Cruise lines ‘are paying agents extra under the table’

Cruise lines ‘are paying agents extra under the table’

By Lucy Huxley

Cruise lines 'are paying agents extra under the table'Cruise lines that have cut commission are giving money back to travel agents “under the table” as they accept that reducing payments to 5% was a mistake, according to the UK boss of MSC.

Giulio Libutti, UK managing director, told Travel Weekly: “Under the table, these lines are now starting to give money back.

“They aren’t going back to fixed rates of 15% or up to 18%, but they are offering double commission for certain months, or bonus commissions.

“Through variable means they are making it back up.”

He added: “The fact that Princess moved back from 5% to 10% shows it was a mistake. You have to have mutual respect for agents and, by cutting commission, they were basically saying the value of an agent wasn’t important any more.”

 

Libutti’s comments come a month after he accused lines of “underestimating the value of agents” by cutting commission.
MSC revised its terms to offer performance-based commission rates of up to 13%, a move Libutti claimed had increased revenue by 35% year on year in 2013, and had also developed new agent partnerships.

“We are now working with some small cruise specialists that a year ago were doing no business with us at all,” he said.

Libutti said competition was particularly challenging as growth in the cruise market had stalled due to the economic crisis and high-profile incidents involving Costa, Carnival and Thomson Cruises.

“Cruise will continue to grow but it is suffering so we all need to find travel agent partners who understand and share our targets.”

MSC expects to attract about 100,000 passengers from the UK in 2014, up from an anticipated 70,000-75,000 in 2013.

Carnival Triumph incident takes toll on Wave bookings, pricing

Carnival Triumph incident takes toll on Wave bookings, pricing

By Tom Stieghorst
For the second year running, the cruise industry’s key sales period has coincided with a high-profile mishap at sea.

Agents say early momentum during the Wave season slowed notably after February, when a crippled Carnival Triumph temporarily became the public’s idea of a cruise.

Although big travel agent groups say bookings are up 5% to 16% over 2012, pricing remains slightly behind on cruises booked over the next 12 months, according to one analyst.

Kevin Weisner“It’s two stories in one quarter,” said Kevin Weisner, vice president at CruiseDeals.com in Charlotte, N.C. “January felt pretty good. Then in March it was a different story altogether. 

“We really felt there was a significant impact to our business and call volume in the month of March, which was pretty directly attributable to the incident with Carnival Triumph and the subsequent coverage.”

Weisner said bookings to date are “a little behind” last year, characterizing it as “more than a rounding error but less than ‘worry about it’ size.”

As might be expected, Carnival Cruise Lines is cited as the line with the biggest bookings drop. 

In a mid-March conference call, Carnival executives said bookings fell by double digits in the days immediately after the Carnival Triumph engine fire but bounced back after promotions were offered.

Ian Rennardson, an analyst at Jefferies International, estimated in a recent report that prices at Carnival’s flagship brand are down 8% for cruises departing in the next three months. 

Rennardson said Norwegian Cruise Line seems to be faring the best of the major brands, likely because of strong pricing for its Breakaway and Getaway ships nearing completion. 

Some big agencies say they’re doing pretty well. Joe McClure, president of Montrose Travel near Los Angeles, said cruise bookings are up 16% and sales up 23% year to date.

“We’ve seen soft pricing from the largest mass-market cruise line, but we’ve seen pretty steady pricing from their competitors in the same space,” McClure said. 

At CruiseOne/Cruises Inc., general manager Dwain Wall said bookings are up mid-single digits. He said business was strong in 2011 and 2012, “and that is continuing in 2013.”

Dwain Wall_But could it be even better? 

Bill Walsh, president of Cruise Travel Outlet, in Salem, N.H., said that after a record January the phones grew quiet. “We are still up double digits on the year but wonder how much we could have been up,” he said. 

Last year’s Wave season provides some easy comparisons. In 2012, the wreck of the Costa Concordia chilled consumers and drove prices into a down cycle that took most of the year to undo. 

Hopes were high at the start of 2013 that consumers had turned the page and would book cruises that they might have taken a pass on just after the Concordia’s accident.

While not nearly as consequential as the Concordia, the week-long saga of the disabled Carnival Triumph that started Feb. 10 grabbed an inordinate amount of media attention.

The questions now are how long will Carnival be affected, and how broadly will Triumph’s impact be felt? 

