The Philippine Star

Coca-Cola speeds up efforts to cut sugar in drinks

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Coca- Cola Co. reported a better-than-expected quarterly profit, and said it would step up efforts to reduce sugar in its beverages, amid growing pressure from health experts and government­s who have blamed sugary drinks for a rise in obesity.

The company’s move comes after rival PepsiCo Inc. announced plans to reduce sugar in its drinks last week.

Coca- Cola has over 200 reformulat­ion initiative­s underway to reduce added sugar in its drinks and is launching more sugar-free, low- and nocalorie products, chief operating officer James Quincey said on a post-earnings call.

The company, which gets about 70 percent of its volume sales from fizzy drinks, is also rolling out Coca- Cola Zero with a “new and improved taste,” he said.

Coca- Cola has also been building its non- carbonated drinks portfolio and offloading much of its bottling business to cope with falling demand for carbonated beverages in North America, its biggest market.

Volumes of noncarbona­ted drinks, which include tea, juices and energy drinks, in the region grew two percent in the third quarter ended Sept. 30.

The world’s largest beverage maker has relied on smaller pack sizes and premium packaging using glass and aluminum to drive margins in developed markets.

Total sales in North America rose three percent to $2.66 billion. Volume sales of carbonated beverages such as Sprite, Fanta and Coca-Cola Zero rose, while those of Diet Coke fell.

Coca-Cola also announced six new franchisin­g agreements with bottlers on Wednesday.

Following these deals, the company would have refranchis­ed territorie­s that account for about 65 percent of total US bottler-delivered distributi­on volume.

The company aims to refranchis­e all its North American territorie­s by the end of 2017.

Coca-Cola’s net income attributab­le to shareholde­rs fell 28 percent to $1.05 billion, or 24 cents per share.

Excluding items, Coca-Cola earned 49 cents per share.

Net operating revenue fell seven percent to $10.63 billion, the sixth straight quarter of decline.

Analysts on average had expected adjusted earnings of 48 cents per share on revenue of $10.51 billion, according to Thomson Reuters.

Shares of the company, which maintained its 2016 forecast, were up about 0.6 percent at $42.78.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A truck transports bottles from the Coca-Cola company on the outskirts of Moscow.
REUTERS A truck transports bottles from the Coca-Cola company on the outskirts of Moscow.

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