NYSE:MPC Marathon Petroleum Q1 2024 Earnings Report $165.47 -4.72 (-2.77%) Closing price 08/1/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$171.50 +6.03 (+3.64%) As of 08/1/2025 08:00 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Marathon Petroleum EPS ResultsActual EPS$2.78Consensus EPS $2.53Beat/MissBeat by +$0.25One Year Ago EPS$6.09Marathon Petroleum Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$32.71 billionExpected Revenue$32.07 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$634.43 millionYoY Revenue Growth-6.20%Marathon Petroleum Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date4/30/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, April 30, 2024Conference Call Time11:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsMarathon Petroleum's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, August 5, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 11:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q2 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Marathon Petroleum Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrApril 30, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Marathon generated $2.58 EPS in Q1 and $3.3 billion of adjusted EBITDA despite major refinery turnarounds. Four of Marathon’s largest and most profitable refineries were in turnaround during Q1, reducing throughput by nearly 270,000 bpd and weighing on results. For Q2, MPC projects system throughput of about 2.8 million bpd at 94% utilization and expects operating costs to fall to approximately $4.95 per barrel. The company announced an additional $5 billion share repurchase authorization, bringing total capital returned since 2021 to $35 billion and cutting the share count by roughly 50%. MPLX’s midstream business provided a $2.2 billion annualized cash distribution to MPC—fully covering dividends and over half of planned 2024 capex—with $550 million contributed in Q1. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallMarathon Petroleum Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xThere are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Welcome to the MPC First Quarter 2024 Earnings Call. My name is Sheila, and I will be your operator for today's call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session. Please note that this conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:19I will now turn the call over to Kristina Kazarian. Kristina, you may begin. Speaker 100:00:24Welcome to Marathon Petroleum Corporation's Q1 2024 Earnings Conference Call. The slides that accompany this call can be found on our Web site at marathonpetroleum.com under the Investor tab. Joining me on the call today are Mike Hennigan, CEO Mary Anne Mannen, President John Quaid, CFO and other members of the executive team. We invite you to read the Safe Harbor statements on Slide 2. We will be making forward looking statements today. Speaker 100:00:50Actual results may differ. Factors Good morning Speaker 200:01:01Good morning and thank you for joining our call. Effective March 1, 2 new independent directors joined the MPC Board. Eileen Drake and Kimberly Ellison Taylor have strong records of accomplishment in complex industries, making them outstanding additions, and we're happy to have them join our Board. As for the macro refining environment, we remain constructive in our view. Oil demand is at a record high globally and we expect oil demand to continue to set records into the foreseeable future. Speaker 200:01:35Forecasted outlooks for this year estimate 1,200,000 to 2,000,000 barrels per day of incremental demand over 2023, primarily driven by the growing need for transportation fuels. Within our own domestic and export business, we are seeing steady demand year over year for gasoline and growth for diesel and jet fuel. We continue to believe that 2024 will be another year of record refined product consumption. Global supply remains constrained. Anticipated capacity additions have progressed more slowly than expected. Speaker 200:02:12And longer term, the level of announced capacity additions remains limited for the rest of the decade. In the Q1, high global turnaround activity, the transition to summer gasoline blends and light product inventories supported refining fundamentals, especially towards the end of the quarter. As we look forward, we believe these fundamentals will support an enhanced mid cycle environment for the refining industry. We believe the U. S. Speaker 200:02:45Refining industry will remain structurally advantaged over the rest of the world. Our system has a locational advantage given the accessibility of nearby crude, which we believe will grow as cost of transportation increases. The availability of low cost natural gas, low cost butane and our refining systems complexity all increase our competitive advantage over the international sources of supply. Even with this outlook, we remain focused on capital discipline while investing to grow earnings at strong returns. In the Q1, we invested over $1,300,000,000 in capital expenditures, investments and acquisitions comprised of attractive refining projects and midstream investments, including MPLX's $625,000,000 strategic acquisition in the Utica Basin. Speaker 200:03:42In refining, we are investing predominantly at our large competitively advantaged facilities to enhance shareholder value and position MPC well into the future. With a focus on safety and asset reliability, we successfully completed the largest amount of planned maintenance work in MPC's history. 4 of our largest and most profitable refineries were in turnaround during the quarter, limiting our financial performance. These assets were in turnaround during a period of lower demand and now we're ready to meet the increased consumption that comes with the summer driving season. In midstream, MPLX continues to execute on attractive growth opportunities. Speaker 200:04:29The Harmon Creek 2 gas processing plant was placed into service in late February, bringing MPLX's Marcellus processing capacity to 6,500,000,000 cubic feet per day. And in the Permian Basin, Preakness 2 is approaching start up and expected to be online by the end of May. We're also building our 7th gas processing plant in the basin Secretariat, which is expected to be online in the second half of twenty twenty five. Once operational, our total processing capacity in the Delaware Basin will be approximately 1,400,000,000 cubic feet per day, which would average to a pace of roughly one new plant per year since 2018. Additionally, MPLX announced 2 strategic transactions. Speaker 200:05:201st, in the Utica, MPLX enhanced its footprint through the acquisition of MPLX enhanced its footprint through the acquisition of additional ownership interest in an existing joint venture and a dry gas gathering system. We've already seen growth in the rich gas window of the Utica and we see new producers moving into the region. 2nd, MPLX entered into a definitive agreement to combine the Whistler Pipeline and Rio Bravo Pipeline Projects into a newly formed joint venture. The platform expands MPLX's natural gas value chain and positions MPLX for future growth opportunities. MPLX is strategic to MPC's portfolio. Speaker 200:06:02Its current $2,200,000,000 annualized cash distribution MPC fully covers MPC's dividend and more than half of our planned 2024 capital program. We expect MPLX to continue to increase its cash distributions as it pursues growth opportunities, further enhancing the value of this strategic relationship. Our overall capital allocation framework remains consistent. We will invest in sustaining our asset base, while paying a secure, competitive and growing dividend, and we intend to grow the company's earnings while exercising strict capital discipline. Beyond these three priorities, we are committed to returning excess capital through share repurchases to meaningfully lower our share count. Speaker 200:06:54Demonstrating this commitment, today, we announced an additional $5,000,000,000 share repurchase authorization. Our total capital return through share repurchases and dividends since May of 2021 now totals $35,000,000,000 with MPC share count reduced by nearly 50%. Let me take a second to share our view on value. We continue to believe share repurchases make sense of the current share price level. When we purchase MPC stock, we are buying into a premier highly advantaged refining system. Speaker 200:07:31We're also buying into a growing mid stream business via our ownership at MPLX. And finally, we are buying strong business execution, disciplined investment and a commitment to capital returns, which will continue to position MPC as an excellent investment. At this point, I'd like to turn the call over to Mary Anne. Speaker 100:07:52Thank you, Mike. Our team's operational and commercial execution supported our ability to generate earnings per share of $2.58 for the quarter and $3,300,000,000 of adjusted EBITDA, while having 4 of our largest refineries in turnaround. This quarter, in conjunction with the planned turnaround activity, we took the opportunity to execute incremental smaller high return quick hit projects focused on optimization and reliability initiatives. This planned maintenance activity contributed to a reduction in refinery throughput of nearly 270,000 barrels per day or 9% compared with the 4th quarter. We plan this turnaround activity to occur in the 4th quarter in the Q1, excuse me, with a focus on safety and asset integrity and in a period of seasonally weaker demand. Speaker 100:08:51Now with a large portion of our 2024 activity complete, we are well positioned to run our refining system near full utilization through the summer driving season. Capture in the quarter was 92% and reflects the seasonal market backdrop. Light product margins were weaker and product inventory builds were both headwinds to quarterly results. Our commitment to commercial excellence remains foundational. We believe that the capabilities we have built over the last few years provide a sustainable advantage versus our peers, and we expect to continue to see the impact in our quarterly results. Speaker 100:09:31We are successfully progressing our 2024 capital investment plan. This includes executing on a multiyear infrastructure infrastructure investment at our Los Angeles refinery and construction of a distillate hydrotreater at our Galveston Bay refinery, both expected to yield returns of approximately 20 percent or more. In addition to these large projects, we continue to execute on smaller high return quick hit projects targeted at enhancing refinery yields, improving energy efficiency and lowering our costs. Let me turn the call over to John. Speaker 300:10:04Thanks, Mary Anne. Slide 6 shows the sequential change in adjusted EBITDA from Q4 2023 to Q1 2024, as well as the reconciliation between net income and adjusted EBITDA for the quarter. Adjusted EBITDA was lower sequentially by approximately $300,000,000 driven primarily by heavy planned turnaround activity resulting in lower R and M throughputs. To assist with your analysis, we thought it helpful to note the company recorded an $89,000,000 or $0.20 per share charge resulting from the quarterly fair value remeasurement of certain long term incentive compensation. Aligned with shareholder value creation, the charge was driven by the $53 or 36 percent increase in our share price, as well as our total shareholder return performance versus our peers during the quarter. Speaker 300:11:01Again, this charge, which we did not adjust for, reduced earnings by $0.20 per share. The tax rate for the quarter was 18%, resulting in a tax provision of $293,000,000 While this rate is lower than what we'd expect to see for the year, it reflects the permanent tax benefits of net income quarter. Moving to our segment results, slide 