425 Filing
Filed by Energy Transfer Partners, L.P.
pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act of 1933
and deemed filed pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Subject Company: Sunoco, Inc.
Commission File No.: 1-06841
Energy Transfer Partners, L.P.
Presentation to Fixed Income Investors
June 5, 2012
Michael Doss
Vice President -
Finance


2
Legal Disclaimer
SAFE HARBOR FOR FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
Statements in this document regarding the proposed transaction between Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. (“ETP”) and
Sunoco, Inc. (“Sunoco”), the expected timetable for completing the proposed transaction, future financial and operating
results, benefits and synergies of the proposed transaction, future opportunities for the combined company, and any other
statements about ETP, Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. (“ETE”), Sunoco Logistics Partners, L.P. (“SXL”) or Sunoco
managements’ future expectations, beliefs, goals, plans or prospects constitute forward looking statements within the
meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.  Any statements that are not statements of historical fact
(including statements containing the words “believes,” “plans,” “anticipates,” “expects,” estimates and similar expressions)
should also be considered to be forward looking statements.  There are a number of important factors that could cause
actual results or events to differ materially from those indicated by such forward looking statements, including: the ability
to consummate the proposed transaction; the ability to obtain the requisite regulatory approvals, Sunoco shareholder
approval and the satisfaction of other conditions to consummation of the transaction; the ability of  ETP to successfully
integrate Sunoco’s operations and employees; the ability to realize anticipated synergies and cost savings; the potential
impact of announcement of the transaction or consummation of the transaction on relationships, including with employee
suppliers, customers and competitors; the ability to achieve revenue growth; national, international, regional and local
economic, competitive and regulatory conditions and developments; technological developments; capital and credit
markets conditions; inflation rates; interest rates; the political and economic stability of oil producing nations; energy
markets, including changes in the price of certain commodities; weather conditions; environmental conditions; business
and regulatory or legal decisions; the pace of deregulation of retail natural gas and electricity and certain agricultural
products; the timing and success of business development efforts; terrorism; and the other factors described in the Annual
Reports on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2011 filed with the SEC by ETP, ETE, SXL and Sunoco.  ETP,
ETE, SXL and Sunoco disclaim any intention or obligation to update any forward looking statements as a result of
developments occurring after the date of this document.


3
ETP Overview
Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. (“ETP”) is one of the largest publicly traded MLPs
Adjusted EBITDA of $1.74 billion in 2011 and $536 million in Q1 2012
Equity
market
capitalization
of
approximately
$9.8
billion
¹
and
an
enterprise
value
of
$18.5
billion
1,2
More than $17.4 billion of total assets
ETP has a diversified portfolio of strategically positions natural gas and NGL assets
Approximately 23,500 miles of intrastate and interstate natural gas pipelines, including JVs
74 Bcf of working natural gas storage capacity
More than 1,500 miles of NGL pipeline
NGL storage and fractionation facilities
ETP has transformed itself over the last eighteen months as we:
Entered
the
NGL
business
through
our
Lone
Star
joint
venture
and
its
acquisition
of
LDH
Energy
Announced
more
than
$3.0
billion
of
organic
growth
opportunities
with
a
focus
on
liquids-rich
opportunities
Contributed our Propane business to AmeriGas
Closed the acquisition of Southern Union’s 50% interest in Citrus (which owns FGT)
Announced the proposed acquisition of Sunoco, Inc. (“SUN”)
Throughout
this
transformation,
we
have
continued
to
demonstrate
our
commitment
to
investment
grade
ratings
by:
Focusing on long-term, fee-based contracts
Significantly improving our business profile
Managing commodity exposure through the use of hedges
Applying cash proceeds from the Propane Contribution to reduce indebtedness
Issuing more than $3.5 billion in equity over the past three years to fund growth
1
As of June 1, 2012.  Excludes the value of incentive distribution rights (IDRs) held by ETE.
2
Includes net debt as of March 31, 2012


