Carnival loses $4.4 billion as coronavirus slams cruise industry

Carnival posted a $4.4 billion loss — which works out to $3.30 per share — for the second quarter. Analysts were forecasting a loss of $1.76 a share. Revenue plummeted 85% to $700 million, missing estimates of about $738 million.

The company is unable to provide any guidance because it is “unable to definitively predict when it will return to normal operations,” it added in its earnings release.
Carnival noted that once it does resume operations, it will only be after collaboration with government and health officials and that it will be in a phased manner.
Shares of Carnival (CCL) were flat in late morning trading Thursday after initially falling more than 4%.
The bad news from Carnival comes one day after Norwegian (NCLH) said it was canceling cruises it had tentatively planned for later this summer and was extending suspensions through September.
Norwegian’s stock rose 3% Thursday and shares of Royal Caribbean (RCL) were up nearly 3% as well. But all three cruise stocks have plummeted between 55% and 70% this year.
Royal Caribbean said last month that demand for 2021 cruises remained strong, a sign that consumers are eager to take vacations again if there is no second wave of Covid-19 cases.

Carnival stressed in the earnings release that it has ample liquidity of about $7.6 billion to ride out an extended pause in operations. But it also said it expects to burn through about $650 million in cash a month, on average, during the second half of 2020.

That’s raised concerns about funding. Carnival and other cruise companies were shut out of the first $2 trillion coronavirus stimulus package that passed in Congress in March.

Even though Carnival and its competitors all have headquarters in Miami, none of them are legally based in the US, allowing them to pay fewer taxes. Carnival is incorporated in Panama. Royal Caribbean is headquartered in Liberia. Norwegian is incorporated in Bermuda.

Carnival did, however, qualify for $700 million in aid through a Federal Reserve program designed to provide funding to struggling businesses.

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