TLDR
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Norwegian Cruise Line forecast 2026 profit below analyst expectations
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Shares of cruise operators fell about 7% in premarket trading
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Higher fuel, maintenance, and operating costs weighed on margins
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Fourth-quarter revenue came in below Wall Street estimates
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Bookings slowed as customers pulled back on expensive travel
Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH) shares moved lower after the company forecast annual profit below Wall Street expectations for 2026. The weaker outlook came as rising operating costs continued to offset strong demand for premium cruise travel.
Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd., NCLH
The company expects adjusted earnings of $2.38 per share for fiscal 2026. Analysts were forecasting adjusted earnings of about $2.55 per share, according to market estimates.
Shares of Norwegian Cruise Line fell about 7% in premarket trading following the update. Cruise operator peers Carnival (CCL) and Royal Caribbean (RCL) also declined in early trading.
Norwegian Cruise Line, $NCLH, Q4-25.
Margins up. EPS beats.
📊 Adj. EPS: $0.28 🟢
💰 Revenue: $2.24B 🔴
📈 Net Income: $14.25MAdjusted EBITDA +20% YoY to $563.85M
Occupancy hit 101.8%. pic.twitter.com/r347iVURZg— EarningsTime (@Earnings_Time) March 2, 2026
The stock moves tracked a broader market selloff tied to escalating geopolitical tensions. Cruise operators also faced pressure from rising fuel costs and operating expenses.
Norwegian Cruise Line reported fourth-quarter revenue of $2.24 billion. This figure came in below analyst expectations of about $2.35 billion.
Revenue increased roughly 6% from a year earlier despite the shortfall versus forecasts. Net yield rose about 4%, slightly above analyst estimates.
Profit Outlook and Cost Pressures
The company reported fourth-quarter net income of $14.3 million, or 3 cents per share. This was down from $254.5 million, or 52 cents per share, in the same period a year earlier.
Adjusted earnings for the quarter came in at 28 cents per share. Analysts had expected adjusted earnings of around 26 cents per share.
Norwegian Cruise Line said rising fuel prices and higher operating costs are weighing on margins. Expenses tied to drydocks, ship maintenance, and new vessel deliveries also added pressure.
Global fuel costs have increased alongside geopolitical tensions. These higher costs are affecting cruise operators across the sector.
The company also reported a slowdown in new bookings. Some customers are cutting back on higher-priced cruise vacations due to persistent inflation and tariff-related uncertainty.
Capacity and Booking Trends
Norwegian said it expects first-quarter net yield to decline about 1%. The decline is linked to timing issues tied to expanded Caribbean capacity.
The company increased Caribbean capacity by about 40%. Some amenities at its Great Stirrup Cay destination are still being rolled out.
Management said the company entered 2026 slightly below its optimal booking range. This followed execution issues in aligning deployment and commercial strategy.
The company expects full-year net yield growth of about 0.4%. Analysts had been forecasting growth closer to 2.1%.
Premarket trading showed Norwegian Cruise Line shares near $22.88 after the update. Shares across the cruise sector remained under pressure following the revised outlook.