4
Proposed Acquisition of SUN
ETP has announced the acquisition of 100% of SUN’s outstanding common stock for $5.3 billion
Creates a “best in class”
natural gas, crude oil, NGLs and refined product logistics platform
Provides customers with a full suite of capabilities in key geographic locations
Diversifies ETP’s existing assets into crude oil and refined products transportation, terminalling and logistics
Provides a growth engine for ETP through ownership of interests in Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P. (“SXL”)
Dramatically
expands
scale,
operational
diversity
and
geographic
footprint
of
SUN
and
SXL,
enabling
businesses
to fully deliver on potential
Accretive to ETP cash flow while providing SUN shareholders increased value now and into the future
Key SUN and SXL management will remain and continue to run businesses


5
Pro Forma Organizational Structure
70%
30%
Energy Transfer Equity, L.P.
(NYSE: ETE)
Ownership
in
RGP
100%
RGP
IDRs
1.6%
General
Partner
Interest
26.3mm
LP
units
(15.4%
of
total)
Ownership
in
ETP
100%
ETP
IDRs
1.5%
General
Partner
Interest
52.5mm
LP
units
(22.9%
of
total)
Ownership in SUG
100% SUG Shares
Regency
Energy
Partners
LP
(NYSE: RGP)
Energy Transfer Partners, L.P.
(NYSE: ETP)
Southern Union Co.
Gathering & Processing
Joint Ventures
Contract Treating
Contract Compression
Lone Star NGL
Midstream
NGL
Intrastate Transportation & Storage
Interstate Transportation
SUGS
Panhandle
Companies
LDCs
Ownership in SXL
100% SXL IDRs
2% GP Interest
32.4% LP Interest


6
ETP Pro Forma Asset Overview
Pipelines
ETP
SXL
Processing
Treating
Pipelines
Terminals
Storage
Note: Excludes SUN’s retail marketing locations


7
Adjusted EBITDA in $ millions.
Since Q4 2010, ETP has
announced more than
$3.0 billion of organic
growth projects and $8.6
billion of strategic
acquisitions
Adjusted EBITDA Expected to Grow


52%
47%
38%
26%
14%
21%
22%
15%
16%
14%
21%
25%
18%
18%
13%
5%
4%
10%
20%
2009
2010
2011
2011
pro forma
Intrastate
Midstream
Interstate
Propane
NGL
Retail
Crude & Refined Products
Increasingly
Diversified
Sources
of
Cash
Flow
(1)
2011 ETP pro forma for contribution of propane to AmeriGas Partners, L.P. and Citrus acquisition.
Excludes distributions from AmeriGas Partners, L.P.
Consolidation of SXL assumed.
SUN acquisition will increase ETP’s fee-based services
provided to producers while balancing its sources of cash
flows
Inventory of attractive NGL and crude oil projects at SXL
augments ETP’s growth projects and provides visibility to
meaningful EBITDA growth
Pro forma combined 2012 growth capex of ~$2.2 billion
with the vast majority allocated to NGLs, midstream and
crude oil projects
Retail business provides an additional stable segment to
ETP's overall business mix
(1)
8
ETP
Adjusted
EBITDA


