Royal Caribbean is sailing smoothly into 2024, CFO outlines

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Royal Caribbean Cruises (RCL) reported its fourth-quarter earnings with mixed results as the company missed Wall Street expectations of $3.36 billion in revenue, posting only $3.3 billion. The company did beat Wall Street expectations with reported adjusted earnings of $1.25 per share for the quarter, ahead of estimates of $1.13 per share. The company released its forecast for the fiscal year, claiming 2024 adjusted profits between $9.50 and $9.70 per share.

The global cruise operator's "Icon of the Seas" — the world's largest cruise liner — set sail on its maiden voyage in late January.

Royal Caribbean CFO Naftali Holtz joins Yahoo Finance to discuss the company's quarterly results, US and international travel demand, and overall performance moving forward.

Holtz comments on international demand through geopolitical events: "We see continued strong demand across the board. Obviously the American consumer has been exceptionally strong, we continue to see that in some of our Caribbean itineraries. But even when we look into other areas around the world when we sell and the guests that we are sourcing from, we [are] seeing really strong booking trends, again, volume and prices across all our key itineraries, Caribbean, Europe, Alaska, etc... It really just speaks to the demand from across the board."

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

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

Video Transcript

[AUDIO LOGO]

JULIE HYMAN: Royal Caribbean predicting smooth sailing ahead after reporting fourth quarter earnings today. The cruise line operator predicting earnings per share will grow at least 40% this year. Naftali Holtz, Royal Caribbean's CFO, is joining us now.

Naftali, thank you for being here. I want to talk about the year and the demand that you're seeing here, because the shares have been sort of up and then down today. And I have seen analysts express some concern that it's going to be tough as the year goes on to just match the demand that you have been seeing thus far. Can you talk me through the trajectory you're expecting for growth for this year?

NAFTALI HOLTZ: Hi, Julie. First, great to be with you. I think as you noted, we just finished reporting our earnings. And I think 2023 can only be described as an exceptional year. We saw acceleration of demand. And it really accelerated through the year. And we ended the year very, very strongly with yield growth more than 3 and 1/2 times what we initially expected, earnings double what we expected at the beginning of the year.