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Stock of Carnival Is Still Taking On Water

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Bloomberg News, Times Staff

Carnival Corp. shareholders appear to be jumping overboard.

Stock of the world’s largest cruise operator (ticker symbol: CCL) is down 33% this year after sliding $2.13 on Wednesday to close at $31.88 on the New York Stock Exchange.

The cruise ship Destiny began returning to the company’s home port in Miami on Wednesday, a day after a mechanical problem left nearly 3,000 passengers stranded in the Atlantic.

The Destiny’s breakdown is the latest in a series of problems at sea for Carnival.

“I think investors are getting tired of these ‘one-time’ events,” said Credit Suisse First Boston Inc. analyst David Anders, who nonetheless rates the shares a “strong buy.”

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Last month, Carnival’s cruise ship Celebration caught fire near Jamaica. And its ship Tropicale caught fire in September, leaving it stranded in the Gulf of Mexico for two days as a tropical storm delayed its return to port in Florida.

Along with the fires and mechanical problems, weak cruise bookings have weighed on the shares. And Carnival’s planned $641-million purchase of time-share resort operator Fairfield Communities Inc. is expected to lower profit margins, analysts said.

Major rival Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. (RCL) has encountered rough going as well, slipping 24% this year to $37.25 on the NYSE. But several analysts have recently upgraded that stock amid the sell-off.

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Sinking Ship

Shares of cruise line operator Carnival Corp. are down a third this year. Weekly closes and latest on the NYSE:

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Wednesday: $31.88, down $2.13

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Source: Bloomberg News

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