7 provides an overview of our Refining and Marketing segment for the Q1. Our refining and marketing results reflect lower throughputs associated with planned turnaround activity as our refineries ran at 82% utilization processing over 2,400,000 barrels of crude per day. Refining operating costs were $6.14 per barrel in the 1st quarter, higher sequentially primarily due to Speaker 400:12:02the lower Speaker 300:12:02throughputs. Sequentially, per barrel margins were up slightly as higher crack spreads were offset by lower margin capture. Slide 9 shows the changes in our mid segment adjusted EBITDA versus the Q4 of 2023. Our midstream segment is growing and generating strong cash flows. In this quarter, MPLX's distribution contributed $550,000,000 in cash flow to MPC. Speaker 300:12:31As Mike said, MPLX remains a source of durable earnings in the MPC portfolio and is a differentiator for us. Slide 10 presents the elements of change in our consolidated cash position for the Q1. Operating cash flow excluding changes in working capital was over $1,900,000,000 in the quarter driven by both our refining and midstream businesses. Working capital was a $389,000,000 use of cash for the quarter, driven primarily by minor builds in crude and refined product inventories mainly related to the turnaround activity. This quarter, capital expenditures, investments and acquisitions were $1,300,000,000 including $710,000,000 of growth and maintenance capital and $622,000,000 for MPLX Acquisitions net of cash received. Speaker 300:13:26Highlighting our steadfast commitment to superior shareholder returns, MPC returned $2,500,000,000 via repurchases and dividends during the quarter. As Mike commented, earlier today we announced the approval of an additional $5,000,000,000 for share repurchases and as of April 26, we had $8,800,000,000 remaining under our current share repurchase authorizations. And from May of 2021 through April 26 this year, we have repurchased 312,000,000 shares or 48% of the shares that were outstanding in May of 2021. At the end of the Q1, MPC had approximately 7.6 $1,000,000,000 in consolidated cash and short term investments, which includes $385,000,000 of MPLX cash. Turning to guidance, on slide 11, we provide our 2nd quarter outlook. Speaker 300:14:26With our significant first quarter turnaround activity behind us, we are projecting higher throughput volumes of nearly 2,800,000 barrels per day, representing utilization of 94%. Planned turnaround expense is expected to be approximately $200,000,000 in the 2nd quarter with activity primarily in the Mid Con region. Operating costs are projected to be $4.95 per barrel in the 2nd quarter, much lower than the 1st quarter, reflecting the benefit of running our system near full utilization and lower expected operating costs. For the full year, we expect operating cost per barrel to trend towards a more normalized level of $5 per barrel subject to energy cost volatility. Distribution costs are expected to be approximately $1,500,000,000 for the 2nd quarter. Speaker 300:15:18Corporate costs are expected to be $200,000,000 With that, let me pass it back to Mike. Speaker 200:15:25In summary, our unwavering commitment to safety, operational excellence and sustained commercial improvement positions us well. We will continue to prioritize capital investments to ensure the safe and reliable performance of our assets. We will also invest in projects where we believe there are attractive returns. The enhanced mid cycle environment should continue longer term given our advantages over marginal sources of supply and growing global demand. MPLX remains a source of growth and a unique competitive advantage in our portfolio. Speaker 200:16:04We believe it will continue to grow its cash distributions to cover both MPC's dividend and capital requirements and still generate excess cash before the first dollar of refining EBITDA is earned. Another way to frame it, MPC has reduced its share count from approximately 650,000,000 in May of 2021 down to approximately 355,000,000 at the end of the Q1. Over this same time frame, the MPLX units owned by MPC is held roughly flat at approximately 650,000,000 units. So the ratio of MPLX units held by MPC to our outstanding shares or the potential value to MPC on a per share basis from MPLX has nearly doubled. The midstream business, which continues to grow, provides a unique value proposition for MPC shareholders. Speaker 200:17:02We believe MPC is positioned as the refiner investment of choice with the strongest through cycle cash generation and the ability to deliver superior returns supported by our steadfast commitment to return capital. Consistent with our goal to have the strongest through cycle cash generation, even with 4 of our most profitable refineries in turnaround, adjusted on a comparable basis, we still generated more cash from operations than our refining peers. Very proud of the team's accomplishment. With that, let me turn the call back to Kristina. Speaker 100:17:41Thanks, Mike. As we open the call up for questions, as a courtesy to all participants, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and a follow-up. If time permits, we'll re prompt for additional questions. With that, operator, we're ready. Operator00:17:54Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Our first question comes from Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Speaker 500:18:23Yes. Good morning, Mike and Mary Anne, team. Thanks for taking the time. I had two questions. The first is more of an industry one, which is your perspective on the West Coast. Speaker 500:18:34We've seen as Rodeo has shut down and Martinez, West Coast margins have really strengthened here, particularly for gasoline. So what's your outlook as we go into the summer and your thoughts on doing business in California broadly? Thank you. Speaker 200:18:51Yes. Good morning, Neil. I'll let Rick start off with that one. Yes. Speaker 400:18:54Hi, Neil. Good morning. The market really in California is fundamentally short and it's long diesel. That's kind of the thesis as we look out there. And an example of that is if you look at gasoline inventories especially right now, they're tight. Speaker 400:19:12In fact, they're below the 5 year average and we're seeing solid demand across the integrated systems. So I generally would say that's the reasoning. That's the reasoning for the scenario right now. And I just want to reiterate the market is short gasoline. And so this is an environment that we expect may persist through summer and we'll see where it goes from there. Speaker 500:19:39Thanks, Ketan. And then the follow-up is just on the return of capital cadence. The buyback this quarter, the 2.2 was a little bit lighter than what I think many in the street were modeling. Just any thoughts on what was that a reflection of some of the one time working capital and M and A dynamics or valuation sensitivity and how should we think about that over the course of the year? Speaker 200:20:06Yes, Neal, this is Mike. Thanks for that question. There is no change in our commitment to returning capital, evidenced by the fact that we got the Board to authorize another $5,000,000,000 So what I would say to you is, don't read into the quarter by quarter variability. To your point, it could have been a little bit higher, but there's a lot of factors that are influencing the activity within the quarter. So the takeaway should be, we are committed and that hasn't changed. Speaker 200:20:34We believe in returning capital to shareholders. You're going to continue to see us do that. Operator00:20:45Next, we will hear from Manav Gupta with UBS. Your line is Speaker 600:20:50open. Guys, in your introductory comments, you did mention that some global capacity was supposed to come on. It's challenged, it's not really come on. I'm trying to understand here, once we go past 2024, like 2025, there is limited capacity expansions that we are aware of. And at this point, I think we understand that 2024 will be above mid cycle. Speaker 600:21:13But based on your commentary, would it be fair to say given road year shutdown and other Houston refinery shutting down, you could well see 2025 also as a year where cracks are above well above the mid cycle levels. Speaker 200:21:29Yes, Manav, I think you said it very well. I'll let Rick add some comments. But in general, like we said in our prepared remarks, global supply is constrained. And we are a believer that demand will continue to set constrained constrained supply scenario leads us to the situation that we have in the market today. We don't see it changing based on everything that we know is available to us and that's why we have that view. Speaker 200:22:03But I'll let Rick add some color. Speaker 400:22:06Yes. Hi Manav. So I will echo Mike's comments and share what you know and what you're reading is what we're seeing and hearing in the marketplace as well that the expansions appear to be continuously delayed. And with that, Mike mentioned in his opening remarks, we see demand growing by 1.2 to upwards to 2,000,000 barrels a day. So pick a number even in between there and that exceeds, Manav, the expansions that may come online end of year, this year or some time in 2025. Speaker 400:22:41So even with those expansions coming online, we see demand outpacing those expansions and thus why we're so optimistic on this mid cycle plus environment lasting. Speaker 200:22:54And Manav, let me also add that historically, the demand numbers continue to get revised up. I know everybody is real time in their thought process, but it's also good to look back no matter which agency is doing it. In fact, the U. S. Agency, when they put the monthlies out, have continually for a long period of time been underestimating gasoline and diesel demand. Speaker 200:23:17So it's just another factor that should put on people's radar to really look at all the revisions that have occurred because the demand numbers have been stronger once they get fully corrected and vetted than they are sometimes in the real time disclosures. Speaker 600:23:36Perfect. My quick follow-up here is, I don't think I remember any time when I've seen a $650,000,000 turnaround expense in a single quarter. So this quarter was truly exceptional in the amount of downtime you took. Now we look at 2nd quarter guidance, it's meaningfully up. But if you look at the rest of the year, should we imagine that 1Q truly was exceptional because if you're going to run harder for the rest of the year, that would mean better capture, lower OpEx per barrel, but it also translate to higher GNP earnings when you translate it to the MPLX side. Speaker 100:24:11Manav, good morning. It's Mary Anne. Let me start. So you're absolutely right. We tried to share as we were on our call last quarter that we expected to have really the largest turnaround in MPC's history in the Q1 and we did. Speaker 100:24:27We had 4 of our largest assets in turnaround. We think that's important as you well stated, given getting that work done ahead of summer driving season. We think we are well poised for that. You made comment also about the utilization. You can see from our guidance, utilization is up. Speaker 100:24:48OpEx per barrel, similarly, when you look quarter over quarter, the throughput impacted by the turnaround was certainly a driver. Sequentially, we're down OpEx, and you can see from what we guided in the second quarter as well that OpEx per barrel is actually well below the what we printed for the Q1. So think you said it well. We took the opportunity in the quarter, while we had the downtime at those largest plants, as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, to work on some projects at those same refineries, those same assets that we think will add reliability in the future as well. Speaker 600:25:32Hope