Oil & Gas Midstream · NYSE
Current Price
$72.08
PE Ratio (TTM)
31.1x
Intrinsic Value
$111.86
+35.6% margin of safety
COMPETITIVE MOAT
↑Extensive Midstream Infrastructure
WMB owns a vast network of pipelines and processing facilities. This integrated system creates significant barriers to entry for competitors seeking to replicate its reach.
↑Long-Term Customer Contracts
The company secures revenue through long-term, fee-based contracts with producers and end-users. This provides revenue stability and predictability, insulating it from commodity price volatility.
↑Strategic Geographic Footprint
WMB's assets are strategically located in key North American energy production basins and demand centers. This positions it to efficiently transport and process vital energy resources.
INVESTMENT RISKS
↓Regulatory and Environmental Scrutiny
Midstream operations face increasing regulatory oversight and environmental concerns. Potential new regulations or stricter enforcement could lead to increased compliance costs or operational disruptions.
↓Energy Transition Uncertainty
The long-term shift towards renewable energy sources poses a risk to fossil fuel infrastructure. While WMB is exploring new energy ventures, its core business remains tied to traditional hydrocarbons.
↓Project Execution and Capital Intensity
Large-scale infrastructure projects are capital-intensive and subject to execution risks. Delays or cost overruns on new developments can impact profitability and shareholder returns.
Base case
A base case PE valuation for WMB estimates a fair value of about $111.86 per share, against a current price of $72.08. The model assumes 17.0% annual earnings growth, a 31x target PE multiple, and a 10% discount rate.
Intrinsic Value
$111.86
Margin of safety
+35.6%
Expected annual return
+9.2%
Base case assumptions: 17.0% annual earnings growth, 31x target PE, 10% discount rate, 5 year projection. Data as of 2026-06-12.
This base case uses default assumptions and is not financial advice. The fair value changes significantly when the target PE or earnings growth rate changes. Open the calculator to set your own assumptions and see the full sensitivity range.
Adjust the target PE, earnings growth, and discount rate to see how the fair value and margin of safety for The Williams Companies, Inc. respond.
Open PE Calculator for WMBThe Williams Companies, Inc., alongside its subsidiaries, operates as a prominent energy infrastructure entity, primarily conducting business throughout the United States. The company’s operations are organized into four key segments: Transmission & Gulf of Mexico, Northeast G&P, West, and Gas & NGL Marketing Services. The Transmission & Gulf of Mexico division manages crucial natural gas pipelines such as Transco and Northwest, in addition to natural gas gathering and processing, and crude oil production handling and transportation assets situated in the Gulf Coast. This segment also oversees various petrochemical and feedstock pipelines. Focusing on midstream activities, the Northeast G&P segment handles gathering, processing, and fractionation within the Marcellus Shale region, predominantly in Pennsylvania and New York, and the Utica Shale region of eastern Ohio. The West segment delivers gas gathering, processing, and treating services across the Rocky Mountain areas of Colorado and Wyoming, the Barnett Shale in north-central Texas, the Eagle Ford Shale in South Texas, the Haynesville Shale in northwest Louisiana, and the expansive Mid-Continent region (including the Anadarko, Arkoma, and Permian basins). This segment also operates natural gas liquid (NGL) fractionation and storage facilities located near Conway in central Kansas. The Gas & NGL Marketing Services segment provides comprehensive wholesale marketing, trading, storage, and transportation of natural gas to utilities, municipalities, power generators, and producers, while also offering risk and asset management and NGL marketing services. The company possesses and operates an extensive network, including 30,000 miles of pipelines, 29 processing facilities, 7 fractionation facilities, and an approximate NGL storage capacity of 23 million barrels. The Williams Companies, Inc. was established in 1908 and maintains its headquarters in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
PE Ratio (TTM)
31.1x
PEG Ratio
1.42
Earnings Yield
3.22%
ROE (TTM)
22.4%
Revenue/Share (TTM)
$9.75
Dividend Yield
2.84%
Debt/Equity
2.33x
The trailing twelve-month PE ratio of WMB reflects how much investors pay per dollar of The Williams Companies, Inc.'s earnings. This metric is most useful when compared to Oil & Gas Midstream peers and the company's own historical range.
WMB's PE of 31.1x combined with a PEG ratio of 1.42 provides a growth-adjusted perspective. A PEG near 1.0 suggests the PE ratio is reasonably justified by the earnings growth rate. Keep in mind that PE-based valuation works best for profitable, mature companies — for high-growth or cyclical Oil & Gas Midstream, a DCF analysis may be more appropriate.
To value The Williams Companies, Inc. using PE: (1) Compare the current PE (31.1x) against the Oil & Gas Midstream median to assess relative pricing, (2) check the PEG ratio (1.42) to adjust for growth expectations, (3) review the 5-year PE range to identify where the stock sits historically, and (4) estimate fair value by multiplying a target PE by forward EPS estimates. This relative approach complements DCF's absolute valuation.
WMB's PEG ratio is 1.42, calculated by dividing the PE ratio (31.1x) by the expected earnings growth rate. A PEG near 1.0 suggests the stock is fairly priced relative to growth. Note that PEG accuracy depends on the reliability of growth estimates.
PE ratio gives a quick relative read — how WMB is priced versus Oil & Gas Midstream peers. DCF provides an absolute value based on projected free cash flows. For WMB, with a strong ROE of 22.4%, both methods are worth using — PE for a market-relative check, DCF to stress-test whether fundamentals justify the price. Each method has blind spots: PE ignores capital structure and cash flow quality, while DCF is sensitive to growth and discount rate assumptions.
P/E and DCF value WMB with different methods and assumptions, so the two conclusions can differ. Compare the DCF intrinsic value.
Price as of 2026-06-12. Financial data from Financial Modeling Prep (trailing twelve months) · Valuation methodology by Charlie Wang.
This is an estimate, not investment advice.