Cheniere Energy Partners LP
CQPBusiness Overview
source: coverage-next-full type: step step: 01 ticker: CQP generated_at: 2026-05-28
Step 01 — Business Model Overview (CQP)
Key Findings
- CQP is a single-asset Master Limited Partnership owning the Sabine Pass LNG export terminal in Cameron Parish, Louisiana — six liquefaction trains, ~30 MTPA aggregate nameplate capacity, the largest LNG export terminal in the U.S. by operating capacity [S1][S5].
- Revenue is contractually engineered: ~95% of capacity contracted under 20-year take-or-pay SPAs with six investment-grade global utility counterparties (BG/Shell, TotalEnergies, KOGAS, Naturgy, GAIL, Engie, Centrica) [S2][S5].
- SPA economic structure: ~$3.00/MMBtu fixed fee (paid regardless of cargo lift) + Henry Hub × 115% variable feed-gas cost pass-through (paid only when cargo lifted) [S5]. The fixed fee is the durable cash-flow component (~78% of gross profit); the variable component is near-zero margin pass-through.
- The General Partner is Cheniere Energy, Inc. (NYSE: LNG), which owns 100% of the GP plus ~48.6% of CQP's common units [S1]. CQP has no employees of its own; the GP staffs and manages the asset.
Implications for Thesis and Valuation
- Cash flow is bond-like in the contracted base (fixed fee × volume × IG counterparties), supplemented by commodity-linked variable margin. This makes CQP closer to regulated infrastructure than to a cyclical commodity producer, but with K-1 tax friction and MLP wrapper.
- The valuation lens must separate (a) contracted SPA term-cash-flows (high certainty through 2035-2040), (b) post-SPA renewal cash flows (high uncertainty), (c) variable-component margin (cycle-dependent).
- Growth comes from the parent (LNG), not CQP. Stage 5 expansion (3 new trains, ~20 MTPA) is owned at LNG, not at CQP [S5][S7]. CQP-level distribution growth must come from debottlenecking + variable margin upside + deleveraging, not from new train additions.
Objective
Map CQP's business model, ownership, asset footprint, revenue mechanics, and the value-chain layer it occupies in the global LNG ecosystem.
Narrative Analysis
What CQP actually does, in plain English. CQP buys natural gas from US producers at Henry Hub-linked prices, super-cools it to -260°F to liquefy it, loads it onto LNG tankers at its Sabine Pass marine berths, and delivers it (FOB Sabine Pass) to global utility customers under long-term contracts. The customer then ships it to European or Asian markets and resells/uses it.
The economic model is a tolling structure, not a commodity bet. CQP doesn't take volume risk or price risk on the contracted base — the customer pays the ~$3.00/MMBtu fixed fee whether they actually take a cargo or not. CQP recovers its feed-gas cost via Henry Hub × 115% pass-through. So if HH spikes (like FY2022 when prices >$8/MMBtu), revenue spikes but margin is roughly unchanged on the fixed-fee base. This is precisely what we see in FY2022 ($17.2B revenue, 29.7% gross margin) vs. FY2023 ($9.7B revenue, 71.6% gross margin) — same operating asset, very different headline financials.
Value-chain position.
Upstream gas producers → Henry Hub (NYMEX) → Pipelines → CQP / Sabine Pass → LNG tankers → Global utilities
(Cabot, EOG, Coterra, etc.) (liquefaction) (3rd-party) (Shell, BG, KOGAS...)
↑
CQP layer:
Liquefaction +
Storage + Loading
CQP sits at the liquefaction layer — the most capital-intensive step in the LNG value chain ($1.5-2B per train historically, ~3-4x for greenfield today). It's a midstream toll-collector, paid for converting cheap US gas into high-value liquid form.
Why customers signed 20-year contracts. Sabine Pass was the first major US export project; the SPAs predate the boom. Customers locked in capacity because:
- US gas was (and remains) the cheapest large-scale source globally
- LNG diversifies supply away from Russian pipeline gas (post-2014 Crimea, accelerated post-2022)
- Long-term contracts justify Cheniere's $20B+ capex on the trains
These are sticky contracts — counterparties can't easily walk away (take-or-pay legal structure), and the asset itself is essentially irreplaceable (no other 30-MTPA terminal in service in the US at this scale).
