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Williams Companies (WMB) delivered record Adjusted EBITDA of $7.75B in 2025 with a five-year EPS CAGR of 14%, and is guiding for $8.05B to $8.35B in Adjusted EBITDA for 2026 while executing 7.1 Bcf/d of pipeline projects and deploying over $7B in its power innovation portfolio for AI data center demand.
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The U.S. produces 40% more natural gas than it consumes domestically and supplies a third of global LNG exports, insulating domestic prices from geopolitical supply disruptions that have caused global LNG markets to spike, and Williams operates the Transco pipeline at the center of this infrastructure advantage.
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The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here FREE.
Williams Companies (NYSE:WMB) CEO Chad Zamarin went on live television recently and made a case that cuts through the geopolitical noise around energy markets. His argument is simple, backed by hard numbers, and worth understanding for anyone following energy markets.
“Natural gas production in the United States is truly our country’s superpower. We are the dominant global producer of natural gas.”
That’s not marketing language. That’s an operational reality Zamarin sees every day running the pipes that move this fuel across the country.
READ: The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks
Here’s the core of Zamarin’s argument: the U.S. produces approximately 110 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day but only consumes approximately 80 billion cubic feet per day domestically. That gap is not an accident. It means the U.S. is producing 40% more energy than it consumes, giving the country a structural export advantage most nations can only envy.
Natural gas constitutes about a third of all energy used in the United States in any form, and the country has become the largest exporter of natural gas globally, supplying a third of global LNG supplies.
That last figure matters right now. Global LNG markets are under serious stress. The suspension of liquefied natural gas exports from Qatar has caused gas prices to soar globally, and a geopolitical situation closing the Strait of Hormuz is constraining global LNG supply significantly. Yet domestic Henry Hub prices tell a completely different story. After a January 2026 spike to $7.72/MMBtu, prices corrected back to $3.62/MMBtu in February, compared to crisis-era peaks of over $13/MMBtu in 2005 and 2008. U.S. producers insulate domestic consumers in ways no other country can replicate at scale.


