logo
Coca-Cola results beat estimates on price hikes, demand surge

Coca-Cola results beat estimates on price hikes, demand surge

Business Times29-04-2025
[ATLANTA] Coca-Cola on Tuesday (Apr 29) reported better-than-expected revenue and profit for the first quarter, as the beverage giant benefits from price hikes and enjoys strong demand for its sodas, juices and milk offering Fairlife.
The Sprite and Fanta maker also maintained its full-year organic revenue and comparable profit forecasts, unlike PepsiCo and Procter & Gamble that lowered their annual expectations as the global trade war triggered by steep US tariffs threatened to push up costs for American companies.
'(Coca-Cola's) operations are primarily local, however, it is subject to global trade dynamics which may impact certain components of the company's cost structure across its markets,' it said in a statement.
'At this time, the company expects the impact to be manageable.'
In the last quarter, Coca-Cola had underlined strategies to offer affordable packaging options and plans to use plastic bottles to mitigate the impact from 25 per cent tariffs on aluminum imports.
'This morning's print reaffirms our confidence in Coca-Cola's fundamentals despite a difficult macroeconomic backdrop,' RBC Capital analyst Nik Modi said.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
'Coca-Cola reiterated top- and bottom-line guidance, which should be viewed as favourable in this environment,' he said.
Shares of Coca-Cola rose 1.2 per cent in premarket trading.
Rival PepsiCo last week called out subdued consumer spending, but demand for Coca-Cola's slightly pricey products has so far remained stable, helping boost sales growth despite price hikes in highly inflationary markets such as Argentina and Latin America.
Its first-quarter overall average selling prices rose 5 per cent, while unit case volumes increased 2 per cent.
Still, volumes in its North America market fell 3 per cent, mostly due to a slowdown in demand for its legacy brands such as Coca-Cola and Sprite, as well as coffee.
In an attempt to boost demand in the region, the company has been betting on its portfolio of energy drinks and prebiotic sodas by launching new items such as Simply Pop.
Its quarterly revenue fell marginally to US$11.22 billion, compared with expectations of a 0.84 per cent fall to US$11.14 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.
Excluding items, the company earned 73 US cents per share, compared with estimates of 71 US cents. REUTERS
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US dollar weakness drives UK fund out of Treasuries and into gilts
US dollar weakness drives UK fund out of Treasuries and into gilts

Business Times

time3 hours ago

  • Business Times

US dollar weakness drives UK fund out of Treasuries and into gilts

A depreciating US dollar has driven one UK asset manager to reallocate money out of inflation-protected Treasuries and into equivalent British bonds. Across three multi-asset funds worth a total of £1.8 billion (S$3.1 billion), London-based CG Asset Management (CGAM) has switched around £100 million out of US Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (Tips) and into UK inflation-linked government bonds since the end of March. The move to skirt currency risk comes as the US dollar has slumped 7 per cent against the pound this year, with US President Donald Trump's unpredictable tariff policies and a widening deficit dragging on the greenback's appeal. That depreciation now 'weighs a bit on any kind of long unhedged allocation to Tips or US conventional government bonds', portfolio manager Emma Moriarty said in an interview. She has now paused the reallocation as 70 per cent of the portfolios' exposure is sterling, a level 'at the very high end for where this would normally be'. Within CGAM's largest multi-asset fund, the Capital Gearing Trust, the gilt linker portfolio returned 1 per cent over the second quarter whereas the Tips portfolio lost 6 per cent. Since April, Moriarty has grown holdings in UK index-linked bonds from 9 per cent to 15 per cent. While longer maturity gilts have struggled this year given doubts about the UK's finances, Moriarty said so-called linkers have been closing the gap in performance with their American counterparts in their own right. Most linkers have gone from 'uninvestable' to 'good value', Moriarty said. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up 'In relative terms, the UK is now in a much better position in that UK real yields are now quite elevated,' she added. Still, in both markets, CGAM has shifted out of the short end of the curve after heightened short-term inflation expectations, and also out of the long-end given concerns of an economic slowdown and fiscal risks. Moriarty currently favours maturities between five and 10 years. Historically, CGAM had favoured the US as the 'number one' most valuable inflation market as its outlook for outright real yields was 'really positive' due to expectations that they would track the relatively rapid growth rate of the US economy. But concerns over tariffs and the US dollar have changed that. Moriarty has shrunk holdings in Tips from 28 per cent to 22 per cent in the last three months, with inflation-linked bonds hit particularly hard in April's market turbulence. The reallocation chimes with other investors also shifting money out of US dollar assets and into Europe. 'The biggest threat to the US dollar is actually just this rotation away from US assets,' Moriarty said. BLOOMBERG

