Royal Caribbean boosts profit outlook as record bookings highlight cruise appeal

Dow Jones
29 Apr

MW Royal Caribbean boosts profit outlook as record bookings highlight cruise appeal

By Tomi Kilgore

Stock rallies toward a sixth straight gain, as another quarterly earnings beat offsets a slight revenue miss

Shares of Royal Caribbean Group were climbing toward a sixth straight gain on Tuesday, after the cruise operator beat first-quarter profit expectations and boosted its full-year outlook, as it took in record bookings during the peak season.

The company also reported first-quarter profit that more than doubled from a year ago, and extended its streak of bottom-line beats to 12 quarters, even as revenue came up a bit short.

The stock $(RCL)$ rallied 4.9% toward a nearly two-month high in premarket trading, after climbing 14.1% over the past five sessions.

The company said it expects 2025 adjusted earnings per share, which excludes nonrecurring items, of $14.55 to $15.55, up from previous guidance of $14.35 to $14.65. That compares with the FactSet consensus of $14.94.

The bullish outlook comes after the company said it had record bookings during "wave season." It's the busiest booking time - coming in the first quarter - when cruise promotions peak.

"Additionally, during April, the company's bookings were greater than the same period last year, including continued strength in close-in bookings," the company said, referring to last-minute reservations.

Chief Executive Jason Liberty said the results showed the "enduring appeal and attractive value proposition" of the company's cruises in the face of the uncertain economic environment.

Read: Royal Caribbean CEO explains why cruises are so popular.

For the first quarter, net income jumped 103% from a year ago to $730 million. Adjusted EPS rose to $2.71 from $1.77, beating the FactSet consensus of $2.55.

Revenue grew 7.3% to $3.999 billion, just below the FactSet consensus of $4.01 billion to mark the third-straight top-line miss.

Passenger ticket revenue increased 7.9% to $2.74 billion, above expectations of $2.69 billion, and onboard and other revenue was up 5.8% to $1.26 billion.

The company said bookings in April to start the second quarter were above levels seen last year, including continued strength in close-in bookings.

Occupancy improved to 108.8% from 107%, to top expectations of 108.2%. Occupancy above 100% indicates that three or more passengers were in some cabins.

Royal Caribbean's stock has slipped 6.2% in 2025 through Monday, while the S&P 500 index SPX has lost 6%.

-Tomi Kilgore

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April 29, 2025 08:41 ET (12:41 GMT)

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