Demand up for cruise vacations: what to expect from the spike

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On its recent earnings call Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH) CEO Harry Sommer claimed cruise demand has been "as robust as we have ever seen it." The travel sector saw a boom in 2023 and cruises may continue in that trend as demand for cruise vacations soar.

Citi Leisure Analyst James Hardiman joins Yahoo Finance for the latest edition of Travel Guide 2024: Industry Insights. He breaks down the pricing momentum following a strong fourth quarter.

Hardiman further details which regions have the best performance for cruises: "I think geographically the Caribbean is clearly the strongest region in the world right now. Europe is strong, but not as strong. As a global cruise company, you do have to deal with a whole lot of stuff, including the fallout from the unrest in the Middle East and the Red Sea restrictions that have now been placed. So, there's some voyages here and there that have had to be moved around the world, and certainly there's going to be a pricing impact there, but I would argue certainly you showed the more recent private movement. If you were to take that back to 2019, these stocks have, at best, held serve or at best flat for 2019 relative to a market that's up dramatically."

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

JOSH LIPTON: Yes, travel demand for cruise vacations has risen spectacularly post-COVID. And with it, ticket prices Norwegian Cruise line CEO Harry Sommer called demand as robust as we have ever seen it. On this week's earnings call, after issuing strong guidance for 2024, adding that when demand is strong, we take advantage of it.

Joining us now as part of Yahoo Finance's travel guide 2024 industry insights, we have James Hardiman, Citi Leisure and Travel Analyst. James, it is always good to see you. So you're pointing out, James, maybe our cruises actually could even get a bit pricier here in 2024. How come, James, and how much price pricier could we see?

JAMES HARDIMAN: For sure. I mean, I think the pricing momentum, the trajectory of what we're seeing is exceedingly positive. As you mentioned, Norwegian had a really good fourth quarter. And the guidance for the first quarter, now, there are some easy comparisons in there.

But for pricing, that's up mid-teens year-over-year. That's a trajectory that we won't be able to sustain. But I think what's important to understand is if you think about that early pandemic and early post-pandemic period, where we saw inflation across the economy, the cruise industry was largely sitting that out, right? They were on the sidelines for a good amount of that time.