Posted on 11/12/2020 1:08:52 PM PST by Capt. Tom
All cruise lines are losing money hand over fist. But how much loss can these companies realistically bear? As the pandemic rages on, cruise companies are starting to feel the pressure.
As we look at a resumption of cruises in the first months of 2021, we take an in-depth look at the staggering numbers released by Stock Apps.
The Largest Cruise Company, Burning The Most Cash On August 31, 2020, the third quarter ended for Carnival Corporation. During the pandemic, the first full quarter showed the full effect the operations pause was having on the largest cruise company in the world.
Carnival Corporation suffered a $2.9 billion loss during this period. In Q3 2019, the company made revenues totaling $6.53 billion. In Q3 2020, the company made a mere $31 million. A 99.5% drop in revenue.
Carnivals stock price has suffered as well. Trading at $51.35 in January, the stock lost 68% of its value and is now trading at a mere $16.21.
The shocking number is the cash the company is burning monthly to be able to stay afloat. Every month during Q3, Carnival Corporation burned through $770 million cash on average.
The company does have the resources to survive the current situation for a few more months. It reported cash on hand of $8.2 billion at the end of Q3. While that may seem like a lot of money, the company will burn through much more per month once it starts getting ships back to operational capacity at the end of 2020 and the beginning of 2021.
Royal Caribbean not faring much better
In Q3, Royal Caribbean reported a loss of $1.2 billion according to the earnings report released.
Royal Caribbean Group is the owner of four brands: Royal Caribbean International, Celebrity Cruises, Silversea, and Azamara. Royal Caribbean Group is also a 50% owner of a joint venture that operates TUI Cruises and Hapag-Lloyd Cruises.
Due to its smaller size, Royal Caribbean has been burning less cash each month; however, with $250-270 million each month, these are still respectable numbers.
Similar to Carnival Corporation, the Royal Caribbean stock has been hit hard by the pandemic in 2020. Trading at $121.18 on January 19, 2020, the stock had lost around 56% by November 2020. It is now trading at $60.59.
The question remains how long Royal Caribbean will be able to keep this up. As with Carnival Corporation, it will start burning through cash faster and faster once operations resume.
As of September 30, the company had liquidity of approximately $3.7 billion, including $3.0 compared to $4.1 billion as of June 30.
The Biggest Loser? Norwegian Cruise Line
The biggest loser during the pandemic seems to be Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings or NCLH. The company which operates Norwegian Cruise Line, Oceania Cruises and Regent Seven Seas could have an estimated 99.45% to 100% loss for the period.
Its revenue has also crashed, going down from $1.66 billion to $0.02 billion, posting a drop of 99%. Norwegian Cruise Lines stock is suffering badly, losing more than 70.95%.
The Global Scale Of The Industry While the scale of the losses is mindboggling, the above doesnt tell the whole story. The Big Three represents a mere 75% of the global industry. There are over 50 cruise lines with 272 ships (associated with CLIA), and this number is still growing as new ships continue to be delivered.
The cruise industry created 1.1 million direct jobs. It served 30 million passengers in 2019, and this number was expected to reach 32 million in 2020 before the pandemic. The cruise industry had a total financial output of $134 billion in 2017, and this number went up in 2018 and 2019.
The total amount in $ the operations pause has cost is hard to predict. However, according to Cruise Lines International Association, cruise suspensions cost the U.S. economy over $25 trillion and 164,000 jobs.
But here is the article anyway. The covid infection on a recent smaller cruise ship testing the waters in the Caribbean will also help the CDC to delay starts from this country. -Tom
Could the whole industry go under?
Reopen as retirement homes. Old people pay more than cruise line fares and would like the better food, friendlier service and their kids might visit.
“Reopen as retirement homes.”
Many retirees already retire on cruise ships. Not a bad thing, either. We actually considered it, but ... cats.
Carnival is talking to the SDS about their 8 day cruises for the first couple of months.....if the SDS wont let these go then Carnival will have to cut them down to 7 day...most passengers wont mind that...
Carnival has several ships doing 6 day then 8 then 6 etc cruises in Jan, Feb etc out of Miami, Port C, Tampa...
Jacksonville and Charleston do mostly 4, 5 day...
If Emperor Joe manages to cheat his way into the WH forget about cruising ever...
Easy money. Have the feds back up bank loans.
Whoops that should have been CDC...
Im busy listening to the War Room..
Perhaps cruise line customers should get vaccine access priority.
Lefties destroy businesses like they destroy everything else. Don’t waste one second trying to understand their motivations. They are anti-social types, sociopaths. They are motivated by the compulsion to harm and destroy. Argument with them will achieve nothing. They are totally convinced of their own rightness.
Don’t commit illegal acts. But lefties do. when you see a lefty stealing on the job, false reporting his time, abusing his/her children, report them to the police. Make their miserable lives even more miserable.
WTF ?
Yeah, its rough all over.
“We actually considered it, but ... cats.”
Cat Overboard?!?! (j/k)
I’m waiting for the last indoor dog to die so I can replace 30 year old carpeting, so I know just what you mean! ;)
It depends of the displacement of the vessel, in that, the weight of the vessel is compared to the weight of the water that the space the ship is taking up while being in the water.
So many people have lost businesses and jobs due to the Dem shut-downs fabricated via the Wuhan Flu.
I feel for Middle America, but I always have a hard time shedding a tear for ‘Luxury’ industries.
I mean, spend your money any way you want, but there are so many sectors of Capitalism that are truly unnecessary for the vast majority of us.
That said, slippery slope, I know. No one should be picking winners and losers, life isn’t fair, even the playing field, blah, blah, blah...
I believe some cruise lines will go Chapt. -11 Bankruptcy and reorganize. -Tom
You *must* be joking.
Just rename all cruises ‘PROTEST’ cruises and all will be fine...
I’d feel sorrier for the Cruise Lines if they were American companies, but they are not.
They deliberately register their ships in countries like the Bahamas to avoid US taxes and regulations.
Remember how shocked these cruise lines were when they found out they weren’t eligible for US Coronavirus bailout money, even though they did most of their business in the USA?
Suddenly, being headquartered in Holland and having your ships registered in Liberia didn’t look too smart.
I bought carnival at 12 dollars and have another bid in for 12 dollars. I had to renew it once already. I thought last week it was going to fall below 12, but it barely didnt. Im waiting....
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