Getting Cheaper, But Not There Yet

Coca Cola (KO) has been dead money for years. After reporting solid results yesterday, the stock may be due for a good 15% rally.

Coke had a great 10-year run which ended 1998, when a bear market in value stocks began. When Warren Buffett built his position in the late 1980s, the stock sold for $4.50 per share, according to Yahoo’s new charts. By 1998, the stock peaked at $89, an almost twenty-fold gain.

Since peaking in price in 1998, the stock has declined almost 50%. By 1998, the P/E on Coke exceeded 40 x earnings, a high-tech type valuation. Today, the P/E is at 19x. Getting cheap, but not very cheap.

Coke grew revenue 7% for the most recent quarter and its operating profit improved 10%, very solid for this $112 billion company. With the market rallying, these results will force large institutions to own this stock. Coke most likely has a good 10% to 15% rally ahead. But after that, take profits. Coke’s valuation is not cheap enough to be a big winner yet.

February 15

About Ed Mullane

Ed Mullane has been writing on business and economics for over twenty-five years. He currently writes for dealReporter, a Financial Times Group company. Much of his time is spent covering dealmaking in the technology, media and telecom industries.
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