Speaker 100:25:32that answers your question. Speaker 300:25:34Yes. And hey Manav, it's John. Just to build on what Mary Anne is saying to connect some thoughts as well. Those additional projects that we took the time to do, right, you can see some of that in turnaround, some of that in OpEx. But really, we felt like given the window we had and getting ready for the rest of the year, that was the right thing to do. Speaker 300:25:50Sorry, just wanted to add Speaker 600:25:52that. And just to quickly follow-up, like the higher throughput also results in higher MPLX earnings for the next quarter, right? Yes. Speaker 300:26:00Hey, Manav, it's John, and I'm not sure if this question came up on the MPLX call as well, but I know a little bit about it from my prior role. Remember, there's maybe less sensitivity on the L and S side of that business as refinery utilization moves higher and lower, just given the contractual structure of those contracts. So, while there is some sensitivity, it may not be as much as you might be thinking. Speaker 600:26:24Okay. Thank you. Speaker 200:26:26Manav, it's Mike. I just want to add. I think the takeaway is, as Mary Anne said, is we chose to use the Q1 to take down 4 of our most profitable refineries. It's a lower demand period in the U. S, etcetera. Speaker 200:26:39And our thought process there was spend that money, increase the reliability, get ourselves ready so that we're able to perform in the second and third quarters as we progress out the year. So we think we've positioned ourselves very well despite a heavy spend in the quarter. We're happy that we've done it. We think the assets are in really good shape and we're looking forward to the rest of the year. Speaker 500:27:05Thank you. Operator00:27:08Thank you. Speaker 300:27:08You're welcome. Operator00:27:11Next, we will hear from Paul Cheng with Scotiabank. You may proceed. Speaker 700:27:15Hey, guys. Good morning. Speaker 200:27:19Good morning, Paul. Speaker 700:27:21I guess that maybe you can answer. If we look at comparing to your guidance from last quarter, your throughput is lower, OpEx and turnaround expense are higher than the guidance. Is it all contribute by what you characterize as some of this quick hit project that is not originally in the guidance or that something else is contribute to that? That's the first question. Speaker 100:27:50Paul, hi, it's Mary Anne. So yes, I think you characterized it well. We took the opportunity while those assets were down in turnaround to work on a few projects, frankly, one at each of them that we felt would improve reliability going forward. When you talk about the guidance throughput, as you said, slightly below that, that we guided, which contributed to the OpEx per barrel number that you saw slightly higher than what we guided. But in general, as you are as we're in turnaround and we look at the activity there, we took the opportunity to do what we needed to do to ensure safe, reliable operations. Speaker 100:28:28And as Mike has already said, given us the opportunity to run hard as we look at the driving season ahead and increased performance. Speaker 700:28:37Okay. The second question is that, maybe this is for Rich. With the TMX spot up, how that will impact your West Coast operation? Will you be able to fully repay the heavy oil and the medium sour that you're currently running over there by the WCS or that we have some kind of configuration limitation because the WCS is consistent mostly is the bitumen and a lot of condensate, but don't have the middle. Speaker 400:29:10Yes. Hi, Paul, and thank you for the question. So, on the West Coast specifically, let me maybe back up and share what is public. We do have a TMX commitment on the line and we believe we will be a significant beneficiary because we will see we will receive beneficiary because we will receive incremental Canadian advantaged crude not only in to Paul our Pacific Northwest system, but also our West Coast system. And specifically to your question, we will end up, I believe, having a significant amount of opportunities on the spot market within the Westridge Dock to take potentially barrels to LA and because of sulfur limitations, because the majority of people out in the West Coast, I believe, as you know are running ANS, we believe you'll see somewhat of a dumbbell type blending system where you'll take heavy Canadian with a lighter grade and introduce it into the units out there. Speaker 400:30:15But the net net for us is we believe it will be quite positive for us not only at Anacortes, our Pacific Northwest refinery, but also at LA. Speaker 700:30:28Rich, can you share that how much WCS do you think you may be able to run? Speaker 400:30:35Right now, Paul, that's an unknown. We're continuing to look at the system and we'll look at the economics. So that will vary from month to month. Operator00:30:51Next, we will Speaker 800:31:00So my question is a follow-up on capital allocation. You drew cash by about $2,000,000,000 at the parent level in 1Q. You now sit at about $7,000,000,000 in parent cash. So we're slowly getting closer to the $1,000,000,000 minimum cash balance. And I know we aren't there yet, but can you talk about how we should think about the buyback once you get to your minimum cash balance? Speaker 800:31:21Should we expect something like 100% of free cash flow paid out given you won't be supplementing with the balance sheet anymore. Just any color on what kind of normal could look like after you've drawn down your cash would be helpful. Speaker 200:31:35Yes, John, this is Mike. I'll start off by saying we've been fortunate enough to continue to generate cash. That's been a good story for us. Back to Neil's first question, we want to make sure there's no ambiguity. We're committed to returning capital. Speaker 200:31:52One of the questions that Neil asked was it a little lower in the quarter and I tried to explain to not read into that quarter to quarter variability because a lot of factors that impact that. So I think the biggest takeaway is we're huge believers in returning capital to shareholders. And depending on the market conditions, etcetera, we evaluate it every single quarter and we try and put a program in place that prioritizes that. At the same time, we're also looking at where should we invest. You heard Mary Anne just talk about we decided to spend a little bit more money in the quarter to enhance the reliability of our assets. Speaker 200:32:31That's a good decision on our part. It's the first decision in our capital framework. But going forward, I think the big takeaway is you'll continue to see us be a leader in returning capital to shareholders. That's something we believe in. You'll see us be a leader in generating cash among our peers, as I said in my prepared remarks, very happy despite the situation we were in the Q1 with 4 of our largest most profitable assets down. Speaker 200:32:59We still generated more cash than our peers. So we think that was a good accomplishment. And over time, you're going to see that we'll remain committed to our capital framework of which when will we get to that $1,000,000,000 That's a good question. I don't know that I can predict it depending on how the market treats us. But I think the biggest takeaway is we're committed to returning capital and as long as we continue to generate cash, we'll continue to do that and reduce the share count going forward. Speaker 800:33:30Okay, great. Thanks, Mike. And then so my follow-up is just on long term captures. I don't think you're officially calling 100% your long term capture, but that's certainly where the business has trended. And you've talked a lot about sources of improvements to date. Speaker 800:33:46My question is, what are the key drivers going forward of driving that capture from 100% to something like 105% or something larger on a sustainable basis? Is it some of the capital projects you're working at the refineries? I'm just trying to get a sense for where we should be looking for the next wave of improvements on the capture side. Speaker 100:34:09John, hey, it's Mary Anne and thanks for the question. As we've been sharing, our commercial performance remains foundational. You heard talk about last quarter some changes that we made in the organization to continue to focus on value chain optimization. That's clearly an objective that Mike has for the organization. We're not done. Speaker 100:34:35We think a lot of the things that we have put in place are sustainable, but we do believe there's opportunities going forward. We like to say that we're approaching 100 percent over a longer period of time. As you've seen, we did it last year. And as you know, there's things from the market that we can't control. You look at our performance this quarter, as you know, we had weaker light product margins as I shared and obviously the commercial team took some decisions pretty late in the quarter on product inventory build as well. Speaker 100:35:09But we will continue to focus on the things that we can and we do believe there are opportunities that will allow us to continue to improve commercial performance. We say we're approaching 100% and we hope you've seen us use that as a deliverable going forward. Ultimately, at the end of the day, as Mike has shared with you, our objective is to deliver the strongest EBITDA per barrel and cash generation relative to our peers and that remains a key focus when we look at our capture performance. Speaker 800:35:44Thank you. Speaker 200:35:45Yes, John, I can't help myself to jump in here. I know this capture metric gets a lot of discussion and Christine has been steadfast that we need to report on it. I just want to caution as I always do that there's a lot of factors, market factors, etcetera, that hit on that. The market should know we're committed to improving our commercial performance. That's obviously a goal here. Speaker 200:36:09But the metric that I want is to look at the most is cash. At the end of the day, go to the bottom of the sheet as opposed to all the very different variables throughout it. The most important thing is, are we generating the most cash? So that's the metric that I start with as we analyze the performance of the assets, etcetera. So I just want to reiterate that. Speaker 200:36:32I know a lot of people like to talk capture. It's not the one that I think tells the story of the business that much. Speaker 800:36:40Understood. Thank you. Speaker 200:36:43You're welcome. Operator00:36:45Our next question will come from Jason Gabelman with TD Cowen. You may proceed. Speaker 900:36:51Yes, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to first ask about the Martinez biofuel projects. It looks like the other income line was close to in refining was close to $200,000,000 this quarter. I think that includes the impact from Martinez. Speaker 900:37:08I was hoping to get an idea of how much that contributed to earnings this quarter and then how you think about the ramp up in capacity to 100% from current 50%? Thanks. Speaker 300:37:23Great. Hey, Jason, it's John. Let me take the first part of that and then I'll turn it over to Mary Anne. But just to clarify, that other that you're seeing on the R and M walk, it is not related to Martinez. Largely, what you're seeing there are, and you've seen it in prior quarters, are some of the insurance proceeds we've recognized in regards to a claim we had at some of our refineries. Speaker 300:37:47But I'll turn it over to Mary Anne to talk about Martinez, but I wanted to clarify it's not in that bar. Speaker 100:37:53Hey, Jason, it's Mary Anne. Thanks for the question. So let me give you update on Martinez. As you stated, we are currently operating at about 50% of our nameplate capacity. In November, we had a heater tube failure at Martinez. Speaker 100:38:10And as I shared with you last