El Nino's typically feature below to well below normal ACE. The only nino that featured above normal ACE was 2004 (if there is another please feel free to add), so that year is a rarity being one. So people keep referencing 2004 and Nino's but lets not do that too often because it was an oddity. The peak +PDO and +AMO probably played a bigger role than the Nino itself.
However the ACE stats says very little about landfalls as Hurricaneman alluded to. This often is dependent on where systems form and the conditions on short time scales rather than the broad overall signal which should be taken in consideration but not gospel.
To continue on my post earlier about MT and possible MJO waves returning to the Pacific once the current wave passes. Guidance is warming up to the fact the MJO will weaken and not quite make it into the phases that are non-Pacific. More feedback likely means more MJO into the Pacific in the longer run as it has been in the big Ocean for quite some time and doesn't want to leave.

