Carnival Corporation stock declined about 6.0% in morning trading after the cruise operator delivered second-quarter results that topped expectations but provided forward targets that fell short of analyst forecasts. Investors responded by selling into the beat, prompted by guidance that softened the market's view of near-term profitability.
For the third quarter of 2026, the company guided to adjusted earnings per share of approximately $1.35, under the analyst consensus of $1.42. Management also forecast adjusted EBITDA for Q3 at roughly $2.88 billion. On a full-year basis, Carnival put mid-point EBITDA guidance at $7.11 billion, below the analyst estimate of $7.19 billion.
The quarter itself delivered solid headline numbers. Carnival reported Q2 EPS of $0.41, about 21% above the analyst estimate of $0.34. Net income reached $537 million, and adjusted net income was a record $569 million, representing year-over-year growth of more than 20%. Revenue hit a record $6.7 billion, and customer deposits climbed to an all-time high of $9.0 billion.
Despite those gains, management flagged several near-term pressures. The company said extreme geopolitical volatility, and specifically the protracted conflict in the Middle East, disrupted booking momentum for European sailings in the Mediterranean. In addition, fuel expenses were nearly 30% higher versus the prior period, placing upward pressure on costs and compressing margins. Operating margin for the quarter was 12.8%, down from 14.8% in the same period a year earlier.
Compounding the financial considerations, the Texas Attorney General announced on June 22 that it is investigating Carnival over a data breach that exposed personal information for approximately 6 million people. That development added a legal and regulatory overhang as the stock opened lower.
The broader market environment also worked against Carnival on the session. The S&P 500 fell 1.1% while the NASDAQ declined 1.7%, reflecting a risk-off tone across U.S. equities. Shares of other cruise operators, including Royal Caribbean and Norwegian Cruise Line, traded lower as well, suggesting sectorwide sensitivity to both macro headwinds and company-level news.
Taken together, the situation combined a guidance miss on both near-term EPS and full-year EBITDA, persistent fuel cost headwinds, geopolitical weakness in key European itineraries, and a deteriorating macro market into a reaction where investors punished the stock despite record topline metrics and customer deposit growth. The market response demonstrates a classic instance of a "beat and lower" outcome in which stronger-than-expected quarterly results are not enough to offset disappointing forward guidance and mounting external risks.
Contextual note - The company reported strong quarterly revenue and deposit growth, but the guidance shortfall and external pressures were the proximate causes cited by investors for the share decline.