quarter, we continue to work with all the regulators to align on what repairs are necessary and ensure safe reliable operation going forward. We would expect to continue to operate at 50% for the Q2. And then somewhere mid third quarter, we would expect to see our capacity increase to about 75% of that nameplate. And again, when I talk about nameplate, I'm talking about 48,000 barrels a day, by the way, just for clarity. And then, we do expect to ramp up to full capacity on Martinez by year end. Speaker 100:38:49So again, 50% second quarter, ramping to 75% mid third quarter with full rate capacity by year end. Speaker 900:38:59Got it. And that means, I guess, that you got approval for the fixes that you need to make in the unit? And then is there any cost OpEx associated with the improvements you need to make at the plant? Speaker 100:39:18So in our Q2 guidance, we do not have any cost yet included in that Q2 guidance. Sorry about that. Yes, we continue to work with regulators to align on the path forward. So we believe, again, continue to work with them, but we believe we understand the work that needs to be done and we are aligning with our regulators to achieve that. Speaker 900:39:42Great. Thanks. And then my other question is, sorry, Mike, I'm going to go back to this capture metric. And you include just 392,000,000 dollars headwind on Slide 8 of capture impact. Some of that is from product inventory and derivatives. Speaker 900:40:00I'm wondering if that amount, if you could share what that is and if that reverses, in 2Q? Thanks. Speaker 100:40:10Yes. It's Mary Anne. So you'll notice that we try to give you on that slide, we show you the impact that is from crude and the impact from product. And what you saw this quarter is what was normally a very positive impact from product margins really narrowed quite a bit in the Q1. Alternatively, that crude is typically a key driver. Speaker 100:40:35It always pulls capture and that will ebb and flow just depending on a series of things. But the key driver in this Q1 as you see were product margins and the inventories, right? We made some commercial decisions, which we think were the right ones and we made those decisions sort of late in the quarter. But as those market dynamics change, we'll be able to share that with you going forward. Speaker 1000:41:01Okay. Thanks. Operator00:41:10Our next question will Speaker 1100:41:19I guess I'd like to dig into here maybe your expectations on crude deaths. We've heard from some of the other companies what's going on in terms of available barrels out there. And you've talked a little bit about the positives on the West Coast, but how should we think about the impact in the Mid Con down to the Gulf Coast, Mid Con thinking the WCS going west instead of south and then along the Gulf Coast, just what you're seeing in terms of available barrels on the heavy medium to heavy side and thoughts on the light heavy spreads? Speaker 400:41:56Yes. Hi, Roger, it's Rick. So I'll start with light heavy spreads. We continue to see them right about where they're at today. Obviously, we've seen the WCS spread come in a few bucks. Speaker 400:42:10And ironically, if you look out on the forward curve towards the end of this year, it starts to move back out $2 to $3 due to strong Canadian production and diluent blending. So we see this as a little bit of a near term blip. Specifically in the Mid Con, I do believe there is a misconception that the Mid Con will be shorted heavy. We don't believe that to be the case. As you know, we're a big buyer in the Mid Con. Speaker 400:42:40And when we look at TMX coming online, we believe the marginal Canadian barrel that's going to get backed out of the system first is the U. S. Gulf Coast export barrel. And so with that being said, when we're looking forward here and whether it's PADD 2, 3 or 5, we expect to generally run about the same mix of Canadian barrels that we've run here the past several quarters. Speaker 1100:43:08Yes, that makes sense. And I guess if we do see fewer barrels on the Gulf Coast, Canadian or otherwise, what's your anticipation there relative to what you've been running at either Galveston Bay or Garyville? Speaker 400:43:24Yes. We don't see it changing a lot. I will tell you when we look at Brazilian growth, when we look at Guyana production and then Canadian even with some barrels getting backed out, we don't see our mix changing that much, Roger. And then we certainly have barrels that could potentially come from the Middle East if we get the right economic signal. So I would say all in, I really don't expect a significant change. Speaker 1100:43:55And I appreciate that. One final clarification on the West Coast. We've heard some say that the acidity of the WCS barrel could be a headwind for running some. And I think when people ask about your ability to run max barrels of WCS, maybe that's what they're getting at. Speaker 200:44:15Is there any Speaker 500:44:15limitation from a metallurgical kind of physical Speaker 1100:44:19kind of physical capacity issue for you on the West Coast? Speaker 400:44:24It is something that will balance, Roger. I believe I said earlier, ANS, the biggest difference is ANS, it has about 5 times lower sulfur than WCS. So that's why we believe there will be a lot of blending going on, on the West Coast. But I do believe in general you will see it limit others toolkits on what the amount is that they can run, but we've yet to see we need to see that play out. Speaker 1100:44:55Understood. Thank you. Speaker 400:44:57Thank you, Roger. Operator00:45:01Our next question comes from Matthew Blair with TPH. Speaker 1000:45:08TPH. Could you talk about the drivers here and how much of MPC's gasoline production is high octane? Speaker 400:45:29Yes, Matt. It's Rick again. So I will tell you good call out. We are seeing octane values be extremely high and as you know we have a lot of reforming capacity. So we are a large octane producer. Speaker 400:45:42So we are seeing the benefit. Certainly, you hit on a couple of the reasons. Specs is certainly a region, but I will also tell you we are seeing strong signals on the export side. And when you think about the export market, we are sending over volume there that generally does not have ethanol in it. So that is eating up a lot of octane long product. Speaker 400:46:05And then there is persistent length in the naphtha market due to poor petchem margins. So that's helping us out on the Octane side. And then lastly, more recently here, you're certainly seeing the impact of high turnarounds just taking Optane off the market here in Q1 and it's carrying into Q2 and we see it persisting for a while, Matt. Speaker 1000:46:31Sounds good. And then circling back to an earlier question, I think you mentioned your long diesel in California. Is that a function of RV share approaching 60% or so? And if so, what do you do with those extra diesel barrels? Are they exported to like Mexico or Canada or Asia? Speaker 400:46:53Yes. So great comment. And my comment earlier, the industry, I would say, is long diesel, and we're not alone in that category. We are as opportunities, Matt, whether anything waterborne where we can find a home to clear the product is what we and others are doing. Operator00:47:25Thank you. Our last question will come from Theresa Chen with Barclays. Your line is open. Speaker 1200:47:33Hi. When we think about your marketing margins within R and M, the direction of wholesale gasoline prices benefiting Q4 as they came off and then acting as a headwind in Q1 as prices shot up. How much can that move the broader R and M capture quarter to quarter or the cash generation from the segment? And how should we think about the drivers of this so far into second quarter? Speaker 400:48:00Hi, Tricia. Can you restate the back half of your question? I'm not sure I caught that part, please. This is Rick. Speaker 1200:48:09Sure, Rick. Related to your marketing margins and the move of the like flat wholesale gasoline prices benefiting Q4 as prices declined and then acting as a headwind as they came up on how much of that can really bring noise to the R and M capture quarter to quarter? Speaker 400:48:33Yes, good question. So it can be significant and depending on the region, it's just tough as you pointed out in an upward market. If you look at Q1 to your point Theresa, I think we had a $14 flat price increase throughout the quarter. So it definitely was a headwind and it can be significant. We amongst all of our competitors need to be competitive at our racks and in an up market it continues to be a headwind. Speaker 400:49:05So I don't have a specific number that I can share with you, but it's definitely a factor in our capture. Speaker 1200:49:16Got it. And Mike, going to your earlier comments about MPLX as a strategic investment and with the announcement at the partnership over the past few months and just migration of more and more third party cash flows, do you have a long term target of the breakdown of 3rd party to GP driven EBITDA or cash flows over time? And would a shift towards more third party cash flow help MPC possibly have more flex flexibility in the upcoming contracting events to take place over the next few years? Speaker 200:49:50Yes, Theresa. We don't have a target per se using that term. We do have a goal of generating increasing cash flows from 3rd parties as well as optimizing within our own system as well. The point I was trying to make is where we stand today, that distribution from MPLX covers the MPC dividend and more than half of the capital. But going out, again, this isn't guidance, but if you look at the trend, we're going to continue to increase the MPLX distribution over time. Speaker 200:50:25And as you see that occurring and depending on the capital needs at the refining side of the business, the statement I said was, there'll be a point where MPLX's distribution will cover the dividend and all of the capital and still have excess cash. That's how unique the competitive advantage is of that business. And we've been bullish natural gas growth for a long time and I always caution, I'm not saying natural gas price, I'm saying natural gas growth volume. We continue to believe that that has tailwinds behind it, whether it's all the topics that have been talked about recently. But as that continues to occur, that ability for MPLX cash generation to increase will just continue and it will get to a point where it's covering the distribute I'm sorry, the dividend at MPC, the capital at MPC and still generate excess cash. Speaker 200:51:19That's where we're headed. So I don't know that we have a target other than that target and we'll try and keep growing that. Speaker 1200:51:28Thank you. Speaker 200:51:30You're welcome, Theresa. Speaker 100:51:33All right. With that, thank you so much for your interest in Marathon Petroleum Corporation. Should you have additional questions or would you like clarification on topics discussed this morning, please reach out and the IR team will be available to help with your call today. Thank you for joining us. Operator00:51:48Thank you. That does conclude today's conference. Thank you once again for your participation. You may disconnect at this time.Read morePowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Marathon Petroleum Earnings HeadlinesMarathon Petroleum Corp. Announces Quarterly DividendJuly 30 at 3:25 PM | prnewswire.comMarathon Petroleum (MPC): One of the Best Crude Oil Stocks According to Hedge FundsJuly 29, 2025 | insidermonkey.comChina just unlocked Nvidia’s AI chips—what that means for youTired of Missing Big AI Moves Like Nvidia? You’re not the problem—your trading system is. Tim’s XGPT system tracks breaking AI news and shows when to trade.