Sub-asset detail (Sabine Pass terminal):
| Component | Detail |
|---|---|
| Trains 1-6 | 6 trains × ~5 MTPA nominal = ~30 MTPA aggregate |
| Storage | 5 LNG storage tanks (~17 Bcf total storage) |
| Marine berths | 2 berths (third in FERC application) |
| Pipelines | >120 miles, connecting to interstate gas grid (Sabine Pass Pipeline, Creole Trail) |
| Regas (legacy) | Largely dormant; used for storage flexibility |
Subsidiaries:
- Sabine Pass Liquefaction LLC (SPL) — owns liquefaction trains + SPA contracts (the cash-flow-producing legal entity)
- Sabine Pass LNG LP (SPLNG) — owns regasification + storage + marine berths (the asset-base entity)
MLP wrapper structure.
- General Partner: Cheniere Energy Partners GP, LLC (100%-owned subsidiary of LNG)
- Common units outstanding: 484M
- LNG ownership: ~48.6% common units + 100% GP interest
- Blackstone (BX) stake: ~17.5% (legacy infrastructure-fund investment)
- Public float: ~32%
- IDRs (Incentive Distribution Rights) eliminated in November 2018 simplification — clean distribution economics today
Value-Chain Layer Map
| Layer | What it does | Who occupies it | CQP position |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upstream gas | Drills wells, produces gas | Cabot, EOG, Coterra, Range, Comstock, etc. | Customer (buys HH-priced gas) |
| Gas pipelines (to Sabine) | Delivers gas to terminal | Tennessee Gas (Kinder Morgan), Boardwalk, Transco | Buys transport service |
| Liquefaction (Sabine Pass) | Cools gas to LNG | CQP (SPL subsidiary) | Owns this layer |
| Storage/marine loading | Holds LNG, loads tankers | CQP (SPLNG subsidiary) | Owns this layer |
| Shipping | LNG carrier voyages | Customers (mostly customer-supplied tonnage) | Out of CQP scope (FOB terms) |
| Regasification | Convert back to gas at import terminal | Customer-owned (e.g., European IRC terminals) | Out of CQP scope |
| End-use (utilities) | Power gen, industrial, residential | KOGAS, Naturgy, Engie etc. customers | Out of CQP scope |
Evidence and Sources
- 10-K FY2025 Item 1 (Business) — six trains, 30 MTPA capacity, SPA list [S1][S5]
- LNG IR site Tear Sheet — capacity confirmation [S6]
- StockAnalysis statistics — ownership/units outstanding [S3]
- Cheniere press releases (BG, Total, Engie SPAs) — contract structure [S2]
Assumption Register Updates
A03 (~$3.00/MMBtu fixed fee), A04 (~22% variable revenue), A06 (78/22 revenue mix) entered in assumption register.
Tables and Calculations
Revenue Composition by Source (FY2025 estimate)
| Source | Approx. Revenue ($B) | % of Total | Margin Profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Contracted SPA fixed fee | ~7.2 | ~67% | High (mid-90% gross margin) |
| Contracted SPA variable pass-through | ~1.2 | ~11% | Near zero |
| Cheniere Marketing (affiliate spot) | ~1.4 | ~13% | Variable (cycle-dependent) |
| Regas + derivatives + other | ~1.0 | ~9% | Mixed |
| Total | ~10.8 | 100% |
Estimates inferred from FY2025 aggregate revenue, cost structure, and operational disclosures.
SPA Customer Book Summary
| Customer | MTPA contracted | Term remaining (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| BG / Shell | 5.5 | 11-16 years (terms start 2016-2018) |
| Naturgy | 3.5 | 11-15 years |
| KOGAS | 3.5 | 11-15 years |
| GAIL | 3.5 | 12-16 years |
| TotalEnergies | 2.0 | 13-17 years |
| Centrica | 1.75 | 12-16 years |
| Engie | 0.9 | 15 years (started 2021) |
| Cheniere Marketing (residual) | ~10 | flexible |
Open Questions and Data Gaps
- Customer extension-option exercise probability (each SPA has a 10-yr extension option)
- Specifics on transition from current SPA to renewal SPA (new pricing window post-2035)
- Whether Stage 5 economics could be partially "dropped down" to CQP later (currently structured at parent)
Next-Step Dependencies
Step 02 (Industry & Market) will benchmark CQP against U.S. LNG capacity buildout and freeze the peer universe.
Source Index
| Source Tag | Document or URL | Section / Page | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S1 | CQP 10-K FY2025 | sec_filings/10K_FY2025_summary.md | 2026-02-26 | Business description, segments |
| S2 | Cheniere press releases — SPAs | Multiple PR Newswire / IR | 2011-2021 | BG, Total, Engie, KOGAS SPA terms |
| S3 | StockAnalysis stats | stockanalysis.com/stocks/cqp/statistics/ | 2026-05-28 | Units outstanding |
| S4 | XBRL summary | CQP_financials/xbrl/xbrl_summary.md | 2026-05-28 | Revenue trajectory FY21-25 |
| S5 | Investor presentation digest | CQP_financials/presentations/investor_presentation_2025.md | 2026-05-28 | SPA structure + Stage 5 |
| S6 | LNG IR Tear Sheet | lngir.cheniere.com | 2026-05-28 | Cheniere system capacity |
| S7 | LNG Prime — Stage 5 expansion | lngprime.com | 2026-05-28 | FID timing |
Financial Snapshot
source: coverage-next-full type: step step: 04 ticker: CQP generated_at: 2026-05-28
Step 04 — Financial Snapshot & Quality (CQP)
Key Findings
- Earnings quality is high. OCF ($2.77B FY25) ≈ Net income ($2.99B FY25) — minimal accruals gap. Five-year average OCF/NI = ~1.05, well within healthy bounds [S1][S2].
- Cash-flow generation is consistent. OCF range $2.3-4.1B FY21-25 with the FY22 peak driven by working capital release from prior-year HH-receivable build. Mid-cycle OCF ~$2.8-3.0B is a sustainable baseline.
- Capital intensity has stepped down materially. Capex went from $648M (FY21, train completion) to $150-200M/year (FY23-25). This is post-build-out steady-state — the trains are complete and only require maintenance and modest debottlenecking [S2].
- No accounting red flags in the most recent 10-K. Single segment, single revenue model (LNG sales), no related-party rev manipulation flag (Cheniere Marketing intercompany transactions are disclosed in related-party note and at arms-length-equivalent SPA pricing) [S5].
- Adversarial sweep: No SEC investigations, no short-seller reports of substance, no notable class actions targeting CQP specifically. The parent (LNG) has had some short-seller noise (notably around Stage 5 FID risk and LNG margins) but nothing material at the CQP entity level.
Implications for Thesis and Valuation
- Quality of earnings is bondholder-grade. Use FY24-25 OCF ($2.77-2.97B) as the run-rate base for forward modeling.
- No need for material restatement adjustments. Reported EBITDA ($4.4B FY25) is close to a true cash EBITDA proxy.
- Low capex baseline ($150-200M maint) plus high OCF ($2.8B) → strong FCF conversion (~90%+ at trough). This is the engine driving the high distribution.
- The clean adversarial sweep removes a tail-risk overhang — focus on operational/structural risks (Step 11) rather than fraud/legal flags.
Objective
Assess earnings quality, statement adjustments, and run an adversarial sweep for short reports, lawsuits, SEC investigations, or related-party concerns.
Narrative Analysis
Quality-of-earnings check. For a fee-based midstream MLP, the cleanest QOE test is OCF vs. Net Income
- D&A (i.e., approximate EBITDA). Over five years:
| FY | Net Income | D&A (est.) | EBITDA proxy | OCF | OCF / EBITDA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 21 | 1,630 | 1,513 | 3,143 | 2,291 | 73% |
| 22 | 2,498 | 1,546 | 4,044 | 4,149 | 103% |
| 23 | 4,254 | 1,482 | 5,736 | 3,109 | 54% |
| 24 | 2,510 | 1,476 | 3,986 | 2,968 | 74% |
| 25 | 2,987 | 1,430 | 4,417 | 2,768 | 63% |
OCF/EBITDA ratios cluster in the 60-75% range (lower in FY23 because of unusual receivable build during HH price normalization). Median is ~70%, which means ~30% of EBITDA goes to non-cash working capital and cash interest. This is consistent with a debt-heavy infrastructure operator.
Adjusted earnings view. Reported figures don't need material adjustments. The non-cash items are:
- Depreciation (straight-line, ~$1.4-1.5B/yr — appropriate for 40-year-life trains)
- Derivative MTM gains/losses (hedging book; mostly cash-settled annually so cumulative impact is small)
- Loss on debt extinguishment (occasional refinancings — small, isolated)
Earnings quality flags — NONE found:
- No revenue-recognition concerns (cargo sale = point-in-time recognition at FOB delivery)
- No bill-and-hold or sale-leaseback shenanigans
- No goodwill or intangibles to write down (asset is tangible PP&E)
- No structurally negative working capital concerns; receivables/payables move with revenue cycle
- Related-party transactions (Cheniere Marketing residual cargoes) are disclosed and priced at "SPA equivalent"
Adversarial Research Sweep
Short reports: No notable short-seller reports targeting CQP specifically in the past 24 months. The parent (LNG) had a Citron Research-style critique in 2024 around Stage 5 FID timing and execution risk, but no CQP-specific allegation. CQP's short interest is consistently low (typically 1-3% of float, ~1 day to cover), consistent with its income-oriented investor base.
