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Earlier this month Carnival PLC (LON:CCL) (NYSE:CCL) found itself falling through the trap door of the FTSE100, largely as a result of the huge declines seen in the Carnival share price, over the last few weeks as investors dumped shares over concern that the business might not survive a prolonged shutdown.
Carnival has already shelved most of its 2020 cruise season as a result of the pandemic, though the company does have plans to restart US operations on Aug 1st, though in the current environment this deadline could well slip back, especially since fellow cruise operator Norwegian pushed back its restart date into the end of September, beginning of October.
Coming so soon after the company posted record profits at the end of last year, the change in outlook could not be starker.
The company also has a lot of questions to answer in how to restore customer trust after the company was criticised for its handling of the initial coronavirus outbreaks on board its cruise ships, earlier this year.
While 2021 bookings are looking good, these have been at heavily discounted prices, with the company’s biggest problem being at the moment being cash flow, or rather the lack of it.
With a huge fleet to maintain the business had been haemorrhaging cash at a rate of up to a $1bn a month at one point, though steps have been taken to ameliorate this, with the furloughing of some positions, and plans to reduce the size of its fleet well advanced.
Carnival was able to raise $6.4bn in April to help tide it over, but had to pay through the nose to do so with a yield of 11.5%, well above the 1% it paid last October, when it raised €600m in the European debt market.
As a result, we can expect to see further job cuts in the coming months, with 450 positions already set to go at its Southampton HQ, with the prospect that more could come, unless lockdown restrictions get eased soon.
Today’s sobering numbers serve to highlight the scale of the problems facing the business with net losses coming in well above expectations, at $6.07c a share, or $4.4bn including a $2bn non-cash impairment charge, well above all of the worst expectations.
Total revenues for Q2 collapsed coming in at $700m, down from $4.8bn a year ago. Expectations of cash burn remain unchanged, with the company looking to accelerate its ship disposal plan, from the preliminarily agreed 6 ships, which are due to be removed in the next 90 days, to a much higher number in the months ahead.
Total liquidity at the end of Q2 stands at $7.6bn, which seems a lot, however when you’re burning through cash at the rate of $1bn a month, getting that amount down can be difficult.
As part of this morning’s announcement it is hoped to get this number down to $250m once all of its ships are in a paused state, which it is expected should happen sometime in Q3.
All in all these are awful numbers for Carnival, as well as the cruise line sector in general, and with concerns about a second wave likely to increase as we head towards the end of the year, the outlook for the sector looks highly uncertain, even on a best case scenario where lockdowns and restrictions are lifted.
Lifting the various lockdowns may well be the easy part, the hard part is likely to be persuading people to get back on these floating theme parks. It could be in the future the size of the cruise sector is likely to be somewhat smaller in the short term, however as the market leader Carnival still looks well placed to survive for now.
Disclaimer: CMC Markets is an execution-only service provider. The material (whether or not it states any opinions) is for general information purposes only, and does not take into account your personal circumstances or objectives. Nothing in this material is (or should be considered to be) financial, investment or other advice on which reliance should be placed. No opinion given in the material constitutes a recommendation by CMC Markets or the author that any particular investment, security, transaction or investment strategy is suitable for any specific person.
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