Forget the Dividend Narrative. Coca-Cola Has Quietly Pivoted Its Growth Strategy.

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By Trey Thoelcke Updated Published

Quick Read

  • Coca-Cola (KO) investors who hold the stock for income are not wrong. They are simply not seeing the full picture.

  • A quiet growth pivot is already underway, and the market has not fully priced it in.

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Forget the Dividend Narrative. Coca-Cola Has Quietly Pivoted Its Growth Strategy.

© nlintheusa / Flickr

Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO | KO Price Prediction) trades at $75.48, up about 8% year-to-date in a choppy market. Most investors explain that with two words: safe dividend. That doesn’t tell the whole story.

Two Moves, One Week, One Message

Earlier this year, Coca-Cola was actively shopping Costa Coffee, the hot-beverages chain it acquired in 2019. The sale process collapsed when bids came in below acceptable thresholds, and management pulled the listing. That same week, the company created its first-ever chief digital officer (CDO) role as part of a broader operational leadership restructuring. Read together, those two decisions describe a company choosing internal transformation over financial engineering.

The Costa Decision

The hot-beverages bet never fully delivered on its original promise. When Coca-Cola explored a Costa sale, offers fell short, so the company ended the process. Keeping Costa means management is committed to fixing the business rather than unloading it at a discount. That is a capital discipline decision, and it carries real implications for future segment margins if the turnaround takes hold.

The CDO Signal

At a consumer staples giant, appointing a chief digital officer is not a PR exercise. The role typically controls direct-to-consumer infrastructure, personalization, marketing technology ROI, connected vending and cooler networks, supply chain digitization, and data monetization. Coca-Cola has already been building the operational scaffolding: innovation hubs and commercial centers of excellence have been established across all operating segments, and the “Rings of Magic” platform is engaging younger consumers across approximately 1,500 universities in eight key markets. The CDO appointment centralizes and accelerates that work.

The Numbers Behind the Pivot

The underlying business is generating notable momentum. Coca-Cola Zero Sugar posted 14% unit case volume growth for the full year 2025, with 13% growth in Q4 specifically. Full-year organic revenue grew 5%, and 2026 guidance calls for 4% to 5% organic revenue growth with comparable EPS growth of 7% to 8%. CEO James Quincey framed it directly: “I’m encouraged by our performance in 2025 which showed both the resilience and momentum that define our business.”

What Investors Should Watch

The short-term picture is neutral: no Costa sale means no cash windfall, no special dividend bump, no buyback acceleration beyond the approximately $5.2 billion remaining repurchase authorization. Medium-term, the thesis depends on whether digital investment visibly lowers marketing costs and whether Costa margins improve. Long-term, the digital transformation is precisely what separates a static bond-proxy from a compounding consumer brand.

The dividend remains intact. Coca-Cola extended its streak to 63 consecutive years of dividend increases, paying $8.8 billion in dividends during 2025. Investors who hold for income are not wrong. They are simply not seeing the full picture. A quiet growth pivot is already underway, and the market has not fully priced it in.

 

Photo of Trey Thoelcke
About the Author Trey Thoelcke →

Trey has been an editor and author at 24/7 Wall St. for more than a decade, where he has published thousands of articles analyzing corporate earnings, dividend stocks, short interest, insider buying, private equity, and market trends. His comprehensive coverage spans the full spectrum of financial markets, from blue-chip stalwarts to emerging growth companies.

Beyond 24/7 Wall St., Trey has created and edited financial content for Benzinga and AOL's BloggingStocks, contributing additional hundreds of articles to the investment community. He previously oversaw the 24/7 Climate Insights site, managing editorial operations and content strategy, and currently oversees and creates content for My Investing News.

Trey's editorial expertise extends across multiple publishing environments. He served as production editor at Dearborn Financial Publishing and development editor at Kaplan, where he helped shape financial education materials. Earlier in his career, he worked as a writer-producer at SVE. His freelance editing portfolio includes work for prestigious clients such as Sage Publications, Rand McNally, the Institute for Supply Management, the American Library Association, Eggplant Literary Productions, and Spiegel.

Outside of financial journalism, Trey writes fiction and has been an active member of the writing community for years, overseeing a long-running critique group and moderating workshop sessions at regional conventions. He lives with his family in an old house in the Midwest.

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