Wall said that he expects Carnival to bounce back big, as attention shifts to other news stories. Unlike some, Wall feels that Carnival stayed on top of the crisis. 

“I think Carnival did a fantastic job managing that horrible mess they got themselves in,“ he said.

For starters, Carnival met right away with CruiseOne to lay out the facts, develop talking points for agents and an FAQ sheet for passengers who were already booked on Carnival. 

“Carnival armed our agents with every possible tool we could think of to make sure they were not sitting there empty-handed,” Wall said. 

At the same time, CruiseOne/Cruises Inc. moved up some Carnival marketing that was originally planned for later in the year. Carnival has done some customized newsletters for CruiseOne/Cruises Inc. agents.

“They couldn’t have been more supportive,” Wall said. 

Beyond the Triumph fallout, another issue clouding Wave season is the strength of European demand. Wall said he’s having a “phenomenal year” in Europe due in part to better agent training.

Grace Dieleman, of Cruise Holidays of Chatham-Kent in Ontario, also said her European business is strong.

Joe McClureBut Europe is soft at Montrose Travel, McClure said. And another Canadian Cruise Holidays agent, Samuel Spencer of Calgary, said that despite some clever promotions from the cruise lines, his numbers remain depressed for big-ship European cruises.

“High summer airfare is once again a deterrent to price-sensitive cruisers,” he said.

In addition, many customers seem to be hanging back and not taking advantage of new value-added promotions such as Celebrity Cruises’ 123Go. When they do book to Europe, Spencer said, it is often too late to get decent airfares, which hurts the travel agent because such a large part of the overall price of the vacation is not eligible for commission.

Many cruise brands owned by public companies are restricted by Securities and Exchange Commission rules on what they can say about pricing and booking during Wave season. 

In his April 3 report, Jefferies analyst Rennardson said it appears to have gone better at Royal Caribbean and Norwegian than at Carnival Corp.

For close-in bookings, Rennardson said almost all Carnival Corp. brands are in negative territory, with the Euro-centric P&O, Cunard Line and Costa suffering the most.

Prices for Carnival Corp. cruises sailing within three months are down 8.9%, compared with increases of 7.7% for RCCL and 7.1% for Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings, leading Rennardson to conclude that the latter two are benefiting from Carnival’s troubles.

For cruises sailing four to 12 months from now, the picture is more muddled, with prices at Carnival (down 0.7%) and RCCL (down 3.3%) lower than last year but Norwegian (up 4.7%) in the black.

Rennardson said RCCL is being dragged down by a 23% price decline at its Spanish brand, Pullmantur.

Overall, pricing trends have deteriorated over the past few months, following a period of improvement in waning months of last year. 

“Given the easy comparisons of 2012,” Rennardson wrote, “the 2013 ‘Wave booking period’ is more important than ever, with share prices vulnerable to any perceived pricing weakness as cruise pricing in the first few months of the new year is often a good barometer for the rest of the year.”

One bit of good news that doesn’t seem to have made much difference is the stock market’s rise into record territory. New wealth might yet translate into higher cruise bookings and prices, although outside of luxury products, Wall said he doesn’t find much correlation.

Likely of more benefit, said Weisner of CruiseDeals, would be a lasting upturn in home prices. 

On that point, Weisner said he’s encouraged. For the first time in a long time, home values have been advancing month after month in a consistent fashion, giving worried homeowners some peace of mind.

“I really do believe, from a personal point of view, that [rising home prices] is going to be a better catalyst for leisure travel sales than the [stock] market,” Weisner said.

Costa to pay $1.3 million fine over Concordia: report

Costa to pay $1.3 million fine over Concordia: report

By Tom Stieghorst
Costa Cruises has agreed to a $1.3 million fine levied by the Italian government to settle criminal charges over the sinking of the Costa Concordia, according to a Reuters report from Italy.

The fine applies to the corporation, not to crew members and executives who have been charged and are expected to be prosecuted individually.

The prosecution is satisfied with the ruling by the preliminary court judge, Valeria Montesarchio, and will not appeal, prosecution sources said, adding that the fine was close to the maximum allowed by law.

“This is a balanced decision,” Costa Cruises lawyer Marco De Luca said after the ruling. “It is the most reasonable solution.”

The company spokesman confirmed De Luca’s comments, originally made to Italian media, and said the company had no further statement.