Cruise ship company Carnival sinks to $4.4B quarterly loss during COVID-19 - Action News
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Cruise ship company Carnival sinks to $4.4B quarterly loss during COVID-19

Carnival Corp. on Thursday reported a fiscal second-quarter loss of $4.37 billion US, after reporting a profit in the same period a year earlier.

Loss even more than what analysts expected as cruise company burning through $20M a day

Carnival Cruise Line shares have lost more than half of their value during COVID-19, as demand for travel has evaporated. (Carnival Cruise Line)

Carnival Corp. reported a record $4.4 billion US in quarterly losses on Thursday, as the COVID-19 pandemic crippled the world's biggest cruise operator and forced it to take major write-downs on the disposal of now-redundant ships.

The Florida-based company said it had $7.6 billion US available at the end of May, but was burning $650 million a month as it awaits regulatory approvals for the resumption of some lines in the hope that customers will come back later this year.

The cruise business globally has collapsed after several liners, including some owned by Carnival's Princess Cruises, became coronavirus hotspots, killing some on board and forcing port quarantines for hundreds more crew and staff.

The company said it hoped to resume operations in a phased manner but was resigned to cutting back on overall capacity and had already agreed to sell six of its ships.

The company's shares fell eight per centin early trades as it revealed a roughly $2-billion loss due to the difference in the sale price of the ships and their previously booked value. Carnival's stock price has sunk by 63 per cent since the start of the year.

Carnival, which in recent weeks had fully drawn down a $3-billion credit line and issued $6.6 billion in bonds and equity, said it was looking for further waivers on debt repayments that are due next year, without which it could breach certain loan conditions.

"The longer the pause in guest operations continues, the greater the impact on the company's liquidity and financial position," it said in its preliminary results for the quarter ending May 31.

Cruise lines normally get bookings six months to a year in advance, and Carnival and its peers have steadily had to cancel, refund or rebook thousands of tickets for customers since the coronavirus outbreak first hit ships in Asia early this year.

The company said half of the guests affected by cancellations so far have requested full refunds, with the rest prepared to rebook. New bookings made in May for cruises in 2021 were down compared to last year, but were showing signs of improvement, it added.

Excluding one-time charges, Carnival reported a preliminary second-quarter net loss of $2.4 billion.

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