The outlook is murky for cruise line operator Carnival, says David Stevenson.
What is Carnival?
One of the largest global leisure travel groups, with 8.5 million customers a year. Brands include Holland America, Princess Cruises and Seabourn in North America, P&O Cruises and Cunard in the UK, AIDA in Germany, Costa Cruises in southern Europe, and P&O Cruises in Australia. In total, the firm operates 23 ‘fun ships’ on voyages that range between three and 16 days to various far-flung destinations. Carnival is the only stock listed in both the S&P 500 and the FTSE 100.
Whatâs its history?
Started by the late Ted Arison, a cruise industry pioneer, the company launched in 1972 with a single secondhand ship (the Mardi Gras) and just enough fuel to make a one-way trip from Miami to San Juan. The firm needed major bankrolling by Arison to keep going. But in 1987, 20% of its shares were sold publicly, providing the capital for acquisition-led growth. The Carnival name was adopted in 1994 and, in 1998, Cunard built the worldâs largest ocean liner, the 150,000-ton Queen Mary II. In April 2003 Carnival merged with rival P&O Princess Cruises.
Who runs Carnival?
Chief executive and chairman is Micky Arison, son of the founder. He also owns the basketball team Miami Heat. Last year he was ranked the richest man in Florida by Forbes, and no. 69 in the whole of the US, with an estimated wealth of $4.1bn. He was paid more than $7m by Carnival in 2009, including a $2.2m cash bonus. Chief operating officer is Howard S Frank, a Carnival veteran since 1989. Head bean counter is ex-Royal Caribbean Cruises staffer David Bernstein.
Howâs trading?
So-so. Second-quarter revenues measured in US dollars (the firmâs accounting currency) were slightly up, despite being hit by events in the Middle East, as well as Japanâs earthquake and nuclear disaster. But this rise was âmore than offset by higher fuel pricesâ, which cost the company some $150m.
And the outlook?
Mixed. There are fewer advance bookings for the rest of 2011 compared with last year, but customers are paying more. âOur North America brands continue to perform well, benefiting from the gradual economic recovery,â says Arison. But the company expects âlower yields for our Europe, Australia and Asia segment in the second halfâ. Fully diluted earnings per share are seen coming in at $2.40 to $2.50, compared to $2.47 in 2010.
The analysts
Of the 18 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg, two-thirds are bulls; 17% rate the stock a âholdâ; 17% are sellers. The average price target is 2,833p, 18% above the current level. Keenest is Wyn Ellis of Numis Securities with a 3,500p target. There are no recent âsellâ calls: the most recent advice to avoid the stock came in March from Greg Johnson of Shore Capital.
Our view
Carnival is very dependent on consumer spending, which could stay weak, while oil prices are an added uncertainty. On a p/e of well over 15, this stock looks more than fully priced.
The numbers
Stock market code: CCL
Share price: 2,412p ($38)
Market cap: ÂŁ20bn
Net assets (published end-May 2011): ÂŁ14.5bn
Net debt (published end-May 2011): ÂŁ5.6bn
P/E (current year estimate): 15.3
Yield (prospective): 2.4%
Geographic shareholdings: UK 2%, US 55%,
privately held 38%
Directorsâ dealings
Carnivalâs top dogs havenât exactly been too keen on their own companyâs equity over the last year.
Whenever directors have taken up their share options, theyâve sold an equivalent amount of stock in the open market. In fact, thereâs been just one ânetâ acquisition of shares â a total of just 627 were bought last October.
Meanwhile, there have been two hefty sales by directors, as shown below. You can see the timing of these deals in the chart above.
Director and total shares sold:
Robert Dickinson: 40,000
Howard Frank: 120,000
Category: Economics