Daily Investory News
Subscribe
  • Economy
  • Forex
  • Stocks
  • Trading
  • Tools
No Result
View All Result
  • Economy
  • Forex
  • Stocks
  • Trading
  • Tools
No Result
View All Result
Daily Investory News
No Result
View All Result
Home Stocks

This ‘dividend king’ pays twice the market yield, but is the stock too hot?

admin by admin
July 16, 2026
in Stocks
0
This ‘dividend king’ pays twice the market yield, but is the stock too hot?
0
SHARES
2
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

One of Wall Street’s most dependable income stocks has quietly become a market outperformer trading close to a record high.

Its dividend yield is roughly twice that of the broader market, while its payout has increased every year for more than six decades.

The company is Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO). Investors have embraced its defensive demand, pricing power and dependable cash returns during an uncertain economic period.

Yet after the shares closed at $82.45 on Wednesday, only 3.8% below their July 7 record, even bullish analysts are divided over how much upside remains.

A 64-year payout streak is only part of the story

Coca-Cola raised its quarterly dividend by about 4% in February, from 51 cents to 53 cents per share.

That marked its 64th consecutive annual increase and lifted the annualised payout to $2.12. At Wednesday’s close, the shares yielded about 2.6%.

The attraction extends beyond income. First-quarter net revenue increased 12% to $12.5 billion, organic revenue advanced 10% and global unit-case volume rose 3%.

Those figures suggest the dividend is being supported by continuing business growth rather than borrowing or financial engineering.

Coca-Cola also enjoys structural advantages few consumer companies can match.

Its brands have global recognition, management can adjust prices and package sizes across markets, and independent bottlers handle much of the capital-intensive production and distribution.

That asset-light structure helps explain why investors have favoured the company during economic uncertainty.

Consumers may postpone expensive purchases, but relatively inexpensive drinks remain accessible, giving Coca-Cola a defensive quality that many cyclical businesses lack.

Wall Street still sees upside

Citigroup analyst Filippo Falorni delivered the most aggressive recent call on July 14, raising his Coca-Cola price target to $97 from $91 while retaining a Buy rating.

The target implies that Citi believes resilient earnings and brand momentum can justify a further valuation premium.

JPMorgan analyst Andrea Faria Teixeira is also positive, but more measured. She raised her target to $90 from $85 on July 10 and maintained an Overweight rating.

Bank of America analyst Peter Galbo has maintained a Buy rating and a $95 target.

The bank sees the FIFA World Cup as a useful near-term catalyst because the tournament creates repeated beverage-consumption occasions across homes, bars and restaurants, while giving Coca-Cola an unusually broad global marketing platform.

The tournament may support volumes and brand visibility, but it is temporary.

The longer-term case still depends on Coca-Cola protecting demand as consumers become more selective and input costs remain unpredictable.

The safety premium may be getting expensive

Coca-Cola now trades at nearly 26 times trailing earnings, a demanding multiple for a mature consumer-staples company.

Its Wednesday’s close was also only a few dollars below the record $85.68 reached earlier this month.

Bernstein SocGen provides the clearest cautious counterpoint.

The firm cut its target to $83 from $84 and kept a Market Perform rating, citing an uneven consumer environment, affordability spending, Mexican tax pressures and the possibility that elevated aluminium costs could weigh on bottlers in 2027 and 2028.

The broader analyst picture reinforces that tension.

Twenty-five analysts tracked by Stock Analysis carry an average target of $86.85, implying only about 5% upside, despite an overall Buy consensus.

Coca-Cola reports second-quarter results on July 28. Investors will watch organic sales, volumes, North American demand, commodity costs and World Cup-related commentary.

The post This 'dividend king' pays twice the market yield, but is the stock too hot? appeared first on Invezz

Previous Post

Ocado shares fall to multi-year low as retailer partnership talks continue

Next Post

Rotork jumps 67% as ABB seals record $5.5B takeover amid UK dealmaking boom

Next Post
Rotork jumps 67% as ABB seals record $5.5B takeover amid UK dealmaking boom

Rotork jumps 67% as ABB seals record $5.5B takeover amid UK dealmaking boom

    Subscribe

    ×

    Subscribe to Daily Investory News

    Latest

    Pi Network Plans V25 Protocol Upgrade on July 22

    Pi Network Plans V25 Protocol Upgrade on July 22

    July 16, 2026
    Trump to Meet Senators on CLARITY Act Ahead of Senate Push

    Trump to Meet Senators on CLARITY Act Ahead of Senate Push

    July 16, 2026
    Pi Network Schedules Protocol v25 Upgrade After 27% Pi Price Drop

    Pi Network Schedules Protocol v25 Upgrade After 27% Pi Price Drop

    July 16, 2026
    Will Bitcoin Price Drop to $38K in 2026? NYDIG’s Q2 Report Has the Answer

    Will Bitcoin Price Drop to $38K in 2026? NYDIG’s Q2 Report Has the Answer

    July 16, 2026

    Browse by Category

    • Economy
    • Forex
    • Stocks
    • Trading
    • Tools
    • Cookie Notice
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Copyright 2026 — Daily Investory News. All rights reserved

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Cookie Notice
    • Investing and Stock News
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Thank you
    • Tools
    • Trading Tools

    Copyright 2026 — Daily Investory News. All rights reserved