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Nervous markets await NvidiaThis summary was created by AI, based on 11 opinions in the last 12 months.
Royal Caribbean Cruises (RCL) appears to be making a strong recovery post-pandemic, buoyed by robust demand for cruises, particularly in Europe and Alaska. The completion of new cruise ships is expected to constrain supply, thus enhancing pricing power for the company. Experts note that RCL has shown impressive financial results, with expectations of yield gains and a strategic foray into river cruising that could strengthen its market position. However, concerns remain regarding its leverage levels and overall economic sensitivity. Many analysts praise RCL's recent performance and outlook while suggesting a correction may be on the horizon, making it a higher-risk buy for investors willing to accept potential volatility.
RCL had a big quarter just announced, and of course has staged a huge recovery from the pandemic. Royal's expectation of a 3.5% yield gain in 2025 echoes robust onboard spending and strong demand for Europe and Alaska itineraries, with accelerated bookings in the last five weeks. Royal characterized its plan to launch river cruising -- with an initial 10-ship order and several launching in 2027 -- as an opportunity to gain share in a complementary, high-end niche with shorter construction lead times and cross-marketing opportunities. That plan sets the stage for a river fleet with capacity about 11% the size of rival Viking, including current and ordered vessels. Royal's 1Q guidance midpoint implies gains of 5% in yield and 1.85% in non-fuel unit cost. Its 4Q unit-cost growth of 13.5% was slightly above 11.6-12.1% guidance due to 340 bps from higher stock-based compensation. The stock is 18X earnings and very strong growth is predicted. It is still heavily leveraged at debt/cashflow 4X, but it is in better financial shape than many peers. Cyclicality of course remains high, but we think it is interesting as a higher risk buy for those investors willing to accept some financial and economic risks here. Its recent results and move to river cruises we think are quite positive developments.
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Up till Covid, well-positioned to take advantage of increased cruising. Had to offer new shares, which diluted shares and increased debt. Clawing their way back up from lows. Cruise industry is very positive for next 12 months. Down with overall market today.
RCL is in better shape and better managed.
Best among the cruise line stocks given its healthy balance sheet, better than Carnival. Tailwind comes from demand post-pandemic. The #3 S&P stock of 2023, up over 160%. There remains huge demand from Americans. Also, Wall Street no longer expects a hard landing to the economy, which a soft one which benefits the cruise lines.
Royal Caribbean Cruises is a American stock, trading under the symbol RCL-N on the New York Stock Exchange (RCL). It is usually referred to as NYSE:RCL or RCL-N
In the last year, 11 stock analysts published opinions about RCL-N. 9 analysts recommended to BUY the stock. 1 analyst recommended to SELL the stock. The latest stock analyst recommendation is . Read the latest stock experts' ratings for Royal Caribbean Cruises.
Royal Caribbean Cruises was recommended as a Top Pick by on . Read the latest stock experts ratings for Royal Caribbean Cruises.
Earnings reports or recent company news can cause the stock price to drop. Read stock experts’ recommendations for help on deciding if you should buy, sell or hold the stock.
11 stock analysts on Stockchase covered Royal Caribbean Cruises In the last year. It is a trending stock that is worth watching.
On 2025-04-28, Royal Caribbean Cruises (RCL-N) stock closed at a price of $216.31.
The completion of new cruise ships will constrain supply and be positive for cruise ships' pricing power. Is -25% from highs and trades at 14x PE.