
24/7 Wall St. recently pondered whether Coca-Cola and Pepsi should be considered as defensive stocks now that the ongoing issues have hurt domestic case volumes so much. Now there is even a health risk that diet drinks may be worse.
S&P placed Coca-Cola’s corporate credit ratings on Credit Watch Positive, implying that an upgrade could be coming in the months ahead. S&P said:
We placed our ratings on Atlanta, Georgia-based The Coca-Cola Co., including the ‘AA-‘ long-term corporate credit rating, on CreditWatch with positive implications. … We will reassess our use of an unfavorable comparable rating analysis on the company.
S&P said that the A-1+ short-term corporate credit and commercial paper ratings are not on CreditWatch. The positive watch also shows that management has maintained a moderate financial policy and has kept its credit ratios in line with a “modest” financial risk assessment.
The ratings agency said that it plans to resolve this CreditWatch rating in the very near term, and that it could raise or leave the ratings on Coca-Cola unchanged.
So, what risk of a health scare is there really? Coca-Cola shares were down $0.02 at 2:00 p.m. EST on Wednesday, against a 52-week range of $36.83 to $43.43.