RCL: Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement
Royal Caribbean (RCL) completed a $2.5 billion senior notes offering on February 27, 2026, issuing $1.25 billion of 4.750% notes due 2033 and $1.25 billion of 5.250% notes due 2038. The cruise operator received approximately $2.471 billion in net proceeds after fees, which it intends to use primarily to refinance senior notes maturing in 2026, strengthening its debt maturity profile. This debt refinancing matters for investors as it extends maturities and potentially lowers near-term refinancing risk at fixed rates.
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Our Take
→Royal Caribbean's $2.5 billion debt refinancing extends a maturity wall that's been the cruise industry's Achilles heel since the pandemic disrupted cash flows—locking in fixed rates above 4.7% signals the company is willing to pay a premium for breathing room rather than gambling on better rates ahead. With roughly $14 billion in total debt still on the books, this move pushes refinancing pressure further out but doesn't fundamentally address leverage. The real question is whether RCL's post-pandemic revenue recovery can sustain margin expansion fast enough to justify the higher debt service burden that comes with extending these obligations.
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