What you need to know about Jensen Huang, the AI visionary in a leather jacket
What you need to know about Jensen Huang, the AI visionary in a leather jacket

Straits Times

time7 hours ago

  • Straits Times

What you need to know about Jensen Huang, the AI visionary in a leather jacket

Find out what's new on ST website and app. Mr Jensen Huang convinced US President Donald Trump to lift restrictions on certain GPU exports to China. NEW YORK - Unknown to the general public just three years ago, Mr Jensen Huang is now one of the most powerful entrepreneurs in the world as head of chip giant Nvidia. The unassuming 62-year-old draws stadium crowds of more than 10,000 people as his company's products push the boundaries of artificial intelligence (AI). Chips designed by Nvidia, known as graphics cards or graphics processing units (GPUs), are essential in developing the generative AI powering technology like ChatGPT. Big tech's insatiable appetite for Nvidia's GPUs, which sell for tens of thousands of dollars each, has catapulted the California chipmaker beyond US $4 trillion (S$5.1 trillion) in market valuation, the first company ever to surpass that mark. Nvidia's meteoric rise has boosted Mr Huang's personal fortune to US$150 billion – making him one of the world's richest people – thanks to the roughly 3.5 per cent stake he holds in the company he founded three decades ago with two friends in a Silicon Valley diner. In a clear demonstration of his clout, he recently convinced US President Donald Trump to lift restrictions on certain GPU exports to China, despite the fact that China is locked in a battle with the United States for AI supremacy. 'That was brilliantly done,' said Dr Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a governance professor at Yale University. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore 1 in 3 vapes here laced with etomidate; MOH working with MHA to list it as illegal drug: Ong Ye Kung Singapore HSA extends hotline hours, launches new platform to report vaping offences Singapore Tampines regional centre set to get more homes, offices and public amenities Multimedia How to make the most out of small homes in Singapore World Diplomats dismissed: Inside the overhaul reshaping Trump's foreign policy Life US tech CEO Andy Byron resigns after viral Coldplay 'kiss cam' video Opinion I thought I was a 'chill' parent. Then came P1 registration Singapore 'God and government are the only things beyond our control,' says Group CEO Mr Huang was able to explain to Mr Trump that 'having the world using a US tech platform as the core protocol is definitely in the interest of this country' and will not help the Chinese military, Prof Sonnenfeld said. Early life Born in Taipei in 1963, Mr Jensen Huang (originally named Jen-Hsun) embodies the American success story. At nine years old, he was sent with his brother to boarding school in small-town Kentucky. His uncle recommended the school to his Taiwanese parents believing it to be a prestigious institution, when it was actually a school for troubled youth. Too young to be a student, Mr Huang boarded there but attended a nearby public school alongside the children of tobacco farmers. With his poor English, he was bullied and forced to clean toilets – a two-year ordeal that transformed him. 'We worked really hard, we studied really hard, and the kids were really tough,' he recounted in an interview with US broadcaster NPR. But 'the ending of the story is, I loved the time I was there,' Mr Huang said. Leather jacket and tattoo Brought home by his parents, who had by then settled in the north-western US state of Oregon, he graduated from university at just 20 and joined Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), then LSI Logic, to design chips – his passion. But he wanted to go further and founded Nvidia in 1993 to 'solve problems that normal computers can't,' using semiconductors powerful enough to handle 3D graphics, as he explained on the 'No Priors' podcast. Nvidia created the first GPU in 1999, riding the intersection of video games, data centres, cloud computing, and now, generative AI. Always dressed in a black T-shirt and leather jacket, Mr Huang sports an Nvidia logo tattoo and has a taste for sports cars. But it is his relentless optimism, low-key personality and lack of political alignment that sets him apart from the likes of Mr Elon Musk and Mr Mark Zuckerberg. Unlike them, Mr Huang was notably absent from Mr Trump's inauguration ceremony. 'He backpedals his own aura and let's the star be the technology rather than himself,' observed Prof Sonnenfeld, who believes Mr Huang may be 'the most respected of all today's tech titans'. One former high-ranking Nvidia employee described him to AFP as 'the most driven person' he had ever met. Street food On visits to his native Taiwan, Mr Huang is treated like a megastar, with fans crowding him for autographs and selfies as journalists follow him to the barber shop and his favourite night market. 'He has created the phenomena because of his personal charm,' noted Mr Wayne Lin of Witology Market Trend Research Institute. 'A person like him must be very busy and his schedule should be full every day meeting big bosses. But he remembers to eat street food when he comes to Taiwan,' he said, calling Mr Huang as being 'unusually friendly'. Nvidia is a tight ship and takes great care to project a drama-free image of Mr Huang. But the former high-ranking employee painted a more nuanced picture, describing a 'very paradoxical' individual who is fiercely protective of his employees but also capable, within Nvidia's executive circle, of 'ripping people to shreds' over major mistakes or poor choices. AFP

