TUI's Turkish Summer Boost Offset by €1 Billion Fund Burden and Technical Breakdown Risk
Veröffentlicht: 28.06.2026 um 02:56 Uhr, Redaktion boerse-global.de
Antalya has overtaken Mallorca as TUI’s top summer destination, but the travel giant faces mounting headwinds that have left its shares languishing below a critical technical level. “Turkey is sprinting back into pole position,” said Benjamin Jacobi, head of TUI Deutschland, capturing the swift reversal in booking patterns that has propelled the country to the top of the list. Greece and Spain are running neck-and-neck for second place, while about 80% of TUI guests opt for European destinations — a share that has edged up to roughly 75% of total bookings.
The summer season is unfolding against an unusual backdrop: a surge in early bookings coinciding with a late-minute rush. Both Egypt and Turkey are benefiting from the twin waves, having been strong in the early-booking phase and now regaining momentum in the last-minute segment. Flexible travelers can shave up to 40% off their package, according to TUI, with available capacity still open in Antalya, Dalaman, Bulgaria, Crete, Hurghada, Mallorca, Ibiza and Tenerife.
A €1 Billion Overhang
While holidaymakers are spending, TUI is pressing Berlin on a regulatory cost that it argues is weighing on the entire German travel industry. The company is calling for the German government to scrap the fees for the travel protection fund (DRSF), which was established after Thomas Cook’s collapse in 2021. German tour operators have already paid around €1 billion into the fund — a sum TUI deems more than sufficient to cover any conceivable risk. The tied-up capital, the group warns, inflates travel prices, saps investment capacity and is steadily losing real value to inflation.
Parallel to this political push, TUI is expanding its own product range. For the first time, it is bundling family hotels with water-park access under the Splashworld brand in the German market, starting with 25 properties across Turkey, Greece, Egypt, Spain, Mexico and the Dominican Republic. At the luxury end, the group’s The Mora hotel brand will open its first Asian property in Singapore in 2026.
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External Strains Multiply
The operational picture is complicated by a series of external disruptions. Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East remain acute, forcing constant route adjustments. Rival KLM has already cancelled some flights to Dubai and Saudi Arabia through August — a stark reminder of the volatility TUI must navigate. On the cost side, oil prices offer some relief: Brent crude has slipped to nearly $73 a barrel, easing pressure on the crucial fuel bill.
Across the Atlantic, a fresh legal cloud hangs over the cruise industry. The US Supreme Court has reopened a case concerning the use of port facilities in Havana, primarily affecting competitors Carnival and Royal Caribbean, but the entire sector is watching the liability dispute closely.
Closer to home, a reform of Germany’s basic income support, set to take effect on 1 July 2026, introduces harsher sanctions and adjusted asset-exemption rules. Analysts warn that such social tightening could dampen demand for budget holidays, putting additional strain on TUI’s price-sensitive customer base.
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Technicals Under Pressure
The mixed signals have left investors on edge. TUI shares closed Friday at €7.38, down 3.66% on the day, and now sit below the 200-day moving average of €7.67. The year-to-date loss stands at roughly 17%, although the stock has managed to gain about 6% over the past 30 days. The relative strength index at 58.4 points to neutral territory — neither overbought nor oversold.
The immediate defence line, however, is the 50-day moving average at €6.82. If that support level holds, the technical picture may stabilise. The next decisive move, though, hinges on booking momentum. With short-term demand dominating, TUI will need precise pricing and capacity management to offset the uncertainty emanating from the Middle East. The half-year results will reveal whether the group’s pricing power is strong enough to absorb the headwinds.
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