📈 AI-backed. Beginner-friendly. Results proven.August 2 at 2:00 AM | Timothy Sykes (Ad)Should You Be Excited About Marathon Petroleum Corporation's (NYSE:MPC) 18% Return On Equity?July 28, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comMarathon Petroleum Corporation (NYSE:MPC) Receives $183.93 Consensus Target Price from BrokeragesJuly 27, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comMarathon Petroleum: Stronger Q2 Crack Spreads For America's Largest RefinerJuly 23, 2025 | seekingalpha.comSee More Marathon Petroleum Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Marathon Petroleum? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Marathon Petroleum and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Marathon PetroleumMarathon Petroleum (NYSE:MPC), together with its subsidiaries, operates as an integrated downstream energy company primarily in the United States. The company operates through Refining & Marketing, and Midstream segments. The Refining & Marketing segment refines crude oil and other feedstocks at its refineries in the Gulf Coast, Mid-Continent, and West Coast regions of the United States; and purchases refined products and ethanol for resale and distributes refined products, including renewable diesel, through transportation, storage, distribution, and marketing services. Its refined products include transportation fuels, such as reformulated gasolines and blend-grade gasolines; heavy fuel oil; and asphalt. This segment also manufactures propane and petrochemicals. It sells refined products to wholesale marketing customers in the United States and internationally, buyers on the spot market, and independent entrepreneurs who operate primarily Marathon branded outlets, as well as through long-term fuel supply contracts to direct dealer locations primarily under the ARCO brand. The Midstream segment transports, stores, distributes, and markets crude oil and refined products through refining logistics assets, pipelines, terminals, towboats, and barges; gathers, processes, and transports natural gas; and gathers, transports, fractionates, stores, and markets natural gas liquids. Marathon Petroleum Corporation was founded in 1887 and is headquartered in Findlay, Ohio.View Marathon Petroleum ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Amazon's Earnings: What Comes Next and How to Play ItApple Stock: Big Earnings, Small Move—Time to Buy?Microsoft Blasts Past Earnings—What’s Next for MSFT?Visa Beats Q3 Earnings Expectations, So Why Did the Market Panic?Spotify's Q2 Earnings Plunge: An Opportunity or Ominous Signal?RCL Stock Sinks After Earnings—Is a Buying Opportunity Ahead?Amazon's Pre-Earnings Setup Is Almost Too Clean—Red Flag? 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There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Welcome to the MPC First Quarter 2024 Earnings Call. My name is Sheila, and I will be your operator for today's call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session. Please note that this conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:19I will now turn the call over to Kristina Kazarian. Kristina, you may begin. Speaker 100:00:24Welcome to Marathon Petroleum Corporation's Q1 2024 Earnings Conference Call. The slides that accompany this call can be found on our Web site at marathonpetroleum.com under the Investor tab. Joining me on the call today are Mike Hennigan, CEO Mary Anne Mannen, President John Quaid, CFO and other members of the executive team. We invite you to read the Safe Harbor statements on Slide 2. We will be making forward looking statements today. Speaker 100:00:50Actual results may differ. Factors Good morning Speaker 200:01:01Good morning and thank you for joining our call. Effective March 1, 2 new independent directors joined the MPC Board. Eileen Drake and Kimberly Ellison Taylor have strong records of accomplishment in complex industries, making them outstanding additions, and we're happy to have them join our Board. As for the macro refining environment, we remain constructive in our view. Oil demand is at a record high globally and we expect oil demand to continue to set records into the foreseeable future. Speaker 200:01:35Forecasted outlooks for this year estimate 1,200,000 to 2,000,000 barrels per day of incremental demand over 2023, primarily driven by the growing need for transportation fuels. Within our own domestic and export business, we are seeing steady demand year over year for gasoline and growth for diesel and jet fuel. We continue to believe that 2024 will be another year of record refined product consumption. Global supply remains constrained. Anticipated capacity additions have progressed more slowly than expected. Speaker 200:02:12And longer term, the level of announced capacity additions remains limited for the rest of the decade. In the Q1, high global turnaround activity, the transition to summer gasoline blends and light product inventories supported refining fundamentals, especially towards the end of the quarter. As we look forward, we believe these fundamentals will support an enhanced mid cycle environment for the refining industry. We believe the U. S. Speaker 200:02:45Refining industry will remain structurally advantaged over the rest of the world. Our system has a locational advantage given the accessibility of nearby crude, which we believe will grow as cost of transportation increases. The availability of low cost natural gas, low cost butane and our refining systems complexity all increase our competitive advantage over the international sources of supply. Even with this outlook, we remain focused on capital discipline while investing to grow earnings at strong returns. In the Q1, we invested over $1,300,000,000 in capital expenditures, investments and acquisitions comprised of attractive refining projects and midstream investments, including MPLX's $625,000,000 strategic acquisition in the Utica Basin. Speaker 200:03:42In refining, we are investing predominantly at our large competitively advantaged facilities to enhance shareholder value and position MPC well into the future. With a focus on safety and asset reliability, we successfully completed the largest amount of planned maintenance work in MPC's history. 4 of our largest and most profitable refineries were in turnaround during the quarter, limiting our financial performance. These assets were in turnaround during a period of lower demand and now we're ready to meet the increased consumption that comes with the summer driving season. In midstream, MPLX continues to execute on attractive growth opportunities. Speaker 200:04:29The Harmon Creek 2 gas processing plant was placed into service in late February, bringing MPLX's Marcellus processing capacity to 6,500,000,000 cubic feet per day. And in the Permian Basin, Preakness 2 is approaching start up and expected to be online by the end of May. We're also building our 7th gas processing plant in the basin Secretariat, which is expected to be online in the second half of twenty twenty five. Once operational, our total processing capacity in the Delaware Basin will be approximately 1,400,000,000 cubic feet per day, which would average to a pace of roughly one new plant per year since 2018. Additionally, MPLX announced 2 strategic transactions. Speaker 200:05:201st, in the Utica, MPLX enhanced its footprint through the acquisition of MPLX enhanced its footprint through the acquisition of additional ownership interest in an existing joint venture and a dry gas gathering system. We've already seen growth in the rich gas window of the Utica and we see new producers moving into the region. 2nd, MPLX entered into a definitive agreement to combine the Whistler Pipeline and Rio Bravo Pipeline Projects into a newly formed joint venture. The platform expands MPLX's natural gas value chain and positions MPLX for future growth opportunities. MPLX is strategic to MPC's portfolio. Speaker 200:06:02Its current $2,200,000,000 annualized cash distribution MPC fully covers MPC's dividend and more than half of our planned 2024 capital program. We expect MPLX to continue to increase its cash distributions as it pursues growth opportunities, further enhancing the value of this strategic relationship. Our overall capital allocation framework remains consistent. We will invest in sustaining our asset base, while paying a secure, competitive and growing dividend, and we intend to grow the company's earnings while exercising strict capital discipline. Beyond these three priorities, we are committed to returning excess capital through share repurchases to meaningfully lower our share count. Speaker 200:06:54Demonstrating this commitment, today, we announced an additional $5,000,000,000 share repurchase authorization. Our total capital return through share repurchases and dividends since May of 2021 now totals $35,000,000,000 with MPC share count reduced by nearly 50%. Let me take a second to share our view on value. We continue to believe share repurchases make sense of the current share price level. When we purchase MPC stock, we are buying into a premier highly advantaged refining system. Speaker 200:07:31We're also buying into a growing mid stream business via our ownership at MPLX. And finally, we are buying strong business execution, disciplined investment and a commitment to capital returns, which will continue to position MPC as an excellent investment. At this point, I'd like to turn the call over to Mary Anne. Speaker 100:07:52Thank you, Mike. Our team's operational and commercial execution supported our ability to generate earnings per share of $2.58 for the quarter and $3,300,000,000 of adjusted EBITDA, while having 4 of our largest refineries in turnaround. This quarter, in conjunction with the planned turnaround activity, we took the opportunity to execute incremental smaller high return quick hit projects focused on optimization and reliability initiatives. This planned maintenance activity contributed to a reduction in refinery throughput of nearly 270,000 barrels per day or 9% compared with the 4th quarter. We plan this turnaround activity to occur in the 4th quarter in the Q1, excuse me, with a focus on safety and asset integrity and in a period of seasonally weaker demand. Speaker 100:08:51Now with a large portion of our 2024 activity complete, we are well positioned to run our refining system near full utilization through the summer driving season. Capture in the quarter was 92% and reflects the seasonal market backdrop. Light product margins were weaker and product inventory builds were both headwinds to quarterly results. Our commitment to commercial excellence remains foundational. We believe that the capabilities we have built over the last few years provide a sustainable advantage versus our peers, and we expect to continue to see the impact in our quarterly results. Speaker 100:09:31We are successfully progressing our 2024 capital investment plan. This includes executing on a multiyear infrastructure infrastructure investment at our Los Angeles refinery and construction of a distillate hydrotreater at our Galveston Bay refinery, both expected to yield returns of approximately 20 percent or more. In addition to these large projects, we continue to execute on smaller high return quick hit projects targeted at enhancing refinery yields, improving energy efficiency and lowering our costs. Let me turn the call over to John. Speaker 300:10:04Thanks, Mary Anne. Slide 6 shows the sequential change in adjusted EBITDA from Q4 2023 to Q1 2024, as well as the reconciliation between net income and adjusted EBITDA for the quarter. Adjusted EBITDA was lower sequentially by approximately $300,000,000 driven primarily by heavy planned turnaround activity resulting in lower R and M throughputs. To assist with your analysis, we thought it helpful to note the company recorded an $89,000,000 or $0.20 per share charge resulting from the quarterly fair value remeasurement