The Manila Times

Coca-Cola recovery continues

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ATLANTA: Coca-Cola measured gradual improvemen­t in the third quarter as it focused on emerging leaner from the global pandemic.

Revenue fell 9% percent to $8.7 billion, topping Wall Street expectatio­ns of $8.4 billion, according to analysts polled by FactSet. It was far better than the 28 percent drop in revenue in the second quarter.

Net income was $1.7 billion. Earnings, adjusted for one-time items, fell 2 percent to 55 cents per share. That also outpaced analyst forecasts of 46 cents.

Coke has been decimated with the closure of arenas, restaurant­s, theaters and other public places where it books about half of its revenue. Soda fountains at such venues normally make up 30 percent of Coke's US sales, for example.

The company has been making up for some of that damage as people buy more beverages, like orange juice, at home.

So far this month, sales based on unit cases are seeing single-digit declines compared to last year; in April, those sales were down 25 percent.

Coke cautioned that some markets are doing better than others. The company saw sales improve in India, Brazil and Japan in the third quarter, for example, but Mexico's recovery has been below expectatio­ns. In the US, sales at convenienc­e stores ticked upward after a slump.

“It is not a straight line recovery around the world," Coke Chairman and chief executive officer James Quincey said in a conference call with investors. “We are prepared for setbacks due to the local spikes in cases and targeted restrictio­ns and closures."

Coke has withdrawn financial guidance and said it will talk more about its expectatio­ns for 2021 when it reports fourth-quarter earnings. But Chief Financial Officer John Murphy said Coke is confident it will recover faster than the broader economy because of its ongoing corporate reorganiza­tion.

Quincey said the pandemic was a “catalyst for change" at Coke, which is cutting slow-selling brands and reducing the number of business segments from 17 to nine.

“We’ve been challengin­g legacy ways of doing business and the pandemic helped us realize we could be bolder in our efforts,” Quincey said.

In August, the company began offering voluntary buyouts to around 4,000 people, which it hopes will

reduce the number of people it eventually lays off. Quincey said that program is nearly finished, and Coke hopes to complete any additional job actions by year-end.

Coca-Cola Co. also announced last week that it was retiring several products this year, including Tab, Zico coconut water, Diet Coke Fiesty Cherry and regional offerings like Northern

Neck Ginger Ale. The company had announced in July summer that it was retiring Odwalla juices.

Eventually, Coke plans to reduce its brands by half, to 200. Quincey said there is no specific profit target for the actions. The company simply wants to devote fewer resources and shelf space to products that aren't performing well.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? IMPROVING
Coca-Cola measured gradual improvemen­t in the third quarter as it focused on emerging leaner from the global pandemic. Revenue fell 9 percent to $8.7 billion, topping Wall Street expectatio­ns of $8.4 billion, according to analysts polled by FactSet. It was far better than the 28 percent drop in revenue in the second quarter.
AP PHOTO IMPROVING Coca-Cola measured gradual improvemen­t in the third quarter as it focused on emerging leaner from the global pandemic. Revenue fell 9 percent to $8.7 billion, topping Wall Street expectatio­ns of $8.4 billion, according to analysts polled by FactSet. It was far better than the 28 percent drop in revenue in the second quarter.

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