US threatens Mexican flights over cargo, competition issues
US threatens Mexican flights over cargo, competition issues

Straits Times

time11 hours ago

  • Straits Times

US threatens Mexican flights over cargo, competition issues

The DOT alleges Mexico has violated a bilateral air agreement by slashing slots for passenger flights and forcing all-cargo carriers to relocate operations. WASHINGTON/MEXICO CITY - The Trump administration said on July 19 that it will take action against Mexico after the Mexican government cut flight slots and forced cargo carriers to relocate operations in Mexico City, affecting US airlines. US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said in a statement the department could disapprove flight requests from Mexico if the government fails to address US concerns over decisions made in 2022 and 2023. The Department of Transportation (DOT) is also proposing to withdraw antitrust immunity from Delta Air Lines' joint venture with Aeromexico to address competitive issues. Mexico is the most popular international destination for US airline travellers. Delta said if the DOT withdraws approval, it 'would cause significant harm to consumers traveling between the US and Mexico, as well as US jobs, communities, and trans-border competition'. Aeromexico said it was preparing a joint response to the order, which it plans to issue in the coming days. Mexico City shake-up The DOT alleges Mexico has violated a bilateral air agreement by slashing slots for passenger flights and forcing all-cargo carriers to relocate operations. Then-President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador defended the decisions, arguing that the capital's main airport was too crowded and that the new, farther-away Felipe Angeles International Airport (Aifa) could handle the extra traffic. Officials are rushing to renovate the ageing Benito Juarez International Airport (MEX) ahead of next year's football World Cup, for which Mexico is a host country. 'By restricting slots and mandating that all-cargo operations move out of MEX, Mexico has broken its promise, disrupted the market, and left American businesses holding the bag for millions in increased costs,' the DOT said. The Aifa is already at full capacity for cargo handling and needs to be expanded. For passenger flights, it lags far behind MEX as transportation to and from the city remains spotty. 'The move not only disrupted critical air cargo operations and set a dangerous precedent for how all-cargo carriers may be treated in global markets, it also created uncertainty about how potential safety emergencies could be handled,' said the Cargo Airline Association, which represents major UScargo carriers. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Tampines regional centre set to get more homes, offices and public amenities Multimedia How to make the most out of small homes in Singapore Life US tech CEO Andy Byron resigns after viral Coldplay 'kiss cam' video Asia From toy to threat: 'Killer kites' bring chaos to Indonesian airspace Opinion I thought I was a 'chill' parent. Then came P1 registration Singapore 'God and government are the only things beyond our control,' says Group CEO Business Me and My Money: He overcomes a $100k setback to build a thriving online tuition business Asia At least 34 killed as tourist boat capsizes in Vietnam's Halong Bay Mexico's Transportation Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The measures The DOT issued orders requiring Mexican airlines to file schedules with the department for all their US operations by a late-July deadline while requiring prior US approval for large charter flights to or from the United States. Airlines set to be affected by the measures, including Volaris and Viva Aerobus, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. If the US rescinds antitrust approval for Delta and Aeromexico, they would be required to end their cooperation on pricing, capacity, and revenue sharing. Delta would be able to retain its equity stake in Aeromexico and continue other aspects of its partnership. The DOT also said it could take action against European countries over limitations at airports. REUTERS

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store