of certain long term incentive compensation. Aligned with shareholder value creation, the charge was driven by the $53 or 36 percent increase in our share price, as well as our total shareholder return performance versus our peers during the quarter. Speaker 300:11:01Again, this charge, which we did not adjust for, reduced earnings by $0.20 per share. The tax rate for the quarter was 18%, resulting in a tax provision of $293,000,000 While this rate is lower than what we'd expect to see for the year, it reflects the permanent tax benefits of net income quarter. Moving to our segment results, slide 7 provides an overview of our Refining and Marketing segment for the Q1. Our refining and marketing results reflect lower throughputs associated with planned turnaround activity as our refineries ran at 82% utilization processing over 2,400,000 barrels of crude per day. Refining operating costs were $6.14 per barrel in the 1st quarter, higher sequentially primarily due to Speaker 400:12:02the lower Speaker 300:12:02throughputs. Sequentially, per barrel margins were up slightly as higher crack spreads were offset by lower margin capture. Slide 9 shows the changes in our mid segment adjusted EBITDA versus the Q4 of 2023. Our midstream segment is growing and generating strong cash flows. In this quarter, MPLX's distribution contributed $550,000,000 in cash flow to MPC. Speaker 300:12:31As Mike said, MPLX remains a source of durable earnings in the MPC portfolio and is a differentiator for us. Slide 10 presents the elements of change in our consolidated cash position for the Q1. Operating cash flow excluding changes in working capital was over $1,900,000,000 in the quarter driven by both our refining and midstream businesses. Working capital was a $389,000,000 use of cash for the quarter, driven primarily by minor builds in crude and refined product inventories mainly related to the turnaround activity. This quarter, capital expenditures, investments and acquisitions were $1,300,000,000 including $710,000,000 of growth and maintenance capital and $622,000,000 for MPLX Acquisitions net of cash received. Speaker 300:13:26Highlighting our steadfast commitment to superior shareholder returns, MPC returned $2,500,000,000 via repurchases and dividends during the quarter. As Mike commented, earlier today we announced the approval of an additional $5,000,000,000 for share repurchases and as of April 26, we had $8,800,000,000 remaining under our current share repurchase authorizations. And from May of 2021 through April 26 this year, we have repurchased 312,000,000 shares or 48% of the shares that were outstanding in May of 2021. At the end of the Q1, MPC had approximately 7.6 $1,000,000,000 in consolidated cash and short term investments, which includes $385,000,000 of MPLX cash. Turning to guidance, on slide 11, we provide our 2nd quarter outlook. Speaker 300:14:26With our significant first quarter turnaround activity behind us, we are projecting higher throughput volumes of nearly 2,800,000 barrels per day, representing utilization of 94%. Planned turnaround expense is expected to be approximately $200,000,000 in the 2nd quarter with activity primarily in the Mid Con region. Operating costs are projected to be $4.95 per barrel in the 2nd quarter, much lower than the 1st quarter, reflecting the benefit of running our system near full utilization and lower expected operating costs. For the full year, we expect operating cost per barrel to trend towards a more normalized level of $5 per barrel subject to energy cost volatility. Distribution costs are expected to be approximately $1,500,000,000 for the 2nd quarter. Speaker 300:15:18Corporate costs are expected to be $200,000,000 With that, let me pass it back to Mike. Speaker 200:15:25In summary, our unwavering commitment to safety, operational excellence and sustained commercial improvement positions us well. We will continue to prioritize capital investments to ensure the safe and reliable performance of our assets. We will also invest in projects where we believe there are attractive returns. The enhanced mid cycle environment should continue longer term given our advantages over marginal sources of supply and growing global demand. MPLX remains a source of growth and a unique competitive advantage in our portfolio. Speaker 200:16:04We believe it will continue to grow its cash distributions to cover both MPC's dividend and capital requirements and still generate excess cash before the first dollar of refining EBITDA is earned. Another way to frame it, MPC has reduced its share count from approximately 650,000,000 in May of 2021 down to approximately 355,000,000 at the end of the Q1. Over this same time frame, the MPLX units owned by MPC is held roughly flat at approximately 650,000,000 units. So the ratio of MPLX units held by MPC to our outstanding shares or the potential value to MPC on a per share basis from MPLX has nearly doubled. The midstream business, which continues to grow, provides a unique value proposition for MPC shareholders. Speaker 200:17:02We believe MPC is positioned as the refiner investment of choice with the strongest through cycle cash generation and the ability to deliver superior returns supported by our steadfast commitment to return capital. Consistent with our goal to have the strongest through cycle cash generation, even with 4 of our most profitable refineries in turnaround, adjusted on a comparable basis, we still generated more cash from operations than our refining peers. Very proud of the team's accomplishment. With that, let me turn the call back to Kristina. Speaker 100:17:41Thanks, Mike. As we open the call up for questions, as a courtesy to all participants, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and a follow-up. If time permits, we'll re prompt for additional questions. With that, operator, we're ready. Operator00:17:54Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Our first question comes from Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Speaker 500:18:23Yes. Good morning, Mike and Mary Anne, team. Thanks for taking the time. I had two questions. The first is more of an industry one, which is your perspective on the West Coast. Speaker 500:18:34We've seen as Rodeo has shut down and Martinez, West Coast margins have really strengthened here, particularly for gasoline. So what's your outlook as we go into the summer and your thoughts on doing business in California broadly? Thank you. Speaker 200:18:51Yes. Good morning, Neil. I'll let Rick start off with that one. Yes. Speaker 400:18:54Hi, Neil. Good morning. The market really in California is fundamentally short and it's long diesel. That's kind of the thesis as we look out there. And an example of that is if you look at gasoline inventories especially right now, they're tight. Speaker 400:19:12In fact, they're below the 5 year average and we're seeing solid demand across the integrated systems. So I generally would say that's the reasoning. That's the reasoning for the scenario right now. And I just want to reiterate the market is short gasoline. And so this is an environment that we expect may persist through summer and we'll see where it goes from there. Speaker 500:19:39Thanks, Ketan. And then the follow-up is just on the return of capital cadence. The buyback this quarter, the 2.2 was a little bit lighter than what I think many in the street were modeling. Just any thoughts on what was that a reflection of some of the one time working capital and M and A dynamics or valuation sensitivity and how should we think about that over the course of the year? Speaker 200:20:06Yes, Neal, this is Mike. Thanks for that question. There is no change in our commitment to returning capital, evidenced by the fact that we got the Board to authorize another $5,000,000,000 So what I would say to you is, don't read into the quarter by quarter variability. To your point, it could have been a little bit higher, but there's a lot of factors that are influencing the activity within the quarter. So the takeaway should be, we are committed and that hasn't changed. Speaker 200:20:34We believe in returning capital to shareholders. You're going to continue to see us do that. Operator00:20:45Next, we will hear from Manav Gupta with UBS. Your line is Speaker 600:20:50open. Guys, in your introductory comments, you did mention that some global capacity was supposed to come on. It's challenged, it's not really come on. I'm trying to understand here, once we go past 2024, like 2025, there is limited capacity expansions that we are aware of. And at this point, I think we understand that 2024 will be above mid cycle. Speaker 600:21:13But based on your commentary, would it be fair to say given road year shutdown and other Houston refinery shutting down, you could well see 2025 also as a year where cracks are above well above the mid cycle levels. Speaker 200:21:29Yes, Manav, I think you said it very well. I'll let Rick add some comments. But in general, like we said in our prepared remarks, global supply is constrained. And we are a believer that demand will continue to set constrained constrained supply scenario leads us to the situation that we have in the market today. We don't see it changing based on everything that we know is available to us and that's why we have that view. Speaker 200:22:03But I'll let Rick add some color. Speaker 400:22:06Yes. Hi Manav. So I will echo Mike's comments and share what you know and what you're reading is what we're seeing and hearing in the marketplace as well that the expansions appear to be continuously delayed. And with that, Mike mentioned in his opening remarks, we see demand growing by 1.2 to upwards to 2,000,000 barrels a day. So pick a number even in between there and that exceeds, Manav, the expansions that may come online end of year, this year or some time in 2025. Speaker 400:22:41So even with those expansions coming online, we see demand outpacing those expansions and thus why we're so optimistic on this mid cycle plus environment lasting. Speaker 200:22:54And Manav, let me also add that historically, the demand numbers continue to get revised up. I know everybody is real time in their thought process, but it's also good to look back no matter which agency is doing it. In fact, the U. S. Agency, when they put the monthlies out, have continually for a long period of time been underestimating gasoline and diesel demand. Speaker 200:23:17So it's just another factor that should put on people's radar to really look at all the revisions that have occurred because the demand numbers have been stronger once they get fully corrected and vetted than they are sometimes in the real time disclosures. Speaker 600:23:36Perfect. My quick follow-up here is, I don't think I remember any time when I've seen a $650,000,000 turnaround expense in a single quarter. So this quarter was truly exceptional in the amount of downtime you took. Now we look at 2nd quarter guidance, it's meaningfully up. But if you look at the rest of the year, should we imagine that 1Q truly was exceptional because if you're going to run harder for the rest of the year, that would mean better capture, lower OpEx per barrel, but it also translate to higher GNP earnings when you translate it to the MPLX side. Speaker 100:24:11Manav, good morning. It's Mary Anne. Let me start. So you're absolutely right. We tried to share as we were on our call last quarter that we expected to have really the largest turnaround in MPC's history in the Q1 and we did. Speaker 100:24:27We had 4 of our largest assets in turnaround. We think that's important as you well stated, given getting that work done ahead of summer driving season. We think we are well poised for that. You made comment also about the utilization. You can see from our guidance, utilization is up. Speaker 100:24:48OpEx per barrel, similarly, when