Linh Banh
Analyst · Stifel
Thank you, Leah. I am very grateful for the opportunity to serve as CFO and for the trust placed in me. With that, good morning, everyone. I will begin by reviewing our first quarter consolidated results and I'll walk you through some of the drivers behind our performance. Overall, we are very pleased to have reported another great first quarter. On a consolidated basis, Total revenue for the quarter increased 17.5% year-over-year to over $1 billion, driven by increased capacity and higher revenue per PCD. Capacity was up 6.6% this quarter, driven primarily by the delivery of 1 ocean ship in 2025. Overall, this revenue performance reflects healthy pricing, a favorable itinerary mix and solid demand. Adjusted gross margin increased 16.9% year-over-year to $717 million, resulting in a net yield of $596, 9.5% higher than the first quarter of 2025. As expected, vessel expenses, excluding fuel per capacity PCD increased 10.6% this quarter compared to the same time last year. This was mainly driven by repair and maintenance costs across the fleet. As we have mentioned in the past, these expenses can vary between quarters depending on maintenance schedules and other operational factors. It is important to emphasize that our repair and maintenance work is incurred against specific projects rather than being quarterly managed. Now turning to SG&A. We continue to invest in our people, in our sales and marketing capabilities to support growth and drive high-quality demand. At this point in the year, we are already marketing for 2027 and when capacity for our core products is expected to increase by 15%. As always, we scale marketing in line with demand, capacity growth and our strategic priorities. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $105 million, 43.9% higher in the same period last year. This significant year-over-year increase was mainly driven by higher revenues across all segments. Net loss was $54.2 million, which is an improvement of more than $51 million from the first quarter of 2025. As a reminder, the first quarter of the fiscal year has typically been negative due to the seasonality of our business. I will now briefly discuss our 2 reportable segments, river and ocean. These are on Slide 8. For the river segment, capacity PCDs decreased 8.4% year-over-year and occupancy for the period was 93.7%, in line with last year. Adjusted gross margin increased 17.2% and net yield was $761 up 28.3% year-over-year. Please note that for river, our core season runs from April through October. To this end, metrics from the first quarter aren't indicative of the full year performance. With that, I will share a few drivers of the year-over-year changes in capacity and net yields. This quarter, we added capacity through new builds in Egypt and Vietnam, both regions with high yield and strong pricing power. At the same time, we intentionally removed lower-yielding winter capacity in Europe during January and February. This shift towards higher-yielding itineraries combined with continued pricing strength drove a materially favorable increase in net yield, while the overall capacity was lower than last year. With respect to ocean, capacity PCDs increased 10% year-over-year due to the addition of the Viking Vesta, which began operating in July of 2025. Occupancy for the period was 95% and slightly higher than last year. Adjusted gross margin increased 16.9% year-over-year and net yield was $527, up 5.6% compared to the previous year driven by higher pricing amongst most itineraries. Now moving to the balance sheet and our liquidity position. On Slide 9, you can see that as of March 31, 2026, we had total cash and cash equivalents of $4 billion and an undrawn revolver of $1 billion. Our net debt was $1.9 billion. And to this end, our net leverage improved from 1.1x as of December 31, 2025, to 1x as of March 31, 2026. As of March 31, 2026, deferred revenue was $5.4 billion. Also on Slide 9, you can see our bond maturity outlook with all maturities falling in 2028 and beyond. I will now confirm our debt amortization for 2026 and 2027. As of March 31, 2026, the scheduled principal payments for the remainder of 2026 were $174.4 million and $197.4 million for full year 2027. From a committed capital expenditure perspective, and for the full year 2026, the total expected committed ship CapEx is about $1.9 billion or $650 million net of financing. And for the full year 2027, the total expected committed ship CapEx is about $1 billion or $260 million net of financing. With that, I will turn it back to Tor to review our business outlook, including our booking curves.