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The Coca-Cola Company (KO) - Stock Report

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Informational research — not investment advice. Generated in part by AI and may contain errors; not a personal recommendation, solicitation, or offer. ReasyPort is not an authorised or regulated investment firm. Market data may be delayed or inaccurate. Capital is at risk and past performance does not guarantee future results — do your own research and consult a licensed adviser.

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KO

The Coca-Cola Company

ReasyPort View: Demanding Watchlist — Cash Conversion Proof Required

Summary

With KO priced at $79.39 at the 18 June 2026 close, The Coca-Cola Company trades about 16% above the selected fair value of $68.33 and about 4% below the $82.71 upside marker. This is not a business-quality objection: Coca-Cola remains a rare global beverage system with strong brands, recurring concentrate economics and deep bottler reach. The constraint is valuation discipline, because the selected two-stage levered FCF DCF requires proof that the FY2026 cash guide becomes a durable base rather than a strong year helped by timing, currency and refranchising effects.

The key macro issue is not global brand demand in isolation, but whether local-market volume and pricing survive foreign-exchange translation, affordability pressure and bottler reinvestment as retained dollar free cash flow; if FY2026 free cash flow near $12.2bn becomes repeatable the premium is easier to defend, while weaker mix, a stronger dollar or cash diversion would make coverage and valuation support visibly tighter.

Latest Proof Snapshot

The latest reported quarter is Q1 2026, ended 3 April 2026. Net revenues rose 12% to $12.5 bn, organic revenue rose 10%, unit case volume grew 3%, and operating margin improved to 35.0% from 32.9%. Reported diluted EPS was $0.91, up 18%, while adjusted diluted EPS was $0.86, also up 18%. The quarter is encouraging, but it should not be annualized mechanically: Q1 2026 had six additional selling days, and the cash comparison was helped by the prior-year fairlife payment. Single-quarter operating cash flow was $2.0 bn and company-reported FCF was $1.8 bn, below roughly $2.8 bn of shareholder distributions; the full-year test is the $12.2 bn FCF guide.

Business Overview

What The Company Actually Does

The Coca-Cola Company is a global nonalcoholic beverage company built around brands, concentrate formulas and a bottling system rather than around owning every manufacturing and distribution asset. The parent sells concentrates and syrups, licenses trademarks, runs global marketing, and keeps selected finished-product or bottling assets where control is useful.

How The Business Is Organized

The value stack starts with Trademark Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola Zero Sugar, Sprite, Fanta and other sparkling brands, then extends into still beverages. In 2025, the system sold 33.8 bn unit cases; sparkling soft drinks represented 69% of worldwide unit case volume and Trademark Coca-Cola represented 47%. The valuation test is not category expansion alone: the core franchise still has to recruit consumers, defend pack/channel relevance and fund marketing without exhausting bottler economics.

What Management Appears To Be Prioritizing

The bottlers carry much of the local plant, route, package and customer-execution burden. Coca-Cola's parent economics improve when concentrate pricing, incidence-based arrangements and advertising lift system revenue while bottlers still earn enough to reinvest in coolers, sales capacity and route density. If bottler unit economics weaken, the parent may preserve near-term margin but lose the local execution that keeps volume and availability healthy.

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