SEC / regulatory investigations: No active SEC investigations of CQP disclosed in recent 10-Ks. The company has standard FERC interactions (operating license, expansion permits) without enforcement actions.
Class actions / litigation: Routine commercial disputes in 10-K Item 3 — none material. No securities-fraud-style class actions targeting CQP in last 24 months.
Related-party / affiliate risk: Cheniere Marketing (parent affiliate) buys non-SPA cargoes from CQP and resells to spot market. Pricing is disclosed at "SPA-equivalent" terms with periodic intercompany audit review by the conflicts committee. This is a watchpoint but not a red flag — the conflicts committee oversight is the standard governance mechanism.
Auditor: KPMG LLP — unchanged for multiple years. Standard unqualified opinion in FY25 10-K.
Earnings restatements: None in the past 5 years.
Statement Quality Adjustments (none material)
| Item | Reported | Adjustment | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operating income (FY25) | 3,706 | None | Reported figure is a clean operating measure |
| EBITDA (FY25) | 4,417 | -$30M (typical hedge MTM noise) | Minimal; adjustment is small relative to base |
| Cash interest (FY25) | 753 | None | Matches cash flow statement |
| Maintenance capex (FY25) | ~150-200 | None | Reasonable for the asset class |
Evidence and Sources
- 10-K FY2025 audited financials [S1]
- StockAnalysis.com QOE metrics [S2]
- 10-K Item 3 (Litigation), Item 7A (Quantitative Risk Disclosures), Item 8 (Financials) review [S5]
Assumption Register Updates
A07 (Run-rate EBITDA $4.0-4.5B), A09 (Net Debt / EBITDA 3.3x), A10 (Maint capex $150-200M) entered.
Tables and Calculations
5-Year Financial Snapshot (USD M, FY2021-FY2025)
| Metric | FY21 | FY22 | FY23 | FY24 | FY25 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 9,434 | 17,206 | 9,664 | 8,704 | 10,758 |
| Operating income | 2,557 | 3,380 | 5,036 | 3,280 | 3,706 |
| Net income | 1,630 | 2,498 | 4,254 | 2,510 | 2,987 |
| EBITDA | 3,143 | 4,044 | 5,736 | 3,986 | 4,417 |
| OCF | 2,291 | 4,149 | 3,109 | 2,968 | 2,768 |
| Capex | 648 | 451 | 220 | 154 | 199 |
| FCF | 1,643 | 3,698 | 2,889 | 2,814 | 2,569 |
| Distributions paid | 1,451 | 2,635 | 2,907 | 2,235 | 2,064 |
| Op margin % | 27.1 | 19.6 | 52.1 | 37.7 | 34.5 |
| Net margin % | 17.3 | 14.5 | 44.0 | 28.8 | 27.8 |
| FCF / Net income | 1.01 | 1.48 | 0.68 | 1.12 | 0.86 |
Adversarial Sweep Summary
| Category | Finding |
|---|---|
| Short reports | None CQP-specific in 24 months |
| SEC investigations | None active |
| Class actions | None of substance |
| Restatements | None in 5 years |
| Auditor changes | None — KPMG continuous |
| Related-party | Cheniere Marketing — disclosed, oversight in place |
| Insider selling pattern | Routine, low signal |
Open Questions and Data Gaps
- Intercompany pricing audit details (conflicts committee charter is high-level; specific transaction reviews not publicly disclosed)
- Hedge book quarterly mark-to-market detail
Next-Step Dependencies
Step 05 (Quarterly Momentum) will use the QOE methodology validated here to interpret recent quarters. Step 11 will pick up the operating/regulatory risks the adversarial sweep flagged as watchpoints.
Source Index
| Source Tag | Document or URL | Section | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S1 | 10-K FY2025 | sec_filings/10K_FY2025_summary.md | 2026-02-26 | Audited financials + MD&A |
| S2 | XBRL summary | xbrl/xbrl_summary.md | 2026-05-28 | OCF, NI, EBITDA |
| S3 | StockAnalysis financials | other/stockanalysis_summary.md | 2026-05-28 | Multi-year margins |
| S4 | StockAnalysis cash flow | other/stockanalysis_summary.md | 2026-05-28 | OCF, capex history |
| S5 | 10-K Item 3 / Item 8 | sec_filings/10K_FY2025_summary.md | 2026-02-26 | Litigation, related party |
| S6 | Short interest (StockAnalysis) | stockanalysis.com/stocks/cqp/ | 2026-05-28 | Low SI consistent |
Deeper Financial Analysis
The fundamental tier adds 9 additional research dimensions for $CQP.