9
Robust Portfolio of Growth Projects
Project
Description
Capacity
Expected
Completion
Estimated Cost
($ mm)
Midstream
Dos Hermanas
Pipeline
50-mile, 24-inch pipeline originating in northwest Webb County and extending to ETP's existing
Houston Pipeline rich gas gathering system in eastern Webb County
400 MMcf/d
In-service
Q4 2010
$43
Chisholm Pipeline
83 mile, 20-inch pipeline extending from DeWitt County to ETP's La Grange Processing Plant in
Fayette County
100 MMcf/d, expandable
to 300 MMcf/d
In-service
Q2 2011
$68
REM Phase I
160-mile, 30-inch pipeline originating in Dimmitt County and extending to the Chisholm Pipeline for
ultimate delivery to ETP’s processing plants
400 MMcf/d, expandable to
800 MMcf/d
In-service
Q4 2011
$230
Chisholm Plant
Natural gas processing plant located adjacent to ETP's existing La Grange Plant in Fayette County
120 MMcf/d
Q1 2012
$70
REM Phase II
70 mile, 42-inch pipeline expansion, which will extend from the Chisholm Pipeline in DeWitt County
east into Jackson County
800 MMcf/d
Q4 2012
$170
400 MMcf/d,  Phase I
Q1 2013
$400
200 MMcf/d,  Phase II
Q1 2014
200 MMcf/d,  Phase III
Q1 2014
Red River Gathering
Pipeline & Godley
117-mile, 24- and 30-inch pipeline from Carter County, Oklahoma to ETP's Godley Plant in Johnson
County, Texas
450 MMcf/d, expandable to
550 MMcf/d
Q4 2012
$360
Godley Plant
Expansion
Cryogenic processing plant to be constructed at the Godley processing facility in Johnson County,
Texas
200 MMcf/d
Q3 2013
Karnes County
Processing Plant
Natural gas processing plant located in Karnes County
200 MMcf/d
Q4 2012
$210
REM Expansion
37 miles, 30-inch pipeline expansion
-
Q4 2013
Sub-total
$1,551
NGL (ETP)
Freedom Pipeline
43-mile, 8-inch NGL pipeline connecting the Liberty pipeline to ETP's La Grange & Chisholm plants
40 Mbpd
In-service
Q3 2011
$30
Liberty Pipeline
93-mile, 12-inch NGL pipeline owned through a 50/50 JV with Copano. Connects the Freedom pipeline
to the Formosa plant
90 Mbpd
In-service
Q3 2011
$26
Justice Pipeline
130-mile, 20-inch NGL pipeline from the Jackson Plant to Mont Belvieu
340 Mpbd
Q3 2012
$300
Sub-total
$356
NGL (70% interest in Lone Star)
West Texas Gateway
570-mile NGL pipeline originating in Winkler County and terminating in Jackson County
200 Mbpd
Q1 2013
$642
Frac I
Mont Belvieu NGL fractionator
100 Mbpd
Q1 2013
$273
Frac II
Mont Belvieu NGL fractionator
100 Mbpd
Q1 2014
$245
Sub-total
$1,160
Total announced ETP growth projects since Q4 2010 (including 70% of Lone Star)
$3,067
Jackson Plant
Natural gas processing plant located in Jackson County


Eagle Ford Shale Projects
10


11
West Texas Gateway Project            
(NGL) Pipeline
Lone Star Projects (70% ETP)
Approximately 570 miles of 16-inch pipe
with an initial capacity of 200,000 Bbl/d
Originating in Winkler County and
terminating in Jackson County, Texas
Lone Star has secured capacity through
ETP’s Justice NGL pipeline from
Jackson County to Mont Belvieu
Expected in-service Q1 2013
Mont Belvieu Fractionator I & II
Two 100,000 Bbl/d NGL fractionators to
be constructed at Mont Belvieu
A substantial amount of the fractionation
capacity will be utilized for NGLs from
ETP’s Justice Pipeline
Expected in-service:                          
Frac I -
Q1 2013                               
Frac II -
Q1 2014


Freedom Pipeline
NGL Pipeline Projects (100% ETP)
12
43 mile 8-inch NGL pipeline
40,000 Bbl/d design capacity
In-service September 2011
Liberty Pipeline
93 mile 12-inch NGL pipeline
90,000 Bbl/d design capacity
50/50 JV with Copano
In-service September 2011
Justice Pipeline
130 mile 20-inch NGL pipeline
340,000 Bbl/d design capacity
Expected in-service Q3 2012


Citrus Overview (50% ETP)
13
Florida Gas Transmission System Map
Florida Gas Transmission (“FGT”) is 100% owned by
Citrus Corp. (“Citrus”),
Owned 50% by ETP and 50% by El Paso Corp., which
was recently acquired by Kinder Morgan, Inc.
Approximately 5,400 miles of pipe and mainline
system capacity of 3.1 Bcf/d
Delivered ~63% of the natural gas consumed in
Florida in 2010
Largely demand driven with 30,000+ MW of gas-fired
generation connected to FGT
Over 240 delivery points and 50 interconnects with
interstate and intrastate pipelines
Gulfstream is currently the only competitor for gas
supply into Florida, with 1.26 Bcf/d capacity
2011 revenue and EBITDA were $694 million and $531
million, respectively
FGT Phase VIII Expansion
Phase VIII, an 820,000 MMBtu/d expansion from
Mississippi to South / Central Florida, was placed in
service on April 1, 2011 with a total project cost of $2.5
billion
Expansion capacity is currently 78% contracted on a firm
basis for a tenure of up to 25 years
Overview


