TLDR
- Multiple Norwegian Cruise Line directors bought over 100,000 shares in May, totaling roughly $1.34 million
- Director Jonathan Cohen made the most recent purchase — 30,000 shares at $15.83 on May 21
- Norwegian cut its full-year 2026 earnings outlook on May 4, citing Middle East disruption and higher fuel costs
- NCLH stock is down 9.5% in May, far worse than Carnival (-1.2%) and Royal Caribbean (-1.3%)
- A viral outbreak on a cruise ship added to investor pressure, though health regulators have downplayed pandemic fears
Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH) stock has dropped 9.5% this month, trading near $15.83 — not far above its 52-week low of $14.53. But while investors have been selling, company insiders have been doing the opposite.
Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd., NCLH
Since early May, five directors have collectively purchased more than 100,000 shares worth around $1.34 million. That’s a clear signal someone on the inside thinks the stock is cheap.
The most recent buy came on May 21. Director Jonathan Cohen picked up 30,000 shares at an average price of $15.83, spending $474,900 in total.
Earlier in the week, Director Jose Cil bought 15,000 shares across Monday and Tuesday at prices between $14.79 and $15.25. Those transactions were made through a family trust.
Director Brian MacDonald purchased 15,000 shares on May 11 at $16.54 each. Before that, on May 7, directors Kevin Lansberry and Zillah Byng-Thorne jointly bought 40,867 shares for roughly $643,476.
Guidance Cut Sparks the Selloff
The selling pressure started on May 4, when Norwegian slashed its 2026 earnings outlook. The company pointed to “headwinds related to disruptions in the Middle East,” specifically the war in Iran and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which pushed oil prices — and fuel costs — higher.
Q1 earnings per share beat forecasts, but revenue came in slightly light. Q2 guidance disappointed, and the full-year EPS cut was sharp enough to trigger a downgrade from at least one analyst firm.
That firm cited slower balance sheet improvement, a tougher demand backdrop, and the view that the company’s growth story was still too far out on the horizon.
Viral Outbreak Adds to the Pressure
The week of May 11 brought a new problem. A rare viral outbreak on a Dutch-flagged cruise ship rattled investors in an already jittery travel sector.
The World Health Organization first received reports of the acute respiratory illness cluster on May 2. The case count has since grown to 12. Regulators have downplayed fears of a wider pandemic, but the timing didn’t help sentiment.
Norwegian has taken the worst hit among its peers this month. Carnival (CCL) is down just 1.2% in May, and Royal Caribbean (RCL) has fallen 1.3%. The S&P 500 is off 3.9% over the same period, making NCLH’s 9.5% decline stand out.
Year-to-date, NCLH is down 28.18%. The stock’s market cap currently sits at $7.36 billion, and average daily trading volume runs around 22.9 million shares.
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