THL Cuts FY26 Profit Outlook as Debt Jumps $70M Above Prior Guidance
thl revises FY26 profit guidance amid global travel disruption
Tourism Holdings Limited (NZX/ASX: THL), the world’s largest commercial RV rental operator, issued a guidance update on 29 May 2026, revising its FY26 underlying net profit after tax (uNPAT) forecast to $40M–$43M on a continuing operations basis, down from prior guidance of $43M–$47M. The revision reflects three headline headwinds: the impact of the Middle East conflict on vehicle sales, softer Australian domestic rental conditions, and adverse foreign exchange movements.
The Board has characterised the outcome as “a positive outcome given the degree of change and impact on global tourism,” noting that underlying profitability has not been significantly impacted. The tone of the update is one of measured resilience rather than alarm.
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What’s behind the numbers
Profit guidance — what changed and why
The updated uNPAT range of $40M–$43M compares to prior guidance of $43M–$47M, representing a modest downgrade on a continuing operations basis. This figure excludes the divested UK & Ireland business, though thl has clarified that the exclusion is not considered a material change to overall earnings, as movements between underlying and statutory items largely offset one another. Further detail is expected at the year-end results presentation.
Three factors are driving the earnings headwinds:
- The ongoing Middle East conflict, which has dampened consumer appetite for recreational vehicle purchases across thl’s markets
- Softer conditions in the Australian domestic rental business, linked to fuel cost concerns and weaker consumer confidence
- Adverse foreign exchange movements impacting reported profitability
Net debt — the bigger story
While the earnings revision is modest, the net debt position has shifted more materially. thl now expects net debt at 30 June 2026 to be in the range of $460M–$470M, up from prior guidance of below $400M.
| Metric | Previous Guidance | Updated Guidance | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| uNPAT (continuing ops) | $43M–$47M | $40M–$43M | Modest downgrade |
| Net Debt (30 June 2026) | Below $400M | $460M–$470M | Material increase |
Three specific factors account for the net debt increase:
- Lower vehicle sales volumes, driven by consumer hesitancy to commit to purchase decisions in the current environment
- Adverse foreign exchange movements of approximately $10M
- Adverse working capital movements of approximately $20M, including a longer than planned inventory release from the Australian manufacturing closure
On the positive side, thl remains comfortably within all of its existing banking covenants. Headroom across thl’s debt facilities, including bank debt and asset financing facilities, currently exceeds $300M in aggregate.
Understanding RV rental economics — why vehicle sales matter to net debt
For investors less familiar with fleet-based business models, the link between vehicle sales and net debt is worth understanding. RV rental companies like thl hold their vehicle fleets as assets on the balance sheet. When those vehicles are sold, the company converts inventory into cash, which reduces debt. When vehicle sales slow, that cash remains locked in fleet inventory rather than flowing back to reduce borrowings, pushing net debt higher in the near term.
Importantly, this dynamic is not permanent. thl has described a self-correcting mechanism: the company can moderate planned vehicle purchases in response to any shortfall in sales, which gradually unwinds the elevated debt position as the fleet is right-sized to demand. For investors, the key watch points are covenant headroom (currently healthy at over $300M), refinancing risk, and the potential effect on dividend capacity if debt remains elevated beyond FY26.
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Regional outlook and strategic progress
Where thl sees growth
Canada stands out as the clearest positive in thl’s regional picture. The company expects a record summer ahead, with forward indicators continuing to support a positive outlook into calendar 2027.
In the United States, forward bookings are now trending up on the prior year, though the degree of recovery and the extent of any growth into calendar 2027 remain uncertain. The Australian domestic rental business has been affected in the short term by fuel cost concerns and softer consumer confidence, while the New Zealand outlook is described as reasonably positive, contingent on Middle East conflict resolution, long-haul flight capacity, and overseas government travel safety ratings.
The September to October booking window is flagged as the key indicator for summer 26/27 performance. thl has noted clearly that if the Middle East conflict persists beyond the next few weeks, there is potential for a more significant impact on New Zealand and Australian summer trading.
Strategic clean-up complete
thl has made material progress on its strategic priorities during FY26:
- UK & Ireland business divested, completing a full exit from that market
- Australian manufacturing operations closed and consolidated into New Zealand, capturing scale efficiencies
- Australian retail business has delivered a significant improvement in its working capital position, with underperforming sites closed and further performance improvement opportunities identified for FY27
On North America, thl has acknowledged that the business continues to perform below return on funds employed (ROFE) expectations. The company is “actively exploring a range of options to lift performance and unlock value” in that region, a characterisation that signals work is underway without committing to a specific path.
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