14
Managed Commodity Exposure
Intrastate Segment
We manage our open transportation capacity (approximately 1.0 Bcf/d) between points across
Texas through the use of buy/sale transactions and commodity derivatives
100% of net retained fuel volumes (approximately 60 MMcf/d) hedged at an average price of
$3.78/MMBtu in 2012 and $3.72/MMBtu in 2013
As of March 31st, we had 54 Bcf in the ground managed for our own account that we now expect
to withdraw in late 2012 / early 2013 at average spreads of $0.95/MMBtu.
Midstream Segment
Approximately 16,700 Bbl/d of equity NGL volumes
Interstate Segment
Nearly all revenues are demand charges
Minimal direct exposure to natural gas prices
NGL Segment
Nearly all gross margin is fee-based
Lone Star (of which we own 70%) has approximately 3,500 Bbl/d equity NGL volumes


15
Balanced Approach To Funding Growth
49%
24%
63%
34%
60%
76%
63%
53%
54%
51%
76%
37%
66%
40%
24%
37%
47%
46%
FY 2005
FY 2006
16 Mo.
Ended
12/31/07
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012E
Cumulative
Equity + Excess Cash Flow   
Debt
Total Capital
Deployed
¹
($
mm):
$1,292
$1,204
$3,062
$1,896
$1,328
$834
$3,428
$18,511
2
3
$5,468
1
2
3
ETP
changed
from
a
fiscal
year
end
of
August
31
to
a
calendar
year
end
at
the
end
of
2007.
st
Excludes capital contributions to joint ventures other than Lone Star. Includes cash paid for acquisitions and proceeds from the sale of assets.
Equity includes net proceeds from issuance of common units plus capital contributions from general partner, capital contributions from non-controlling interest, and
common units issued in connection with acquisitions.  Excess Cash Flow includes net cash provided by operating activities less maintenance capital expenditures and 
distributions paid plus proceeds from sale of assets and discontinued operations.


16
Debt Capitalization
($ million)
3/31/2012
12/31/2011
Revolving Credit Facility ($2,500)
190
$              
314
$              
Senior Notes:
5.65%
due 2012
108
                
400
                
6.00%
due 2013
350
                
350
                
8.50%
due 2014
292
                
350
                
5.95%
due 2015
750
                
750
                
6.13%
due 2017
400
                
400
                
6.70%
due 2018
600
                
600
                
9.70%
due 2019
400
                
600
                
9.00%
due 2019
450
                
650
                
4.65%
due 2021
800
                
800
                
5.20%
due 2022
1,000
             
-
                     
6.63%
due 2036
400
                
400
                
7.50%
due 2038
550
                
550
                
6.05%
due 2041
700
                
700
                
6.50%
due 2042
1,000
             
-
                     
Total Senior Notes
7,800
             
6,550
             
Other Long-Term Debt:
Transwestern Senior Notes
870
                
870
                
Other
1
                    
82
                   
Total Other Long-Term Debt
871
                
952
                
Total Debt
8,861
$           
7,816
$           


17
Ratings Summary
Moody's
S&P
Fitch
Rating
Outlook
Rating
Outlook
Rating
Outlook
ETP
Senior Unsecured
Baa3
Negative
BBB-
Stable
BBB-
Negative
SUN
Senior Unsecured
Ba2
Developing
BB+
CW Positive
BB+
Stable
SXL
Senior Unsecured
Baa2
Review Down
BBB
Negative
BBB
Stable


