Corporate Results of over 2500 companies Friday, October 22, 1999
fesub.gif (4328 bytes)
Elections 99
fe.gif (834 bytes) flnews.gif (5153 bytes)
Search FE
-
-
Think Tank
This week we focus on a complete analysis of the
pharma industry
-
 

Coca-Cola Q3 profits dip 11% 

REUTERS  
New York, Oct 21: Coca-Cola Co., the world's largest beverage company, posted an 11 per cent drop in third-quarter profits on Thursday as results continue to be hurt from a contamination scare in Belgium and France this summer.

The Atlanta-based company reported quarterly earnings of$787 million, or 32 cents per share, compared with $888 million, or 36 cents per share after a 1-cent gain, in the same period a year earlier.

The quarterly results met Wall Street estimates, which were adjusted after the company warned of lower profits and volume weakness in September, according to earnings forecast firm First Call/Thomson Financial.

Revenues jumped 9 percent in the quarter to $5.19 billion, reflecting price hikes in North America and structural changes in the bottling system, Coke said. Those gains were partially offset by the negative impact of a stronger dollar.

Shares of Coke were down 5/16 at 52-1/2 in early morning trading on the New York Stock Exchange amid a broad market sell-off. Coca-Cola said the overall impact of this summer's European product withdrawal on third-quarter earnings was about 2 to 3 cents per share after tax. The company added it is seeing steady improvements and expects to be back at pre-incident levels by the end of this year.

"This past year has not been what the company's shareowners or its management, most especially me, want or expect," Coke Chairman and CEO Douglas Ivester said in a release. "Both our volume and profit results and our stock price have disappointed us all, even recognising the difficult circumstances. But I can only be optimistic about the long-term outlookfor the global economy, and thus our ability to deliver on our stated long-term volume and earnings objectives," he said, adding that the company is better off than it was a year ago.

With a 3.5 per cent rise in worldwide unit case volume, the beverage giant said it is encouraged by improving business conditions in Germany, Japan and Brazil.

One per cent of that rise in worldwide case volume was attributable to the company's acquisition of Cadbury Schweppes for about $970 million, completed in the quarter. The deal adds brands such as Schweppes, Canada Dry, Dr. Pepper and Crush.

North American volume trends that have been hurt by price increases in the supermarket are rebounding, the company said. Third-quarter unit case volume was up 2 per cent.

Coke's main rival, PepsiCo Inc., posted better than expected quarterly profits earlier this month, due mainly to strong returns from its snack and juice units.

Coke said currency exchange rates have begun to stabilise,and it expects that currency fluctuations will have less of a negative impact on operating results in 2000.

Copyright © 1999 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.

- Lead Stories | Corporate | Politics | Commodities | Economy/Finance | BSE Today | NSE/ Markets | Strategy | Convergence | After Hours top.gif (150 bytes)Top
flame.jpg (1068 bytes) © Copyright 1999: Indian Express Newspaper(Bombay) Ltd. All rights reserved throughout the world.
This entire edition is compiled in Mumbai by The Indian Express Online Media Limited, a division of
The Indian Express Group of Newspapers. Managed by The Indian Express Online Media Limited and hosted by CerfNet.