Here's Where Things Went Wrong For Coca-Cola in 2017

Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), one of Warren Buffett's favorite stocks, is widely considered a safe income play for long-term investors. However, Coca-Cola's 9% gain over the past year underperformed both its rival PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP) and the S&P 500, which respectively rose 11% and 18%. Let's take a look back at what went wrong at Coca-Cola this year.

1. Dismal revenue growth

Coca-Cola's sales growth is only positive on an organic basis, which excludes the impact of foreign exchange rates, acquisitions, divestments, refranchising efforts, and other charges. But on a reported basis, Coca-Cola's revenue has fallen annually for ten straight quarters.

For example, Coca-Cola's organic revenues rose 4% annually last quarter as higher prices and a better product mix offset its flat growth in unit case volumes. However, its net revenues fell 15%, due to an 18% headwind from the ongoing refranchising of its bottling territories.

As a result, analysts expect Coca-Cola's revenue to fall 16% this year and 12% next year. By comparison, PepsiCo's revenue could rise 1% this year and another 4% next year.

2. Anemic earnings growth

Coca-Cola props up its earnings with aggressive buybacks. The company spent $2.8 billion, or 46% of its free cash flow, on buybacks over the past 12 months. PepsiCo spent just 36% of its FCF on buybacks during the same period.

But even after those buybacks, Coca-Cola's earnings are expected to remain flat this year and rise just 4% next year. Analysts expect PepsiCo's earnings to grow 8% this year and 7% next year.

Those dramatic differences can be attributed to the fact that PepsiCo's more diverse portfolio of carbonated drinks, non-carbonated drinks, and packaged foods (Frito Lays and Quaker) is better insulated from slumping soda sales than Coca-Cola's portfolio of beverages.

PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi aggressively pivoted the company's portfolio toward healthier drinks and snacks, but former Coca-Cola CEO Muhtar Kent and his successor, James Quincey, pursued different strategies -- like adding more non-carbonated beverages (via its acquisitions of Fuze, Vitamin Water, Honest Tea, and Keurig Green Mountain) and reduced-sugar versions of its flagship sodas.

3. Its unwillingness to buy Monster

Soda consumption in the US dropped to a 31-year low last year according to Beverage-Digest. Demand is also slumping in other countries as consumers buy healthier drinks. However, the growing niche market of energy drinks is bucking that trend.

That's why Coca-Cola took a 16.7% stake in energy drink maker Monster Beverage (NASDAQ: MNST) in 2014. At the time, it seemed like Coca-Cola would eventually buy the entire company, which is expected to post double-digit revenue and earnings growth this year.

However, Coca-Cola hasn't expressed any interest in buying the company -- which likely dampened investor enthusiasm for its stock. Monster isn't cheap, with an enterprise value of $34 billion, but it could give Coca-Cola some much-needed growth.

4. Overheated valuations

Coca-Cola's stock isn't cheap at 44 times earnings and 23 times next year's earnings. By comparison, PepsiCo has a trailing P/E of 24 and a forward P/E of 21.

Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, which respectively pay forward yields of 3.2% and 2.7%, were both considered safe dividend plays in a low interest rate environment. But with interest rates gradually rising, bonds will become more attractive than blue chip dividend stocks -- which could cause a sell-off of higher P/E dividend plays like Coca-Cola.

5. Weak insider sentiment

If Coca-Cola's stock was poised to run higher, we'd likely see a lot of insider buying. Yet the company's insiders sold over 2.2 million shares over the past 12 months and only bought about 844,000 shares. Over the past three months, insiders sold 338,000 shares but didn't buy a single one.

The bottom line

Coca-Cola isn't a risky investment -- it's one of the world's largest beverage companies and it finished last quarter with $22.2 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments. It's also raised its dividend annually for over five decades.

But the company certainly didn't impress investors this year. It didn't follow PepsiCo's example and expand into packaged foods, and didn't listen to pleas to buy Monster. Instead, the company was content to tread water, and investors turned their attention toward more promising plays across the aging bull market.

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Leo Sun has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Monster Beverage. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.