18
ETP is one of the largest publicly traded MLPs with an equity market capitalization of approximately
$9.8 billion¹
and an enterprise value of $18.5 billion
1,2
Owns and operates more than 23,500 miles of intrastate and interstate pipelines and 1,500 miles of
NGL pipeline
Connects prolific natural gas producing areas with multiple end markets
Key Considerations
Large
Diversified
Asset Base
Strong
Balance Sheet
Stable Asset
Base & Cash
Flow Profile
Well
Managed
Growth
Profile
Committed to maintaining a strong balance sheet and investment credit grade metrics
Track record of maintaining a strong liquidity position
Proven ability to raise equity including more than $3.5 billion in net proceeds from equity offerings over
the past three years
Significant fee-based operating income and long-lived assets
High-quality customer base with strong credit profile
Hedge positions provide for further cash flow stability in commodity price sensitive areas
Low-risk, high-return projects supported by long-term customer contracts
Demonstrated ability to construct and place into service pipelines on-time / on-budget
Balanced approach to funding
1
As of June 1, 2012.  Excludes the value of incentive distribution rights (IDRs) held by ETE.
2
Includes net debt as of March 31, 2012


19
Adjusted EBITDA Reconciliation (ETP)
Years Ended December 31,
($ millions)
2008
2009
2010
2011
Net income
866.0
$                    
791.5
$                    
617.2
$                    
697.2
$                    
Interest expense, net of interest capitalized
265.7
                      
394.3
                      
412.6
                      
474.1
                      
Income tax expense
6.7
                         
12.8
                        
15.5
                        
18.8
                        
Depreciation and amortization
262.2
                      
312.8
                      
343.0
                      
430.9
                      
Non-cash compensation expense
23.5
                        
24.0
                        
27.2
                        
37.5
                        
(Gains) losses on disposals of assets
1.3
                         
1.6
                         
5.0
                         
3.2
                         
Gains on non-hedged interest rate derivatives
51.0
                        
(39.2)
                       
(4.6)
                        
77.4
                        
Unrealized (gains) losses on commodity risk management activities
(35.5)
                       
(30.0)
                       
78.3
                        
11.4
                        
Goodwill impairment loss
11.4
                        
-
                         
-
                         
-
                         
Impairment of investment in affiliate
-
                         
-
                         
52.6
                        
5.4
                         
Proportionate share of unconsolidated affiliates' interest, depreciation
and allowance for equity funds used during construction
-
                         
22.3
                        
22.5
                        
30.0
                        
Adjusted EBITDA attributable to non-controlling interest
-
                         
-
                         
-
                         
(37.8)
                       
Other, net (includes allowance for equity funds used during construction)
(73.3)
                       
(12.7)
                       
(28.5)
                       
(5.4)
                        
Adjusted EBITDA
1,378.9
$                
1,477.4
$                
1,540.9
$                
1,742.6
$                
Adjusted EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial measure.  Management believes Adjusted EBITDA provides useful information to investors as measure of comparison with peer 
companies, including companies that may have different financing and capital structures.  The presentation of Adjusted EBITDA also allows investors to view our performance in a
manner similar to the methods used by management and provides additional insight to our operating results. 
There are material limitations to using measures such as Adjusted EBITDA, including the difficulty associated with using it as the sole measure to compare the results of one 
company to another, and the inability to analyze certain significant items that directly affect a company’s net income or loss or cash flows. In addition, our calculation of Adjusted
EBITDA may not be consistent with similarly titled measures of other companies and should be viewed in conjunction with measurements that are computed in accordance with 
GAAP, such as gross margin, operating income, net income, and cash flow from operating activities. 
Definition of Adjusted EBITDA
ETP defines Adjusted EBITDA as total partnership earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, and other non-cash items, such as non-cash compensation expense,
gains and losses on disposals of assets, the allowance for equity funds used during construction, unrealized gains and losses on commodity risk management activities, non-cash
impairment charges, and other non-operating income or expense items.  Unrealized gains and losses on commodity risk management activities includes unrealized gains and losses
on commodity derivatives and inventory fair value adjustments (excluding lower of cost or market adjustments).