Coronavirus Could Pose Threat to Cruise Ship Credit Ratings

The cruise ship Diamond Princess is docked at the port of Yokohama, south of Tokyo, in this photo taken by Kyodo February 7, 2020. Mandatory credit Kyodo/via REUTERS

The impact on cruise companies’ earnings from cancelled trips, steep discounts and ships quarantined over coronavirus concerns could pose credit risks, said rating agencies Moody’s Investors Service and S&P Global Ratings.

Carnival Corp and Royal Caribbean Cruises said last week that scrapped itineraries in Asia due to the outbreak would affect their earnings per share more than expected. Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings on Thursday forecast an impact of 75 cents per share on full-year adjusted earnings, citing virus-linked fallout.

“It reduces the flexibility that these companies have in their rating categories,” said Moody’s analyst Peter Trombetta. “It removes some of their cushions.”The earnings impact on both Carnival and Royal Caribbean were deemed “credit negative” by Moody’s although neither company’s credit ratings were immediately affected.

In a note published on Wednesday, S&P Global analysts wrote that the impact on Carnival’s cash flow from the coronavirus outbreak is expected to drive leverage above the 2.5 debt to EBITDA ratio is 2020, the threshold that would normally warrant a downgrade if breached. However, if the analysts believe the impact on Carnival to be temporary and that leverage could be lowered within a year or two, they do not expect to downgrade the rating.

Financially, “Carnival would be impacted the most. They also have the most capacity in China. So they would probably see the biggest hit to earnings,” said Trombetta.

In response to a request for comment, a Carnival spokesman said, “The primary impact on the cruise industry is focused mostly on China, which is an emerging market for the cruise industry, so the impact is relatively small.” Neither Royal Caribbean nor Norwegian responded to a request for comment.

While the outbreak casts a shadow on the cruise industry in the short-term, credit analysts said they did not expect the effect to be lasting.

“We have very short memories,” said Trombetta, citing disasters like the wreck of the Costa Concordia ship in 2012, which killed 32 people. “People want to go on cruises. Once some time passes, that demand – so far – seems to keep coming back.”

Fitch Ratings, the third of the three largest credit rating agencies do not publicly rate the cruise companies, but analyst Colin Mansfield, who covers the gaming, lodging and leisure sectors, said he expected the consequences of the epidemic to be temporary.

And yet, Norwegian Cruise Line Chief Executive Frank Del Rio noted on a call with investors on Thursday that the coronavirus in particular “has caused near panic in the travelling public.”

“The decrease in bookings is similar to what we see – we have seen in past similar events, whether they be geopolitical during the financial crisis, et cetera. What’s a little bit different about this one is the increase in cancellations.”

That bias could create longer-term problems for the industry. There is some potential for “a softer demand picture in general if cruise gets some bad PR from this that sticks in peoples’ minds for any period of time,” said Paul Golding, analyst at Macquarie Capital. (Reporting by Kate Duguid; Editing by Megan Davies, Steve Orlofsky and Daniel Wallis)(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2019.

Coronavirus already impacting travel beyond China air routes

Coronavirus already impacting travel beyond China air routes
Photo Credit: Rangizz/Shutterstock

The travel industry is bracing for a potentially serious downturn of unknown length as the coronavirus continues to spread, forcing cancellations of flights, tours and cruises in China and threatening to create a global tourism slowdown.

While most industry players said it was too early to predict the ultimate impact, investment analysts said the growing number of travel warnings and bans related to the virus, combined with election-year politics in the U.S. and geopolitical tensions, were worrisome in terms of the financial health of the industry in 2020.

“The tourism industry is already facing a number of headwinds, including ongoing uncertainty over the terms of the U.K.’s upcoming Brexit withdrawal and intensifying geopolitical tensions between a number of powerful nations,” said Ben Cordwell, travel and tourism analyst at the U.K. data and analytics company GlobalData. “These factors, combined with the coronavirus outbreak, could mean a tough year lies ahead for the international tourism industry.”

While some outbound tours and China-based cruises were cancelled, U.S. tour operators were mostly taking a wait-and-see approach, noting that this is the off-season for travel to China; group travel and cruises typically pick up in March.

Airlines felt the immediate brunt, with British Airways becoming the first carrier to halt all travel to China and others following suit.

Austin Horowitz, a senior aviation management consultant for ICF, said that even in a best-case scenario, demand for air travel to China would take a severe hit in the near term.

“The duration of how long this goes on until it is contained will have a significant impact on how fast the recovery is,” Horowitz said of travel demand.

A recent IATA analysis showed that pandemic outbreaks can have a major impact on air service demand but that demand also recovers quickly. The World Health Organization has not classified coronavirus as a pandemic, but it is likely to do so.

During the most significant pandemic of this century, the 2003 SARS outbreak in southern China that killed nearly 800 people and afflicted more than 8,000, Asia-Pacific airlines saw the number of monthly miles travelled by passengers bottom out at 35% below pre-pandemic levels.

