Letting portfolios travel more with these vacation stocks

In This Article:

As many consumers look forward to the summer months, investors look at travel and live experience stocks as a great way to balance their portfolios for later in the year. But which companies are best suited to take advantage of the post-pandemic demand for experiential spending?

Macquarie Senior US Lifestyle & Payments Analyst Paul Golding joins Yahoo Finance Anchor Julie Hyman for the latest installment of Yahoo Finance's Good Buy or Goodbye, helping investors navigate which vacation-adjacent companies are best for their portfolio.

Golding picks Royal Caribbean Cruises (RCL) as his Good Buy, citing the operator's product with best-in-class ships, the notion that cruises offer the best bang for your buck, and its ability to appeal to a wide variety of consumers. Golding believes the cruise line has a great opportunity for margin expansion as its ships get larger with more amenities.

Golding chooses Vail Resorts (MTN) as his Goodbye, citing weather volatility that can lead to more cancellations and refunds, barriers of entry associated with expensive activities like skiing, and personnel congestion on its premises impacting overall customer experiences.

Catch up with episodes of Good Buy or Goodbye here, or watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live

Editor's note: This article was written by Nicholas Jacobino

Video Transcript

[AUDIO LOGO]

JULIE HYMAN: There's a big noisy universe of stocks out there. Welcome to Good Buy or Goodbye. Our goal to help cut through that noise, to navigate the best moves for your portfolio. Today, we're taking a look at lifestyle stocks pent up demand, post COVID saw consumers spend big on experiences last year. So what's the best way to play it now?

I'm here with Paul Golding, Macquarie Senior US Lifestyle and payments analyst. Thanks for being here. Good to see you in person Paul, usually we talk remotely. So let's talk about your goodbye stock first of all. It's in the cruise industry, Royal Caribbean specifically. And like many of the cruise stocks, it's done pretty well over the past year because people are cruising and there's good forward bookings as well.

And you like the cruise industry but you say this company is really the best in class. Why is that?

PAUL GOLDING: Well, first off, they're making good on this margin expansion promise post COVID. They've changed the dynamics in which their ships are occupied and that allows for better efficiency per sailing. The other piece of it is that they manage the balance sheet best through COVID in our view and they're deleveraging quickly. So we like them for those reasons relative to the peers.