Coca-Cola CompanyKODON'T BUYFeb 14, 2017Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 04, 2026. Market Open.
Seems to be consolidating at this point. Good news is that underlying trend has basically been positive, seeing nice higher lows. But we're also seeing resistance around $72.50 where it just doesn't want to get through. Nice ascending triangle forming, but hard to say which way it's going to break from here.
Is the gold standard of beverages with a reach into 200 countries. Revenue grew 5% last quarter and volumes are improving again. They have pricing power. Margins are resilient. EPS should grow 7-9% in 2025. Trades at 22x forward PE is stable, paying a 3% dividend. Sees 195 upside.
Operates in a cola duopoly with PEP. He likes market leaders like these that have little to no direct competition. That being said, it's a lot harder these days with consumer brands to establish a brand and build a moat. Today he could launch a cola company online, using Instagram and FB, with very little cost and effort, and with luck it could even go viral. Brands will have a tough time.
Very strong, well-established brand. He owns FEVR, take a look at that one.
Brand strength, pricing power, geographic diversification. Big potential expansion in coffee. Really gets local culture. Chart shows a bit of resistance at this level, and we want to see it get through that. Whole chart is decent. Down less than the market these last few days. Beverage sector is pretty defensive and predictable. Metrics look pretty good. Yield is 2.82%.
(Analysts’ price target is $75.38)
Sectors that started performing better than the rest of the market in June 2016, were transports, industrials, financials, technology and materials. These are the groups that are positively correlated to rising inflation and rising real interest rates. They are the most economically sensitive sectors. Earnings have been improving for the last three quarters. Where money is coming from and going to come are sectors that benefit in low interest rates and low growth, to sectors that benefit in higher growth and a little higher inflation. Consumer staples don’t fit that category, and are being used as a source of funds. Doesn’t think you will get hurt badly with this, but feels you are just missing out.