from our recent acquisitions were offset by considerably warmer temperatures in the western half. With respect to the weather, average temperatures across our service territories during the second quarter were 6% warmer than normal and 1% warmer than the prior year. In the eastern half of the U.S., average temperatures were slightly warmer than normal and 3% colder than the prior year second quarter, whereas average temperatures in the West were 22% warmer than normal and 17% warmer than the prior year second quarter. From a commodity perspective, propane inventory levels in the U.S. experienced a seasonal decline during the second quarter, but remained well above historical averages for this time of year. At the end of the second quarter, U.S. propane inventories were at 77 million barrels, which were 75% higher than March 2025 levels and 47% higher than the five-year average for March. Given the increase in inventories and other factors, average wholesale propane prices for the quarter of $0.69 per gallon, basis Mont Belvieu decreased 23% compared to the prior year second quarter. Although average propane prices for the second quarter were lower than the prior year, prices have evolved and have recently begun to rise due to the conflict in Iran and the resulting disruption in global energy markets. At the end of February, just before the start of the conflict, spot propane prices were in the mid-$0.60 per gallon range, whereas most recently, spot prices have risen to the $0.90 per gallon range. Excluding the impact of the noncash mark-to-market adjustments on our commodity hedges that I mentioned earlier, total gross margins of $345.1 million for the second quarter increased $500,000 compared to the prior year second quarter, primarily due to a slight increase in propane unit margins of $0.03 per gallon or 1.7%. As Mike mentioned, following the publication of proposed treasury regulations in February 2026, which provided sufficient clarity for us to conclude that the production and sales of our RNG qualified for production tax credits under Section 45Z, we recognized $3.5 million of PTCs earned on D3 RNG injections at our Stanfield, Arizona facility for the period from January 2025 through March 2026. The benefit was reported as a reduction to operating expenses and included a catch-up adjustment of $2 million for credits related to fiscal 2025 and $800,000 related to the first quarter of fiscal 2026. With that said, combined operating and G&A expenses of $169.5 million for the quarter were flat compared to the prior year second quarter as higher payroll and benefit-related expenses along with higher fuel and vehicle maintenance costs, driven by elevated activity levels to meet stronger customer demand in the Eastern territories and an increase in accruals for self-insurance matters were offset by the recognition of production tax credits and a $2.9 million insurance recovery related to the partial settlement of certain claims associated with our RNG acquisition in December 2022. Net interest expense of $19.7 million for the quarter decreased 4.2% compared to the prior year second quarter, resulting from a lower level of average outstanding borrowings under our revolving credit facility and lower benchmark interest rates on revolver borrowings. Total capital spending for the quarter of $24.7 million was $5.4 million higher than the prior year second quarter, primarily due to the construction efforts at our Columbus, Ohio and Upstate New York RNG facilities. On a year-to-date basis, our total growth CapEx for our RNG facilities totaled $19 million, and our full-year capital spending estimate for the existing projects is $35 million to $40 million. Turning to our balance sheet. During the second quarter, we utilized excess cash flows from operating activities to repay $64.3 million of borrowings under the revolver. Our consolidated leverage ratio for the trailing 12-month period ended March 2026 improved to 4.34x compared to 4.54x for March 2025 with an increase in adjusted EBITDA of $6 million and total debt reduction of $32.3 million. We have now moved through our historically high period of seasonal working capital needs into the fiscal quarters we expect to generate excess cash flows. We will continue to remain focused on utilizing excess cash flows to strengthen the balance sheet as opportunities arise to fund strategic growth, including the remaining growth capital for our RNG platform. We have more than ample borrowing capacity under our revolver to support our capital expansion plans and ongoing strategic growth initiatives. With that, I'll turn the call back to Mike.
Michael A. Stivala: Thanks, Mike. As announced on April 23, our Board of Supervisors declared our quarterly distribution of $0.325 per common unit in respect of our second quarter of fiscal 2026. That equates to an annualized rate of $1.30 per common unit. Our quarterly distribution will be paid on May 12 to our unitholders of record as of May 5. Our distribution coverage continues to remain strong at 2.2x for the trailing 12-month period ended March 2026. So just a few closing remarks. The management team here at Suburban Propane has been together for decades now. We've built our core propane business to be recognized as best-in-class with our hyperlocal operating model. As evidenced by our performance in this year's heating season, our business and our outstanding personnel are very well situated to adapt and handle whatever weather conditions come our way. When others in our industry may struggle to keep up in high demand scenarios, our hard-working and dedicated teams across the country rise to the occasion. I'm super proud of their efforts in the face of some very challenging operating conditions this past winter. They've also done a great job executing on our customer base growth and retention initiatives, especially meeting growing demand for propane in certain unique applications, such as EV charging stations, powering port equipment, power generation for data center construction, backup power generation and multipurpose agricultural uses. We're also proud of our expanded sponsorship with NASCAR and Speedway Motorsports as the official propane of NASCAR, which has given us the opportunity to showcase the power and versatility of propane in a very high-performance setting at 28 races throughout virtually every weekend of the NASCAR Cup Series. In the meantime, we have taken a measured and disciplined approach towards the execution of our long-term strategic growth plans as we continue to build out a renewable energy platform to support the evolving clean energy needs of our customers. As I mentioned in my opening remarks, we've been focused on stabilizing production levels, building a team and increasing the scale of our RNG platform, a process that we call suburbanizing the platform to deliver the same operational discipline and excellence that we have been known for within the propane space. We have made tremendous progress, and we believe that the market for RNG is still in the early stages with tailwinds that will provide positive support for long-term growth potential given the ultra-low carbon qualities and its blending or drop-in replacement capabilities with traditional natural gas. And as we are coming up on our 100-year anniversary in 2028, we view the build-out of our renewable energy platform as truly long-term strategic investments to help set Suburban Propane up for its next century of success. In closing, I want to once again thank the more than 3,300 dedicated employees of Suburban Propane for their unwavering commitment to safety and outstanding customer service during a very challenging winter heating season and during a time when our customers needed us most. Thank you. As always, we appreciate your support and attention this morning, and we'll now open the call for questions. And Morgan, if you could help us with that.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] It appears there are no questions at this time. I would like to turn the conference back over to Mike Stivala for any further remarks.
Michael A. Stivala: Great. Thanks, Morgan, and thank you all again for joining us. I hope you have a great summer. We look forward to talking to you again in August as we close out our third quarter results. So thank you again, and please be safe.
Operator: This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect and have a wonderful rest of your day.