Coca Cola Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Coca Cola stocks.

Coca Cola Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 1 KO Why Coca-Cola Stock Could Be in for a Tough Year in 2025
Nov 1 CCEP Stocks to watch next week: Berkshire Hathaway, Super Micro, Novo Nordisk, Vistry and M&S
Nov 1 KO Coca-Cola Europacific Partners invests in Australia canning lines
Nov 1 KO Insiders At Coca-Cola Sold US$19m In Stock, Alluding To Potential Weakness
Nov 1 KO The Coca-Cola Company Announces New Reporting Lines for Costa Coffee and innocent Businesses to Europe Operating Unit
Nov 1 KO Soda is making a comeback
Nov 1 KO LA County files lawsuit against PepsiCo and Coca-Cola over plastic pollution
Nov 1 KO Coca-Cola relaunches Mexican soft drink brand Barrilitos in California and Texas
Oct 31 KO Los Angeles County sues Pepsi and Coca-Cola over plastic bottles
Oct 31 KO L.A. County sues Pepsi and Coca-Cola over their role in ongoing plastic pollution crisis
Oct 31 KO Coca-Cola brings back the Barrilitos brand to Texas and California
Oct 31 KO Los Angeles County sues PepsiCo and Coca-Cola over plastic pollution
Oct 31 KO THE COCA-COLA COMPANY RELAUNCHES BARRILITOS IN CALIFORNIA & TEXAS
Oct 31 COKE Institutional owners may ignore Coca-Cola Consolidated, Inc.'s (NASDAQ:COKE) recent US$650m market cap decline as longer-term profits stay in the green
Oct 31 KO IBG: Growing Beverage Company Entering Attractive Niches, Expanding Distribution, Leveraging Coca-Cola Relationship
Oct 31 KO 3 Reasons to Buy Coca-Cola Stock Like There's No Tomorrow
Oct 30 KO Coca-Cola Consolidated: Q3 Earnings Snapshot
Oct 30 COKE Coca-Cola Consolidated Reports Third Quarter and First Nine Months 2024 Results
Oct 30 KO 3 Reasons Not to Buy Coca-Cola Stock Right Now
Oct 30 KO 2 Stocks to Buy Now If You're Retiring in 30 Years
Coca Cola

Coca-Cola, or Coke, is a carbonated soft drink manufactured by The Coca-Cola Company. Originally intended as a patent medicine, it was invented in the late 19th century by John Stith Pemberton and was bought out by businessman Asa Griggs Candler, whose marketing tactics led Coca-Cola to its dominance of the world soft-drink market throughout the 20th century. The drink's name refers to two of its original ingredients: coca leaves, and kola nuts (a source of caffeine). The current formula of Coca-Cola remains a trade secret, although a variety of reported recipes and experimental recreations have been published.
The Coca-Cola Company produces concentrate, which is then sold to licensed Coca-Cola bottlers throughout the world. The bottlers, who hold exclusive territory contracts with the company, produce the finished product in cans and bottles from the concentrate, in combination with filtered water and sweeteners. A typical 12-US-fluid-ounce (350 ml) can contains 38 grams (1.3 oz) of sugar (usually in the form of high fructose corn syrup). The bottlers then sell, distribute, and merchandise Coca-Cola to retail stores, restaurants, and vending machines throughout the world. The Coca-Cola Company also sells concentrate for soda fountains of major restaurants and foodservice distributors.
The Coca-Cola Company has on occasion introduced other cola drinks under the Coke name. The most common of these is Diet Coke, along with others including Caffeine-Free Coca-Cola, Diet Coke Caffeine-Free, Coca-Cola Zero Sugar, Coca-Cola Cherry, Coca-Cola Vanilla, and special versions with lemon, lime, and coffee. Based on Interbrand's "best global brand" study of 2015, Coca-Cola was the world's third most valuable brand, after Apple and Google. In 2013, Coke products were sold in over 200 countries worldwide, with consumers drinking more than 1.8 billion company beverage servings each day. Coca-Cola ranked No. 87 in the 2018 Fortune 500 list of the largest United States corporations by total revenue.

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