you look quarter over quarter, the throughput impacted by the turnaround was certainly a driver. Sequentially, we're down OpEx, and you can see from what we guided in the second quarter as well that OpEx per barrel is actually well below the what we printed for the Q1. So think you said it well. We took the opportunity in the quarter, while we had the downtime at those largest plants, as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, to work on some projects at those same refineries, those same assets that we think will add reliability in the future as well. Speaker 600:25:32Hope Speaker 100:25:32that answers your question. Speaker 300:25:34Yes. And hey Manav, it's John. Just to build on what Mary Anne is saying to connect some thoughts as well. Those additional projects that we took the time to do, right, you can see some of that in turnaround, some of that in OpEx. But really, we felt like given the window we had and getting ready for the rest of the year, that was the right thing to do. Speaker 300:25:50Sorry, just wanted to add Speaker 600:25:52that. And just to quickly follow-up, like the higher throughput also results in higher MPLX earnings for the next quarter, right? Yes. Speaker 300:26:00Hey, Manav, it's John, and I'm not sure if this question came up on the MPLX call as well, but I know a little bit about it from my prior role. Remember, there's maybe less sensitivity on the L and S side of that business as refinery utilization moves higher and lower, just given the contractual structure of those contracts. So, while there is some sensitivity, it may not be as much as you might be thinking. Speaker 600:26:24Okay. Thank you. Speaker 200:26:26Manav, it's Mike. I just want to add. I think the takeaway is, as Mary Anne said, is we chose to use the Q1 to take down 4 of our most profitable refineries. It's a lower demand period in the U. S, etcetera. Speaker 200:26:39And our thought process there was spend that money, increase the reliability, get ourselves ready so that we're able to perform in the second and third quarters as we progress out the year. So we think we've positioned ourselves very well despite a heavy spend in the quarter. We're happy that we've done it. We think the assets are in really good shape and we're looking forward to the rest of the year. Speaker 500:27:05Thank you. Operator00:27:08Thank you. Speaker 300:27:08You're welcome. Operator00:27:11Next, we will hear from Paul Cheng with Scotiabank. You may proceed. Speaker 700:27:15Hey, guys. Good morning. Speaker 200:27:19Good morning, Paul. Speaker 700:27:21I guess that maybe you can answer. If we look at comparing to your guidance from last quarter, your throughput is lower, OpEx and turnaround expense are higher than the guidance. Is it all contribute by what you characterize as some of this quick hit project that is not originally in the guidance or that something else is contribute to that? That's the first question. Speaker 100:27:50Paul, hi, it's Mary Anne. So yes, I think you characterized it well. We took the opportunity while those assets were down in turnaround to work on a few projects, frankly, one at each of them that we felt would improve reliability going forward. When you talk about the guidance throughput, as you said, slightly below that, that we guided, which contributed to the OpEx per barrel number that you saw slightly higher than what we guided. But in general, as you are as we're in turnaround and we look at the activity there, we took the opportunity to do what we needed to do to ensure safe, reliable operations. Speaker 100:28:28And as Mike has already said, given us the opportunity to run hard as we look at the driving season ahead and increased performance. Speaker 700:28:37Okay. The second question is that, maybe this is for Rich. With the TMX spot up, how that will impact your West Coast operation? Will you be able to fully repay the heavy oil and the medium sour that you're currently running over there by the WCS or that we have some kind of configuration limitation because the WCS is consistent mostly is the bitumen and a lot of condensate, but don't have the middle. Speaker 400:29:10Yes. Hi, Paul, and thank you for the question. So, on the West Coast specifically, let me maybe back up and share what is public. We do have a TMX commitment on the line and we believe we will be a significant beneficiary because we will see we will receive beneficiary because we will receive incremental Canadian advantaged crude not only in to Paul our Pacific Northwest system, but also our West Coast system. And specifically to your question, we will end up, I believe, having a significant amount of opportunities on the spot market within the Westridge Dock to take potentially barrels to LA and because of sulfur limitations, because the majority of people out in the West Coast, I believe, as you know are running ANS, we believe you'll see somewhat of a dumbbell type blending system where you'll take heavy Canadian with a lighter grade and introduce it into the units out there. Speaker 400:30:15But the net net for us is we believe it will be quite positive for us not only at Anacortes, our Pacific Northwest refinery, but also at LA. Speaker 700:30:28Rich, can you share that how much WCS do you think you may be able to run? Speaker 400:30:35Right now, Paul, that's an unknown. We're continuing to look at the system and we'll look at the economics. So that will vary from month to month. Operator00:30:51Next, we will Speaker 800:31:00So my question is a follow-up on capital allocation. You drew cash by about $2,000,000,000 at the parent level in 1Q. You now sit at about $7,000,000,000 in parent cash. So we're slowly getting closer to the $1,000,000,000 minimum cash balance. And I know we aren't there yet, but can you talk about how we should think about the buyback once you get to your minimum cash balance? Speaker 800:31:21Should we expect something like 100% of free cash flow paid out given you won't be supplementing with the balance sheet anymore. Just any color on what kind of normal could look like after you've drawn down your cash would be helpful. Speaker 200:31:35Yes, John, this is Mike. I'll start off by saying we've been fortunate enough to continue to generate cash. That's been a good story for us. Back to Neil's first question, we want to make sure there's no ambiguity. We're committed to returning capital. Speaker 200:31:52One of the questions that Neil asked was it a little lower in the quarter and I tried to explain to not read into that quarter to quarter variability because a lot of factors that impact that. So I think the biggest takeaway is we're huge believers in returning capital to shareholders. And depending on the market conditions, etcetera, we evaluate it every single quarter and we try and put a program in place that prioritizes that. At the same time, we're also looking at where should we invest. You heard Mary Anne just talk about we decided to spend a little bit more money in the quarter to enhance the reliability of our assets. Speaker 200:32:31That's a good decision on our part. It's the first decision in our capital framework. But going forward, I think the big takeaway is you'll continue to see us be a leader in returning capital to shareholders. That's something we believe in. You'll see us be a leader in generating cash among our peers, as I said in my prepared remarks, very happy despite the situation we were in the Q1 with 4 of our largest most profitable assets down. Speaker 200:32:59We still generated more cash than our peers. So we think that was a good accomplishment. And over time, you're going to see that we'll remain committed to our capital framework of which when will we get to that $1,000,000,000 That's a good question. I don't know that I can predict it depending on how the market treats us. But I think the biggest takeaway is we're committed to returning capital and as long as we continue to generate cash, we'll continue to do that and reduce the share count going forward. Speaker 800:33:30Okay, great. Thanks, Mike. And then so my follow-up is just on long term captures. I don't think you're officially calling 100% your long term capture, but that's certainly where the business has trended. And you've talked a lot about sources of improvements to date. Speaker 800:33:46My question is, what are the key drivers going forward of driving that capture from 100% to something like 105% or something larger on a sustainable basis? Is it some of the capital projects you're working at the refineries? I'm just trying to get a sense for where we should be looking for the next wave of improvements on the capture side. Speaker 100:34:09John, hey, it's Mary Anne and thanks for the question. As we've been sharing, our commercial performance remains foundational. You heard talk about last quarter some changes that we made in the organization to continue to focus on value chain optimization. That's clearly an objective that Mike has for the organization. We're not done. Speaker 100:34:35We think a lot of the things that we have put in place are sustainable, but we do believe there's opportunities going forward. We like to say that we're approaching 100 percent over a longer period of time. As you've seen, we did it last year. And as you know, there's things from the market that we can't control. You look at our performance this quarter, as you know, we had weaker light product margins as I shared and obviously the commercial team took some decisions pretty late in the quarter on product inventory build as well. Speaker 100:35:09But we will continue to focus on the things that we can and we do believe there are opportunities that will allow us to continue to improve commercial performance. We say we're approaching 100% and we hope you've seen us use that as a deliverable going forward. Ultimately, at the end of the day, as Mike has shared with you, our objective is to deliver the strongest EBITDA per barrel and cash generation relative to our peers and that remains a key focus when we look at our capture performance. Speaker 800:35:44Thank you. Speaker 200:35:45Yes, John, I can't help myself to jump in here. I know this capture metric gets a lot of discussion and Christine has been steadfast that we need to report on it. I just want to caution as I always do that there's a lot of factors, market factors, etcetera, that hit on that. The market should know we're committed to improving our commercial performance. That's obviously a goal here. Speaker 200:36:09But the metric that I want is to look at the most is cash. At the end of the day, go to the bottom of the sheet as opposed to all the very different variables throughout it. The most important thing is, are we generating the most cash? So that's the metric that I start with as we analyze the performance of the assets, etcetera. So I just want to reiterate that. Speaker 200:36:32I know a lot of people like to talk capture. It's not the one that I think tells the story of the business that much. Speaker 800:36:40Understood. Thank you. Speaker 200:36:43You're welcome. Operator00:36:45Our next question will come from Jason Gabelman with TD Cowen. You may proceed. Speaker 900:36:51Yes, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to first ask about the Martinez biofuel projects. It looks like the other income line was close to in refining was close to $200,000,000 this quarter. I think that includes the impact from Martinez. Speaker 900:37:08I was hoping to get an idea of how much that contributed to earnings this quarter and then how you think about the ramp up in capacity to 100% from current 50%? Thanks. Speaker 300:37:23Great. Hey, Jason, it's John. Let me take the first part of that and then I'll turn it over to Mary Anne. But just to clarify, that other that you're seeing on the R and M walk, it is not related to