Over the course of 2003, revenue miles flown were down 8%, causing $6 billion in lost revenue. However, monthly passenger numbers at Asia-Pacific carriers had returned to pre-SARS levels within seven months of the start of the crisis.

Other pandemics, such as the 2015 MERS flu outbreak in South Korea, had a shorter-lived effect. The first month of the outbreak brought a 12% decline in travel to and from South Korea, IATA said. However, volume began to recover after just two months.

“While there are risks that this outbreak could cause a sizeable disruption, history indicates that any effect on air transport would be temporary,” IATA said in a statement.

Cordwell, too, said that while it was hard to predict best- and worst-case scenarios, “I do think the market is quite resilient. People are not going to stop travelling. … I do think the industry will definitely bounce back.”

Travel advisors, meanwhile, were scrambling to deal with the uncertainty.

“It has been a horrible experience with travel plans,” said Craig Hsu, vice president of Travel Design USA, which specializes in travel to Asia. “The mood of our travellers [is] very concerned and worried. We have cancelled multiple trips, including a large group that was supposed to travel to Wuhan in March. Luckily, the airlines and cruise lines worked with us for a full refund to our clients.”

Although acknowledging that his advisors were inundated with calls, he said the impact had been much greater in 2003. But he also pointed out that U.S. consumer demand for travel to China was much higher back then.

“SARS was huge,” he said. “People were more interested in travelling to China during that time versus now,” a shift that he attributed to trade and political tensions between the U.S. and China.

Agents said they also were starting to see apprehension about travel beyond China.

For example, Joan Novack, an independent advisor with a Travel Edge affiliate in New York, said she has two clients, women in their mid-80s, travelling to Southeast Asia with Abercrombie & Kent starting Feb. 24. One of the clients still wants to take the trip, she said, but the other is reluctant after hearing news reports about the spread of coronavirus.

ASTA advised agents against making any recommendations to clients about whether or not to travel to affected areas, instead of encouraging them to direct clients to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for the most up-to-date recommendations related to coronavirus.

“Ultimately, it is the traveller who must make that decision, ideally doing so in an informed manner and in light of his or her own individual risk tolerance,” ASTA said in a statement.

Cruise lines with China-based ships last week began cancelling departures through early February. And some lines implemented stricter preboarding health screenings. Likewise, as of last week, more than 20 U.S. airports were screening passengers arriving from China.

As far as the long-term impact of coronavirus on cruise lines, UBS financial analyst Robin Farley said that Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. (RCCL) is the most exposed to the China market, where it has about 6% of its deployments in 2020, followed by Carnival Corp. with 5% and Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings with less than 1%. She said that while Chinese passengers are growing rapidly as a source in other parts of the world as well, “Chinese passenger travel to other markets may not be as impacted by these concerns.”

Farley also said that early checks had indicated that the coronavirus had not impacted North American cruise bookings.

“Concerns about viruses tend to be regional to the occurrence, and it is still early to know what regions may ultimately be impacted,” Farley wrote in an investors note.

The outbreak was top of mind at the Americas Lodging Investment Summit in Los Angeles last week, as hoteliers braced for a significant drop in one of their biggest growth markets as well as the potential fallout from a decline in outbound travel from China.

STR president Amanda Hite said, “I do expect there to be a pretty big demand drop [for hotels] in China. When I look at the initial impact on the U.S., there will be some key markets that feel it, especially in gateway cities that depend on Chinese travellers, like New York, Los Angeles. Those are markets where if this is a prolonged issue, that could be very impactful.”

Hite said a look back at the impact from SARS, which began around February of 2003, showed the peak drop in room demand for China came a few months later.

“We saw room demand drop 50% in April, 75% in May and then another 50% drop in room demand in June,” she said. “And then it started to pick back up.”
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Jamie Biesiada, Johanna Jainchill, Christina Jelski and Robert Silk contributed to this report.

Steel Cut for Carnival’s First China-Built Ship

Carnival's China Newbuild?

Steel was cut last week for Carnival Corporation’s first-China built ship, now under construction at Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding Co Ltd facility., and due for delivery in the second half of 2023, according to Chinese news sources.

At the steel cutting ceremony, a rendering and vessel model was unveiled, which appear to show a Vista-class ship with a dual AIDA/Costa funnel, and sporting an AIDA livery.

Carnival’s China newbuild project is part of a joint venture, with the ships set to go to a yet-to-be-named domestic brand in which Carnival is a partner with China State Shipbuilding Corporation. Fincantieri is also involved, having licensed the Vista-class platform.

Further information about the domestic brand has yet to be revealed.

Carnival's China Newbuild?

The joint venture calls for the transfer of existing vessels (two Costa ships) and then the newbuild project, with orders firmed up for a pair of 135,000-ton Vista-class ships, and an option for up to four more.

The contracted price is reported to be $770 million per new vessel.

Steel Cutting