About Coca Cola

The Coca-Cola Company operates as a total beverage company in the United States. The company offers beverage products bearing its trademarks, which are sold in more than 200 countries and territories. The company owns or licenses and markets numerous beverage brands, which the company groups into the following categories: Trademark Coca-Cola; sparkling flavors; water, sports, coffee and tea; juice, value-added dairy and plant-based beverages; and emerging beverages. The company owns and markets several of the world’s largest nonalcoholic sparkling soft drink brands, including Coca-Cola, Sprite, Fanta, Coca-Cola Zero Sugar, and Diet Coke/Coca-Cola Light. The company makes its branded beverage products available to consumers throughout the world through the company’s network of independent bottling partners, distributors, wholesalers, and retailers, as well as the company’s consolidated bottling and distribution operations. Beverages bearing trademarks owned by or licensed to the company account for 2.2 billion of the estimated 64 billion servings of all beverages consumed worldwide every day. Operating Segments The company’s operating structure includes the following operating segments: Europe, the Middle East and Africa; Latin America; North America; the Asia Pacific; Global Ventures; and Bottling Investments. The company’s operating structure also includes Corporate, which consists of two components: a center focusing on strategic initiatives, policy, governance and scaling global initiatives; and a platform services organization supporting the operating units, global marketing category leadership teams and the center by providing efficient and scaled global services and capabilities, including but not limited to, transactional work, data management, consumer analytics, digital commerce and social/digital hubs. Products and Brands As used in this report: •’concentrates’ means flavorings and other ingredients which, when combined with water and, depending on the product, sweeteners (nutritive or non-nutritive) are used to prepare syrups or finished beverages, and includes powders/minerals for purified water products; •’syrups’ means intermediate products in the beverage manufacturing process produced by combining concentrates with water and, depending on the product, sweeteners (nutritive or non-nutritive); •’fountain syrups’ means syrups that are sold to fountain retailers, such as restaurants and convenience stores, which use dispensing equipment to mix the syrups with sparkling or still water at the time of purchase to produce finished beverages that are served in cups or glasses for immediate consumption; •’Company Trademark Beverages’ means beverages bearing the company’s trademarks and certain other beverages bearing trademarks licensed to the company by third parties for which the company provides marketing support and from the sale of which the company derives an economic benefit; and •’Trademark Coca-Cola Beverages’ or ‘Trademark Coca-Cola’ means nonalcoholic beverages bearing the trademark Coca-Cola or any trademark that includes Coca-Cola or Coke (that is, Coca-Cola, Diet Coke/Coca-Cola Light and Coca-Cola Zero Sugar and all their variations and any line extensions, including caffeine free Diet Coke, Cherry Coke, etc.). Likewise, when the company uses the capitalized word ‘Trademark’ together with the name of one of the company’s other beverage products (such as ‘Trademark Fanta,’ ‘Trademark Sprite’ or ‘Trademark Simply’), the company mean nonalcoholic beverages bearing the indicated trademark (that is, Fanta, Sprite or Simply, respectively) and all its variations and line extensions (such that ‘Trademark Fanta’ includes Fanta Orange, Fanta Zero Orange, Fanta Zero Sugar, Fanta Apple, etc.; ‘Trademark Sprite’ includes Sprite, Sprite Zero Sugar, etc.; and ‘Trademark Simply’ includes Simply Orange, Simply Apple, Simply Grapefruit, etc.). The company operates in two lines of business: concentrate operations and finished product operations. The company’s concentrate operations typically generate net operating revenues by selling beverage concentrates, sometimes referred to as ‘beverage bases,’ syrups, including fountain syrups, and certain finished beverages to authorized bottling operations (to which the company typically refers as its ‘bottlers’ or the company’s ‘bottling partners’). The company’s bottling partners either combine concentrates with still or sparkling water and sweeteners (depending on the product), or combine syrups with still or sparkling water, to produce finished beverages. The finished beverages are packaged in authorized containers, such as cans and refillable and nonrefillable glass and plastic bottles, bearing the company’s trademarks or trademarks licensed to the company and are then sold to retailers directly, or in some cases, through wholesalers or other bottlers. In addition, outside the United States, the company’s bottling partners are typically authorized to manufacture fountain syrups, using the company’s concentrates, which they sell to fountain retailers for use in producing beverages for immediate consumption, or to authorized fountain wholesalers who in turn sell and distribute the fountain syrups to fountain retailers. The company’s concentrate operations are included in its geographic operating segments and the company’s Global Ventures operating segment. The company’s finished product operations generate net operating revenues by selling sparkling soft drinks and a variety of other finished beverages to retailers, or to distributors and wholesalers who in turn sell the beverages to retailers. Generally, finished product operations generate higher net operating revenues but lower gross profit margins than concentrate operations. These operations consist primarily of the company’s consolidated bottling and distribution operations, which are included in the company’s Bottling Investments operating segment. In certain markets, the company also operates non-bottling finished product operations in which the company sells finished beverages to distributors and wholesalers that are generally not one of the Company’s bottling partners. These operations are generally included in one of the company’s geographic operating segments or the company’s