Carnival Corporation to Begin Cruises in Phases

Carnival Cruise iconic Funnel.

Carnival Corp said on Friday it was planning to resume operations in a phased manner and would operate with a smaller fleet on its return, months after suspending trips due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The company’s shares, that have lost more than two-thirds of their value this year, rose as much as 11% to $16.12 in morning trading.

The world’s largest cruise operator said it has reduced capital expenditures by more than $5 billion over the next 18 months and raised a couple more billions to navigate through the virus outbreak.

The cruise business has been one of the worst-hit after several ships, including some owned by Carnival’s Princess Cruises, became coronavirus hotspots.

To survive through the pandemic, cruise operators have raised billions through various means, even pledging ships and private islands.

Carnival alone, raised over $10 billion through a series of financing transactions since voyages were paused, enough to withstand another full year in a zero-revenue scenario, Chief Executive Officer Arnold Donald said on a conference call.

As it restarts voyages, the company expects future capacity to be moderated, while some ships could be removed and new deliveries would be delayed, Carnival added.

“We are also reorganizing the company to emerge stronger, leaner and more efficient,” Donald said.

“Even when we return to full-scale operations, we don’t expect to return to the same staffing requirements as we are addressing our work streams to work in a more efficient manner.”

The 13 ships expected to leave the fleet represent a nearly 9% reduction in current capacity, and the company expects only five of the nine ships originally scheduled for delivery to be delivered.

On Thursday, Carnival said it would resume voyages run by its German cruise line AIDA next month. (Reporting by Nivedita Balu in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D’Silva and Shounak Dasgupta)

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2020.

NCL Holdings says cruisers eager for exotic sailings

Oceania Cruises' Marina.
Oceania Cruises’ Marina.

Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd. (NCLH) said that consumers are booking cruises to far-flung destinations in 2021, with Japan and Dubai among the top itineraries, along with several world cruise segments.

NCLH CEO Frank Del Rio said during the company’s earnings call that for its Oceania and Regent brands, demand for those itineraries in the first and second quarters of next year indicates that people will be willing to take long-haul flights.

“And so, this notion that people aren’t going to want to cruise to faraway places or exotic destinations, what we’re seeing is defying that,” he said. “So we’re not seeing any particular area of strength other than these Japanese itineraries, these world cruise segments that are sold out, literally.”

Del Rio also said during the call that he anticipates it would take about six months to resume service across its entire, three-brand fleet.

“The return to service of a phased approach of roughly five vessels per month is what we believe we operationally could handle in terms of bringing back the ships from cold lay-up, including re-crewing the vessels etc.,” Del Rio said. “Given that we have 28 vessels if you bring back an average of five vessels a month, it’s going to take about six months to get all ships back operating.”

During the earnings call, Del Rio said that timeline assumes that the itineraries those ships would operate are available.

“So the six-month ramp-up assumes more than anything else our operational capability to ramp up and that the ports are open,” he said.

Del Rio said that consumer demand is not a concern.

“We believe consumer demand and the bookings that follow are based on our ability to market, travel agents being back open again, the whole industry being back in operation as opposed to sitting idle,” he said. “There is pent-up demand, let’s not forget that. People only talk about the negative, but the fact that the industry has been shut down now over four months, there’ll be pent-up demand. People will want to cruise again.”

He also acknowledged that it will take time for cruising to come back to where it had been.

“We just have to be patient,” he said, adding that “no one is more impatient than me. But I recognize that this is going to be a recovery effort that’s going to take multiple quarters, perhaps multiple years to get back to the good old days of 2019.”

$211M loss in the first quarter

NCLH reported an expected loss of $211.3 million for the first quarter of 2020, compared with income of $181.8 million one year prior. Revenue decreased 11.2%, to $1.2 billion, compared to $1.4 billion in 2019, for the quarter ended March 31.

NCLH said it had “taken decisive action to significantly strengthen our financial position” in response to the Covid-19 global pandemic, including the company’s $2.4 billion capital raise, which Del Rio said positions the line “to weather an unlikely scenario of over 18 months of suspended voyages.”

“Our guests continue to demonstrate their desire for cruise vacations,” Del Rio said. “And we continue to experience demand for voyages further in the future across our three brands.”

NCLH reported “significant softness in near-term demand and an elevated rate of cancellations for existing bookings.”

But the company also said there “continues to be demand for cruise vacations, particularly beginning in the fourth quarter 2020 accelerating through 2021.”

The company reported that slightly more than half of its guests booked on cancelled sailings had requested cash refunds instead of future cruise credits.

NCLH said that it had begun developing a comprehensive and multifaceted strategy to enhance its health and safety protocols, including “enhanced screenings, upgraded cleaning and disinfection protocols and plans for social distancing.”

NCLH said it had furloughed approximately 20% of its shoreside workforce through July 31.

Norwegian Plans Phased Return to Service

Norwegian Dawn
Norwegian Dawn

“I will do everything humanly possible to be able to look my own family in the eyes and say they will be safe on our cruise ships,” said Frank Del Rio, chairman and CEO of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings (NCLH), on the company’s first-quarter earnings call.

Del Rio said NCLH is working with experts to develop health protocols that will be robust to gain CDC approval and generate confidence among the public. The same process must be replicated around the world.

When the no-sail order is lifted by the CDC, Del Rio said he expects that the company’s brands will return to service in a phased order of roughly five vessels a month, assuming ports are open and they can sail their designated itineraries.

Norwegian Bliss

With 28 vessels, it will take roughly six months to bring the whole fleet back into service. It is also unknown at this point whether they will be allowed to sail at 100 per cent capacity.

Consumer demand is still there, according to Del Rio, despite all the negative press. He noted that bookings are still coming in, despite the suspension of marketing activities, and expects that cash coming in will overtake the net cash outflow (refunds) in the next 60 days.

“There is pent up demand; people want to cruise again,” he added, noting that world cruise segments for the Regent and Oceania brands were sold out, with customers flying to embarkation points in Japan and Dubai.

However, with a booking curve from six to eight months out, it will take time before the pipeline is full or nearly full, he said.

Mark Kempa, CFO and executive vice president, commented that he sees 2021 as a transition year and that NCLH may be able to rebuild in earnest in 2022, bringing the company back on the track it was prior to COVID-19.

Newbuild deliveries may be delayed 12 to 18 months, added Del Rio.