Want Decades Of Passive Income? 3 Stocks To Buy Right Now.
By Geoffrey Seiler – Mar 9, 2026 at 10:05PM EST
Key Points
-
Energy Transfer has a high yield and is returning to growth mode.
-
Enterprise Products Partners has a storied history of being the most consistent company is the midstream space.
-
Western Midstream is going through a transition year, but remains a solid long-term investment with a very high yield.
NYSE: ET
Energy Transfer
Today’s Change
(-0.80%) $-0.15
Current Price
$18.59
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$64B
Day’s Range
$18.44 – $18.80
52wk Range
$14.60 – $19.30
Volume
16M
Avg Vol
15M
Gross Margin
12.27%
Dividend Yield
7.07%
Energy Transfer (ET 0.80%) sports a 7.1% yield with plans to increase its distribution at a 3% to 5% pace moving forward. The company has one of the largest midstream footprints in the U.S., with much of its business coming from fee-based operations, helping create solid visibility.
After getting a bit over its skis with debt during the pandemic and having to slash its distribution, the company was able to quickly improve its balance sheet and return its distribution to prior levels — and its distribution now sits well above the level before it cut it. Meanwhile, Energy Transfer is back in growth mode, as the company has a growing number of growth projects tied to natural gas demand, which is being boosted by AI data center consumption.
With a cheap stock valuation, well-covered distribution (nearly 1.8 times last quarter), and a strong growth pipeline, Energy Transfer is a stock you can buy and hold for strong passive income generation over the next decade and beyond.
Enterprise Products Partners
Expand
NYSE: EPD
Enterprise Products Partners
Today’s Change
(-1.28%) $-0.48
Current Price
$37.09
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$81B
Day’s Range
$36.94 – $38.22
52wk Range
$27.77 – $38.22
Volume
6.4M
Avg Vol
4.4M
Gross Margin
12.86%
Dividend Yield
5.79%
The king of consistency, Enterprise Products Partners (EPD 1.28%) has increased its distribution for 27 consecutive years. That’s impressive given the number of energy market collapses and tough economic periods that have occurred over that stretch. It also speaks to the company’s conservative and reliable nature, which remains there today.
The stock currently carries a 5.9% yield, and its distribution has been growing at around a 3% to 4% annual pace. It has one of the best balance sheets in the space, and had a robust 1.8 coverage ratio last quarter. Meanwhile, it will be flush with cash this year, as it reduced its capital expenditure (capex) budget for 2026, taking it to a range of $2.5 billion to $2.9 billion from $4.4 billion in 2025. Meanwhile, a bunch of growth projects are set to come online later this year, leading the company to predict double-digit adjusted EBITDA and cash flow in 2027.
Overall, Enterprise is a reliable high-yield stock you can count on that will see solid growth in the coming years.
Image source: Getty Images.
Western Midstream
Expand
NYSE: WES
Western Midstream Partners
Today’s Change
(-0.91%) $-0.38
Current Price
$41.33
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$16B
Day’s Range
$40.93 – $41.80
52wk Range
$33.60 – $44.74
Volume
1.8M
Avg Vol
1.3M
Gross Margin
52.29%
Dividend Yield
8.73%
With an 8.6% yield, Western Midstream (WES 0.91%) has one of the highest yields in the midstream space. Meanwhile, it is looking to grow its distribution by 3% in 2026.
While Western Midstream had a strong 2025, it won’t see as much growth this year, as the company is expecting to see some lower throughput through its systems, and it recently restructured an agreement with parent Occidental (OXY +1.50%) to move to a fixed-fee structure from a cost-of-service structure. Cost-of-service arrangements are typically used during early midstream buildouts to ensure the companies capture a necessary return on their investments.
In the new deal with Occidental, it will have minimum volume commitments through 2035, while Occidental will return 15.3 million units (s) to Western, worth around $610 million, as compensation for the reduced operating cash flow of the new structure. However, Western management believes it will be able to reduce costs to such an extent that it will have little impact on its adjusted EBITDA.
Western also expanded its agreement with ConocoPhillips in the Delaware Basin, as it looks to further diversify away from Occidental. In addition, the company has been going all-in on the produced water business through its acquisition of Aris Water Solutions and Pathfinder Pipeline project. As such, the company is still set to grow its adjusted EBITDA this year, even during this transition period.
With one of the best balance sheets in the sector and the company setting the bar lower, now looks a great time to add this high-yielder to your portfolio.
Read Next
•By Matt DiLallo
Is Energy Transfer Stock Going to $30?
•By Leo Sun
2 Energy Stocks That Can Stand the Test of Time
•By Matt DiLallo
Here’s the First Energy Stock I Plan to Buy in March
•By Matt DiLallo
The Smartest Dividend Stocks to Buy With $150 Right Now
Energy Transfer Continues to Boost Its 7%-Yielding Dividend
•By Matt DiLallo
4 Top Dividend Stocks Yielding More Than 4% to Buy for Passive Income Right Now
About the Author
Geoffrey Seiler is a contributing Motley Fool stock market analyst covering technology, consumer goods, healthcare, energy, and materials stocks. Prior to The Motley Fool, Geoffrey was a senior equity analyst at Raging Capital Management, a $600 million long-short hedge fund. He holds a bachelor’s degree in history from Haverford College.
Stocks Mentioned
Energy Transfer
NYSE: ET
$18.59
(-0.80%)-$0.15
Enterprise Products Partners
NYSE: EPD
$37.09
(-1.28%)-$0.48
ConocoPhillips
NYSE: COP
$117.10
(+0.03%)+$0.03
Occidental Petroleum
NYSE: OXY
$55.01
(+1.50%)+$0.82
Western Midstream Partners
NYSE: WES
$41.33
(-0.91%)-$0.38
*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.
Sumber Artikel:
Fool.com