Stocks

Will Carnival Stock Bounce Back From Monday’s 4% Drop?

The cruising giant came through with another beat, but the market wasn’t impressed.

It doesn’t seem fair. Carnival Corp. (CCL -1.84%) (CUK -1.20%) checked off most of the boxes that investors like to see out of an earnings report this week. It topped expectations on both ends of the income statement, as well as all the key cruise line stocks metrics that Carnival reports. The world’s largest cruise line operator also raised its guidance across the board.

It was a classic “beat and raise” on Monday morning, but the market wasn’t impressed. Carnival stock still tumbled 4% on the news. It’s moving lower again in early Tuesday trading. The cruising bellwether had a strong fiscal third quarter, extending a lot of impressive streaks.

Carnival has now cranked out 10 consecutive quarters of record revenue results. The company has consistently landed ahead of Wall Street profit targets for a dozen straight reports. Net yield—a widely tracked industry metric that calculates adjusted gross margin per available passenger cruise day—has never been higher.

Is there something that Carnival bulls are missing? If not, isn’t this a golden opportunity where the stock chart and fundamentals are passing ships? Let’s take a closer look to get a fresh read on the market’s interesting reaction to Carnival’s latest financial results.

Diving into the deep end

Revenue hit a new record of $8.2 billion during the seasonally potent fiscal third quarter for Carnival. It was just a 3% increase over last year’s previous record-setting showing, but Carnival achieved this on slightly lower capacity this time around. A 4.6% jump in net yields—another new high-water mark for Carnival—helped push the top line higher.

Net income of $1.9 billion (or $2 billion on an adjusted basis) is also an all-time high for Carnival. Passengers are willing to pay up for sailings and on-board activities, more than enough to offset the rising costs to provide them. Its adjusted profit of $1.43 a share landed 9% ahead of expectations, continuing a long string of positive surprises on the bottom line.

Period EPS Estimate Actual EPS Surprise
Fiscal Q3 2023 $0.75 $0.86 15%
Fiscal Q4 2023 ($0.13) ($0.07) 46%
Fiscal Q1 2024 ($0.18) ($0.14) 22%
Fiscal Q2 2024 ($0.02) $0.11 650%
Fiscal Q3 2024 $1.15 $1.27 10%
Fiscal Q4 2024 $0.07 $0.14 94%
Fiscal Q1 2025 $0.02 $0.13 485%
Fiscal Q2 2025 $0.35 $0.24 46%
Fiscal Q3 2025 $1.32 $1.43 9%

Data source: Yahoo! Finance. EPS = earnings per share (adjusted).

Carnival wrapped up its quarter by raising its guidance for the full fiscal year that ends in November. It did so for all the metrics that it updates quarterly, but let’s zoom in on adjusted earnings. Carnival was initially targeting an adjusted profit per share of $1.70 back in December, when it initiated its fiscal 2025 forecast. That per-share adjusted income goal post has inched higher every three months, going to $1.83, $1.97, and now $2.14.

It’s a strong report, but the company that carves out a living sailing blue oceans ended Monday in red. It’s time to sniff out potential culprits, but—spoiler alert for anyone looking to invest in Carnival—it sure seems like a bargain after an unfair sell-off.

Someone enjoying the view from a cruise ship's veranda.

Image source: Getty Images.

Fishing for clues

The remarkable recovery for the cruise line industry doesn’t get enough credit. No other slice of the travel pie had to suffer through government-mandated sailing stoppages for more than a year due to the COVID-19 crisis. Carnival and its peers had to take on a lot of debt or issue new stock to stay afloat during the long revenue-free phase of the recovery process.

The latest insult hurled at Carnival is the market selling off following another blowout report, but let’s dust for fingerprints.

It’s easy to start at the degree of the beat. Check out Carnival’s adjusted profit, which came as a 9% positive surprise in the table shown earlier. It is the first time in more than two years that the cruising bellwether offers just a single-digit percentage beat. While it may signal weakening, penalizing it would be unwarranted.

The year-over-year revenue growth of 3% should also be considered. Although it dings Carnival as a growth stock, it’s also the cruise line operator’s weakest increase on the top line in over four years, dating back to when it was essentially not taking on passengers. However, three months ago, Carnival was bracing investors for even slower growth.

Demand isn’t an issue. Booking trends have improved since May. Carnival closed out the quarter with deposits for future sailings at an all-time high for this time of year. It already has half of next year’s sailing capacity booked. The two major analysts that have changed their profit targets since the report have gone higher, not lower.

One knock is that Carnival also announced on Monday that it’s redeeming all of its outstanding convertible notes. While this may seem dilutive, what did investors expect would happen to convertible securities for an appreciating stock? Carnival has routinely redeemed debt issued in more desperate times to be bankrolled by either its newfound wealth or more attractive credit terms.

The last and most logical concern is that Carnival has had a significant run ahead of this week’s financial reveal. The shares have risen nearly 60% over the past year, including this early week’s retreat. However, this doesn’t diminish the potential bargain that Carnival stock represents as its business continues to improve.

Carnival is trading for less than 14 times this year’s updated guidance. The multiple increases if you substitute its market cap for enterprise value, but the same can be said for most low-priced stocks that happen to have debt-heavy balance sheets.

Carnival had a strong quarter. Don’t let the stock chart action convince you otherwise.