Global Ventures operating segment. Additionally, the company sells directly to consumers through retail stores operated by Costa Limited (‘Costa’). These sales are included in the company’s Global Ventures operating segment. In the United States, the company manufactures fountain syrups and sell them to fountain retailers, who use the fountain syrups to produce beverages for immediate consumption, or to authorized fountain wholesalers or bottling partners who in turn sell and distribute the fountain syrups to fountain retailers. These fountain syrup sales are included in the company’s North America operating segment. The company owns and markets numerous valuable beverage brands, including the following: Sparkling soft drinks: Coca-Cola, Diet Coke/Coca-Cola Light, Coca-Cola Zero Sugar, Fanta, Fresca, Schweppes (Schweppes is owned by the company in certain countries other than the United States), Sprite and Thums Up; Water, sports, coffee and tea: Aquarius, Ayataka, BODYARMOR, Ciel, Costa, Dasani, dogadan, FUZE TEA, Georgia, glaceau smartwater, glaceau vitaminwater, Gold Peak, Ice Dew, I LOHAS, Powerade and Topo Chico; and Juice, value-added dairy and plant-based beverages: AdeS, Del Valle, fairlife, innocent, Minute Maid, Minute Maid Pulpy and Simply. The company has also directly entered the alcohol beverage category in numerous markets outside the United States. In the United States, the company has established a wholly owned, indirect, firewalled subsidiary, which authorizes alcohol-licensed third parties to use certain of the company’s trademarks and related intellectual property on alcohol beverages that contain company beverage bases. The company’s approach in alcohol focuses on three segments of alcohol ready-to-drink beverages: hard seltzers (e.g., Topo Chico Hard Seltzer), hard alternatives (e.g., Lemon-Dou) and pre-mixed cocktails (e.g., Jack Daniel’s & Coca-Cola). In addition to the beverage brands the company owns, the company provides marketing support and otherwise participate in the sales of other beverage brands through licenses, joint ventures and strategic relationships. For example, certain Coca-Cola system bottlers distribute certain brands of Monster Beverage Corporation (‘Monster’), primarily Monster Energy, in designated territories in the United States, Canada and other international territories pursuant to distribution coordination agreements between the company and Monster and related distribution agreements between Monster and Coca-Cola system bottlers. Distribution System The company makes its branded beverage products available to consumers in more than 200 countries and territories through the company’s network of independent bottling partners, distributors, wholesalers and retailers as well as the company’s consolidated bottling and distribution operations. The company’s five largest independent bottling partners based on unit case volume in 2023 were as follows: Coca-Cola FEMSA, S.A.B. de C.V. (‘Coca-Cola FEMSA’), which has bottling and distribution operations in Mexico (a substantial part of central Mexico, as well as southeast and northeast Mexico), Guatemala, Colombia (most of the country), Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Venezuela, Uruguay, Brazil (a major part of the states of São Paulo and Minas Gerais; the states of Mato Grosso do Sul, Paraná, Rio Grande do Sul, and Santa Catarina; and part of the states of Goiás and Rio de Janeiro), and Argentina (federal capital of Buenos Aires and surrounding areas). Coca-Cola Europacific Partners plc (‘CCEP’), which has bottling and distribution operations in Andorra, Australia, Belgium, Fiji, continental France, Germany, Great Britain, Iceland, Indonesia, Luxembourg, Monaco, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Papua New Guinea, Portugal, Samoa, Spain and Sweden. Coca-Cola HBC AG (‘Coca-Cola Hellenic’), which has bottling and distribution operations in Armenia, Austria, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Egypt, Estonia, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Montenegro, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Northern Ireland, Poland, Republic of Ireland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Switzerland and Ukraine. Arca Continental, S.A.B. de C.V., which has bottling and distribution operations in northern and western Mexico, northern Argentina, Ecuador, Peru, and the state of Texas and part of the states of New Mexico, Oklahoma and Arkansas in the United States. Swire Coca-Cola Limited, which has bottling and distribution operations in 11 provinces and the Shanghai municipality in mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Cambodia, Vietnam and territories in 13 states in the western United States. The company’s bottlers are independent contractors and are not the company’s agents. Bottler’s Agreements The company has separate contracts, to which the company generally refers as ‘bottler’s agreements,’ with the company’s bottling partners under which the company’s bottling partners are granted certain authorizations by the company. Bottler’s Agreements Outside the United States Bottler’s agreements between the company and its authorized bottlers outside the United States generally are of stated duration, subject in some cases to possible extensions or renewals. In such instances, the company has authorized certain bottlers to prepare and package Company Trademark Beverages for sale to other bottlers or purchase Company Trademark Beverages from other bottlers for sale and distribution throughout their respective designated territories, often on a nonexclusive basis. Bottler’s Agreements Within the United States In the United States, most bottlers operate under a contract to which the company generally refers as a ‘Comprehensive Beverage Agreement’ (‘CBA’) that is of stated duration, subject in most cases to renewal rights of bottlers and in some cases to renewal rights of the company. Certain U.S. bottlers have been granted certain additional exclusive territory rights for the distribution, promotion, marketing and sale of company-owned and licensed beverage brands (as defined by the CBAs). The company refers to these bottlers as ‘expanding participating bottlers’ or ‘EPBs.’ EPBs operate under CBAs (‘EPB CBAs’) under which the company generally retained the rights to produce the applicable beverage products for territories not covered by specific manufacturing agreements, and such bottlers purchase from the company (or from company-authorized manufacturing bottlers) substantially all of the finished beverage products needed in order to service the customers in these territories. The company has also entered into manufacturing agreements that authorize certain EPBs that have executed EPB CBAs to manufacture certain beverage products for their own account and for supply to other bottlers. In addition, certain U.S. bottlers that were not granted additional exclusive territory rights, which the company refer to as ‘participating bottlers,’ converted their legacy bottler’s agreements to CBAs, to which the company refers as ‘participating bottler CBAs,’ each of which has a term of 10 years, is renewable by the bottler indefinitely for successive additional terms of 10 years each, and is substantially similar in most material respects to the EPB CBAs, including with respect to requirements for a binding national governance model and mandatory incidence pricing, but includes core performance requirements that vary in certain respects from those in the EPB CBAs. Under the terms of the bottler’s agreements, bottlers in the United States generally are not authorized to manufacture fountain syrups. Rather, the company manufactures and sells fountain syrups to authorized fountain wholesalers (including certain authorized bottlers) and some fountain retailers. These wholesalers in turn sell the syrups, or deliver them on the company’s behalf, to restaurants and other retailers. Promotional and Marketing Programs In addition to conducting the company’s own independent advertising and marketing activities, the company may provide promotional and marketing support and/or funds to the company’s bottlers. In many instances, the company provides promotional and marketing support and/or funds and/or dispensing equipment and repair services to fountain and bottle/can retailers, typically pursuant to marketing agreements. Investments in Bottling Operations Most of the company’s branded beverage products are prepared, packaged, distributed and sold by independent bottling partners. Seasonality Sales of the company’s ready-to-drink beverages are somewhat seasonal, with the second and third calendar quarters (year ended December 2023) historically accounting for the highest sales volumes. Competition In many of the countries in which the company does business, PepsiCo, Inc., is a primary competitor. Other significant competitors include, but are not limited to, Nestle S.A., Keurig Dr Pepper Inc., Danone S.A., Suntory Beverage & Food Limited, AB InBev, Kirin Holdings, Heineken N.V., Diageo and Red Bull GmbH. Raw Materials In the United States, the company purchases HFCS (high fructose corn syrup) to meet the company’s and its bottlers’ requirements with the assistance of Coca-Cola Bottlers’ Sales & Services Company LLC (‘CCBSS’). CCBSS is a limited liability company that is owned by authorized Coca-Cola bottlers doing business in the United States and Canada. Among other things, CCBSS provides procurement services to the company’s North American operations and to the company’s U.S. and Canadian bottling partners for the purchase of various goods and services, including HFCS. The company works with Cutrale Citrus Juices U.S.A., Inc., the company’s primary supplier of orange juice from Florida and Brazil, to ensure an adequate supply of orange juice and orange juice concentrate that meets the company’s standards. The company derives the majority of its dairy revenues through fairlife, LLC (‘fairlife’), which purchases milk from dairy cooperatives that in turn source milk from farms within the cooperatives. The company generates most of its coffee revenues through Costa. Costa purchases Rainforest Alliance Certified and other green coffee through multiple suppliers. Governmental Regulation In the United States, the safety, production, storage, transportation, distribution, advertising, marketing, labeling and sale of the company’s products and their ingredients are subject to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act; the Federal Trade Commission Act; the Lanham Act; state consumer protection laws; various federal and state laws and regulations governing competition and trade practices, including the Robinson-Patman Act of 1936, as amended, and the Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914, as amended; federal, state and local workplace health and safety laws; various federal and state laws and regulations governing the company’s employment practices, including those related to equal employment opportunity and compensation; various federal, state and local environmental protection laws; privacy and personal data protection laws; and various other federal, state and local statutes and regulations. The company is also required to comply with the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and the Trade Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act. The company maintains that the presence of each such substance in company products is subject to an applicable exemption from the warning requirement or that the product is otherwise in compliance with the Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986. The company is also subject to various federal, state and international laws and regulations related to cybersecurity, privacy and data protection, including the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation, China’s Personal Information Protection Law and the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 (‘CCPA’), which became effective on January 1, 2020, as amended by the California Privacy Rights Act (‘CPRA’), which became effective on January 1, 2023. History The Coca-Cola Company was founded in 1886. The company was incorporated in 1919 under the laws of the state of Delaware.

Country
Industry:
Bottled and Canned Soft Drinks and Carbonated Waters
Founded:
1886
IPO Date:
01/02/1968
ISIN Number:
I_US1912161007
Address:
One Coca-Cola Plaza, Atlanta, Georgia, 30313, United States
Phone Number
404 676 2121

Key Executives

CEO:
Quincey, James Robert
CFO
Murphy, John
COO:
Data Unavailable