What happened

On Monday, the cruise industry -- indeed, just about every industry related to travel and leisure in any way -- got knocked for a loop by worries that a revived coronavirus, fueled by its delta variant, would throw the world back into lockdown.

It took less than 24 hours for those worries to apparently subside.

Cruise ship next to a beach with palm trees

Image source: Getty Images.

So what

On Tuesday, shares of travel and leisure stocks rebounded strongly:

  • Hotel, casino, and resort company MGM Resorts (MGM -1.24%) achieved a 4.8% gain by the closing bell.
  • Royal Caribbean (RCL 0.54%) shares rose 7.7% on the day.
  • Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings (NCLH -0.21%) closed 8.3% higher.

What was the catalyst behind Tuesday's rebound? As Marketwatch quoted one group of bemused analysts who were posed the question, "The rebound reflected ideas the previous sell-off was overdone."  

In other words, there wasn't a clear reason for today's bounce back.

Now what

What's interesting about today's rebound, though, is the net results after the past two trading days:

  • MGM Resorts stock now sits 1.2% above where it closed on Friday last week.
  • Royal Caribbean shares cost 3.5% more today than they did then.
  • And Norwegian Cruise has not only recovered all its losses of yesterday, but also booked a gain of 2.3% from Friday.

That's right: It's just as if Monday never happened at all! So I guess the lesson for investors who sold in a panic yesterday is one of the oldest pieces of advice ever written: "Act in haste, repent at leisure."