Martinez. Largely, what you're seeing there are, and you've seen it in prior quarters, are some of the insurance proceeds we've recognized in regards to a claim we had at some of our refineries. Speaker 300:37:47But I'll turn it over to Mary Anne to talk about Martinez, but I wanted to clarify it's not in that bar. Speaker 100:37:53Hey, Jason, it's Mary Anne. Thanks for the question. So let me give you update on Martinez. As you stated, we are currently operating at about 50% of our nameplate capacity. In November, we had a heater tube failure at Martinez. Speaker 100:38:10And as I shared with you last quarter, we continue to work with all the regulators to align on what repairs are necessary and ensure safe reliable operation going forward. We would expect to continue to operate at 50% for the Q2. And then somewhere mid third quarter, we would expect to see our capacity increase to about 75% of that nameplate. And again, when I talk about nameplate, I'm talking about 48,000 barrels a day, by the way, just for clarity. And then, we do expect to ramp up to full capacity on Martinez by year end. Speaker 100:38:49So again, 50% second quarter, ramping to 75% mid third quarter with full rate capacity by year end. Speaker 900:38:59Got it. And that means, I guess, that you got approval for the fixes that you need to make in the unit? And then is there any cost OpEx associated with the improvements you need to make at the plant? Speaker 100:39:18So in our Q2 guidance, we do not have any cost yet included in that Q2 guidance. Sorry about that. Yes, we continue to work with regulators to align on the path forward. So we believe, again, continue to work with them, but we believe we understand the work that needs to be done and we are aligning with our regulators to achieve that. Speaker 900:39:42Great. Thanks. And then my other question is, sorry, Mike, I'm going to go back to this capture metric. And you include just 392,000,000 dollars headwind on Slide 8 of capture impact. Some of that is from product inventory and derivatives. Speaker 900:40:00I'm wondering if that amount, if you could share what that is and if that reverses, in 2Q? Thanks. Speaker 100:40:10Yes. It's Mary Anne. So you'll notice that we try to give you on that slide, we show you the impact that is from crude and the impact from product. And what you saw this quarter is what was normally a very positive impact from product margins really narrowed quite a bit in the Q1. Alternatively, that crude is typically a key driver. Speaker 100:40:35It always pulls capture and that will ebb and flow just depending on a series of things. But the key driver in this Q1 as you see were product margins and the inventories, right? We made some commercial decisions, which we think were the right ones and we made those decisions sort of late in the quarter. But as those market dynamics change, we'll be able to share that with you going forward. Speaker 1000:41:01Okay. Thanks. Operator00:41:10Our next question will Speaker 1100:41:19I guess I'd like to dig into here maybe your expectations on crude deaths. We've heard from some of the other companies what's going on in terms of available barrels out there. And you've talked a little bit about the positives on the West Coast, but how should we think about the impact in the Mid Con down to the Gulf Coast, Mid Con thinking the WCS going west instead of south and then along the Gulf Coast, just what you're seeing in terms of available barrels on the heavy medium to heavy side and thoughts on the light heavy spreads? Speaker 400:41:56Yes. Hi, Roger, it's Rick. So I'll start with light heavy spreads. We continue to see them right about where they're at today. Obviously, we've seen the WCS spread come in a few bucks. Speaker 400:42:10And ironically, if you look out on the forward curve towards the end of this year, it starts to move back out $2 to $3 due to strong Canadian production and diluent blending. So we see this as a little bit of a near term blip. Specifically in the Mid Con, I do believe there is a misconception that the Mid Con will be shorted heavy. We don't believe that to be the case. As you know, we're a big buyer in the Mid Con. Speaker 400:42:40And when we look at TMX coming online, we believe the marginal Canadian barrel that's going to get backed out of the system first is the U. S. Gulf Coast export barrel. And so with that being said, when we're looking forward here and whether it's PADD 2, 3 or 5, we expect to generally run about the same mix of Canadian barrels that we've run here the past several quarters. Speaker 1100:43:08Yes, that makes sense. And I guess if we do see fewer barrels on the Gulf Coast, Canadian or otherwise, what's your anticipation there relative to what you've been running at either Galveston Bay or Garyville? Speaker 400:43:24Yes. We don't see it changing a lot. I will tell you when we look at Brazilian growth, when we look at Guyana production and then Canadian even with some barrels getting backed out, we don't see our mix changing that much, Roger. And then we certainly have barrels that could potentially come from the Middle East if we get the right economic signal. So I would say all in, I really don't expect a significant change. Speaker 1100:43:55And I appreciate that. One final clarification on the West Coast. We've heard some say that the acidity of the WCS barrel could be a headwind for running some. And I think when people ask about your ability to run max barrels of WCS, maybe that's what they're getting at. Speaker 200:44:15Is there any Speaker 500:44:15limitation from a metallurgical kind of physical Speaker 1100:44:19kind of physical capacity issue for you on the West Coast? Speaker 400:44:24It is something that will balance, Roger. I believe I said earlier, ANS, the biggest difference is ANS, it has about 5 times lower sulfur than WCS. So that's why we believe there will be a lot of blending going on, on the West Coast. But I do believe in general you will see it limit others toolkits on what the amount is that they can run, but we've yet to see we need to see that play out. Speaker 1100:44:55Understood. Thank you. Speaker 400:44:57Thank you, Roger. Operator00:45:01Our next question comes from Matthew Blair with TPH. Speaker 1000:45:08TPH. Could you talk about the drivers here and how much of MPC's gasoline production is high octane? Speaker 400:45:29Yes, Matt. It's Rick again. So I will tell you good call out. We are seeing octane values be extremely high and as you know we have a lot of reforming capacity. So we are a large octane producer. Speaker 400:45:42So we are seeing the benefit. Certainly, you hit on a couple of the reasons. Specs is certainly a region, but I will also tell you we are seeing strong signals on the export side. And when you think about the export market, we are sending over volume there that generally does not have ethanol in it. So that is eating up a lot of octane long product. Speaker 400:46:05And then there is persistent length in the naphtha market due to poor petchem margins. So that's helping us out on the Octane side. And then lastly, more recently here, you're certainly seeing the impact of high turnarounds just taking Optane off the market here in Q1 and it's carrying into Q2 and we see it persisting for a while, Matt. Speaker 1000:46:31Sounds good. And then circling back to an earlier question, I think you mentioned your long diesel in California. Is that a function of RV share approaching 60% or so? And if so, what do you do with those extra diesel barrels? Are they exported to like Mexico or Canada or Asia? Speaker 400:46:53Yes. So great comment. And my comment earlier, the industry, I would say, is long diesel, and we're not alone in that category. We are as opportunities, Matt, whether anything waterborne where we can find a home to clear the product is what we and others are doing. Operator00:47:25Thank you. Our last question will come from Theresa Chen with Barclays. Your line is open. Speaker 1200:47:33Hi. When we think about your marketing margins within R and M, the direction of wholesale gasoline prices benefiting Q4 as they came off and then acting as a headwind in Q1 as prices shot up. How much can that move the broader R and M capture quarter to quarter or the cash generation from the segment? And how should we think about the drivers of this so far into second quarter? Speaker 400:48:00Hi, Tricia. Can you restate the back half of your question? I'm not sure I caught that part, please. This is Rick. Speaker 1200:48:09Sure, Rick. Related to your marketing margins and the move of the like flat wholesale gasoline prices benefiting Q4 as prices declined and then acting as a headwind as they came up on how much of that can really bring noise to the R and M capture quarter to quarter? Speaker 400:48:33Yes, good question. So it can be significant and depending on the region, it's just tough as you pointed out in an upward market. If you look at Q1 to your point Theresa, I think we had a $14 flat price increase throughout the quarter. So it definitely was a headwind and it can be significant. We amongst all of our competitors need to be competitive at our racks and in an up market it continues to be a headwind. Speaker 400:49:05So I don't have a specific number that I can share with you, but it's definitely a factor in our capture. Speaker 1200:49:16Got it. And Mike, going to your earlier comments about MPLX as a strategic investment and with the announcement at the partnership over the past few months and just migration of more and more third party cash flows, do you have a long term target of the breakdown of 3rd party to GP driven EBITDA or cash flows over time? And would a shift towards more third party cash flow help MPC possibly have more flex flexibility in the upcoming contracting events to take place over the next few years? Speaker 200:49:50Yes, Theresa. We don't have a target per se using that term. We do have a goal of generating increasing cash flows from 3rd parties as well as optimizing within our own system as well. The point I was trying to make is where we stand today, that distribution from MPLX covers the MPC dividend and more than half of the capital. But going out, again, this isn't guidance, but if you look at the trend, we're going to continue to increase the MPLX distribution over time. Speaker 200:50:25And as you see that occurring and depending on the capital needs at the refining side of the business, the statement I said was, there'll be a point where MPLX's distribution will cover the dividend and all of the capital and still have excess cash. That's how unique the competitive advantage is of that business. And we've been bullish natural gas growth for a long time and I always caution, I'm not saying natural gas price, I'm saying natural gas growth volume. We continue to believe that that has tailwinds behind it, whether it's all the topics that have been talked about recently. But as that continues to occur, that ability for MPLX cash generation to increase will just continue and it will get to a point where it's covering the distribute I'm sorry, the dividend at MPC, the capital at MPC and still generate excess cash. Speaker 200:51:19That's where we're headed. So I don't know that we have a target other than that target and we'll try and keep growing that. Speaker 1200:51:28Thank you. Speaker 200:51:30You're welcome, Theresa. Speaker 100:51:33All right. With that, thank you so much for your interest in Marathon Petroleum Corporation. Should you have additional questions or would you like clarification on topics discussed this morning, please reach out and the IR team will be available to help with your call today. Thank you for joining us. Operator00:51:48Thank you. That does conclude today's conference. Thank you once again for your participation. You may disconnect at this time.Read morePowered by