Tom
TS Member
The company is using cash, i.e. the amount coming in is less than what is going out.
I think most people now understand the half-billion pre-tax loss is asset write-offs but the trajectory is clear: it is worse year-on-year and the numbers are eye watering. These pre-tax losses tend to be over-trivialised by those that think they have been overstated by "YouTubers" or whoever else they dismiss.
Merlin in its current form is under considerable existential threats. Yes, it can turn around, but this requires a significant step-change in both guest numbers and spend, and/or a major strategic restructure. They have already attempted the latter in the Sea Life offload, which failed. They are now forced to manage those assets longer, all the time while burning cash.
Their credit rating has tanked as a result of their finical performance. In a company so heavily laden and reliant on debt, it is the lenders that determine how well it is doing, and ultimately decide said business' fate.
I think most people now understand the half-billion pre-tax loss is asset write-offs but the trajectory is clear: it is worse year-on-year and the numbers are eye watering. These pre-tax losses tend to be over-trivialised by those that think they have been overstated by "YouTubers" or whoever else they dismiss.
Merlin in its current form is under considerable existential threats. Yes, it can turn around, but this requires a significant step-change in both guest numbers and spend, and/or a major strategic restructure. They have already attempted the latter in the Sea Life offload, which failed. They are now forced to manage those assets longer, all the time while burning cash.
Their credit rating has tanked as a result of their finical performance. In a company so heavily laden and reliant on debt, it is the lenders that determine how well it is doing, and ultimately decide said business' fate.