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Carnival Gets Hit By the Iran War. Can the Cruise Stock Bounce Back?

Carnival (NYSE: CCL) shares were heading lower on Friday, even though the world’s largest cruise operator beat estimates in its fiscal first-quarter earnings report.

In the last quarter before the war in Iran roiled the global travel market, Carnival reported revenue of $6.17 billion, up 6.1% from the quarter a year ago and ahead of estimates of $6.14 billion.

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Management noted record net yields, or revenue per passenger cruise day, and strong close-in demand, or bookings made shortly before departure, showing strong demand to start the fiscal year.

Profits also improved with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) operating income increasing from $543 million to $607 million, and adjusted earnings per share rising from $0.13 to $0.20, beating the consensus at $0.18.

Carnival continues to make progress with paying down the large debt balance it acquired during the pandemic, and it reduced its interest expense from $377 million to $291 million. Booking trends remain strong, hitting a new record, a positive leading indicator for future revenue.

However, investors were more focused on Carnival’s guidance, given the upheaval in the Middle East. For the full year, management still expects solid growth, calling for net yields to rise 2.75% on a constant currency basis, noting higher ticket prices and strength in onboard spending, but sees cruise costs before fuel up 3.1% in constant currency.

Higher fuel costs are expected to eat into the bottom line as the company lowered its full-year adjusted earnings per share guidance from $2.48 down to $2.21, which it attributed to a headwind of $0.38 due to the spike in oil prices. Notably, Carnival does not hedge on fuel prices, and the company said that a 10% change in fuel cost impacts its bottom line for the year by $160 million, or $0.11 share.

Similarly, it cut its adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) from $7.63 billion to $7.19 billion.

Image source: Carnival.

Carnival also unveiled a new set of long-term targets after the company beat its previous SEA Change targets nearly twice as fast as it expected.

Its new program PROPEL calls for:

  • Greater than 16% return on invested capital

  • More than 50% adjusted EPS growth from 2025

  • More than 40% of cash from operations distributed to shareholders (approximately $14 billion)

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