These 2 Stocks Might Be Getting a Little Too Expensive

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Cruising can be a lot of fun and consumers have been increasingly turning to the vacation option. That trend is unlikely to change over the long term, but there's an important wrinkle here that investors shouldn't ignore when looking at industry leaders Carnival Corp. (NYSE: CCL) and Royal Caribbean Cruises (NYSE: RCL). Read this before you buy either of these stocks.

Up, up and away

Carnival's stock has experienced a dramatic rise of around 85% over the past year. Royal Caribbean shares have done even better, up more than 120%. For comparison, the S&P 500 index has advanced roughly 20% over the same span, which most investors would consider a very compelling performance. The two cruise lines put the market's gain to shame.

CCL Chart

CCL data by YCharts.

There is no question that investors have had very good reasons to be bullish about Carnival and Royal Caribbean. For example, after the stocks plunged in 2020, revenue and earnings for both companies have recovered strongly. And bookings remain solid for both cruise lines. For example, Carnival noted in its fiscal fourth-quarter 2023 earnings release that it had record 2023 revenue, record booking volumes over the Black Friday/Cyber Monday selling period, and that the fourth quarter saw customer deposits 25% above previous record levels. In Royal Caribbean's third-quarter 2023 earnings release, CEO Jason Liberty noted, "Our booked load factors are higher than all prior years and at higher rates." At this point, it looks like both companies are probably going to have pretty good years in 2024.

Wall Street is forward-looking

But given the huge gains in the shares of both cruise stocks, it seems like investors may already be pricing in a lot of that good news. Indeed, even if the positive outlook among investors is justified, 80% plus share price gains in a year is something that should cause you to step back and carefully consider your investment decisions. Trees don't grow to the sky, as goes an old saying about getting too positive about good trends.

The big problem here is that cruising is, at best, a luxury service. So demand will wax and wane along with economic activity. If there's a recession, investors are likely to dump Carnival and Royal Caribbean. It's not fair to look at the pandemic as a reference point here (given the government mandated closures), so it's best to go back to the Great Recession. As the chart below illustrates, these two stocks can get hit hard during a weak macroeconomic environment as the market assumes that customers will pull back on spending.