Business World

Coca-Cola bets on Kobe sports drink in fight with PepsiCo’s Gatorade

-

NEW YORK — Coca-Cola Co. is buying a minority stake in a sports drink brand backed by basketball star Kobe Bryant, it said on Tuesday, seeking to mount a stronger challenge to PepsiCo’s Gatorade.

Coca-Cola’s investment in BodyArmor — which will make it the brand’s second-largest shareholde­r — comes as its Powerade drink steadily cedes market share to Gatorade. Coke has also been rattled by falling demand for its trademark fizzy drinks.

While Coke says there is “much work to be done” at Powerade, PepsiCo said last month that Gatorade was seeing higher demand after launching zerosugar versions.

“Proud of our team at @DrinkBODYA­RMOR and our new partnershi­p with the @CocaColaCo who believes in our mission of becoming the #1 Global Sports Drink. Thanks @Gatorade, we’ll take it from here,” Bryant said on Twitter.

Gatorade and PepsiCo’s other sports drinks account for nearly a third of a $20-billion US market, according to Euromonito­r Internatio­nal. Monster Beverage and Red Bull follow close behind, with Coke trailing in fourth place with a 7% share. Coca-Cola also has a 16.7% stake in Monster.

“(BodyArmor) is a positive for Coca-Cola, which is continuing to pursue its product portfolio diversific­ation strategy,” said RBC Capital Markets analyst Nik Modi.

BODYARMOR

BodyArmor is also backed by Dr Pepper Snapple — now part of Keurig Dr Pepper — which made a $20-million investment in 2015 and boosted its ownership to 15.5% in 2016.

But Wells Fargo analyst Bonnie Herzog said Coca-Cola’s investment could end BodyArmor’s agreement with Dr Pepper.

“We have learned that BodyArmor has notified Keurig Dr Pepper that they are terminatin­g their existing distributi­on agreement,” she said. “Although the timing and mechanism by which distributi­on will transition over to Coca-Cola’s bottling system is still uncertain.”

Neither Keurig Dr Pepper nor BodyArmor responded to Reuters’ requests for comment.

Coke did not disclose the size of its investment or other financial details but said it could increase its ownership in BodyArmor, whose higher-priced energy drinks use natural flavors and sweeteners such as pure cane sugar and coconut water concentrat­e.

“We would not be surprised if Coca-Cola eventually acquires the remainder of BodyArmor,” Wells Fargo’s Herzog said.

Coca-Cola, however, has historical­ly stayed away from full-blown acquisitio­ns, settling instead for acquiring partial stakes in companies — a strategy that allows it to test-drive potentiall­y risky bets.

Bryant, who first invested in BodyArmor in 2013 two years after it was launched, is now its third-biggest shareholde­r. The brand also has endorsemen­t deals with baseball player Mike Trout and another NBA star, James Harden. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines