Coca-Cola reported higher-than-expected revenue in the fourth quarter as growth in Mexico, Germany and other markets offset lower sales in the US.
Revenue rose 7% to 10.8 billion US dollars (£8.6 billion) for the October-December period, the Atlanta beverages giant said on Tuesday.
That topped Wall Street’s forecast of 10.7 billion (£8.5 billion), according to analysts polled by FactSet.
Unit case volumes rose 2% in the quarter, led by sparkling soft drinks, juices and Coca-Cola Zero Sugar. Sports drinks, coffee and tea all saw lower demand.
In North America, unit case volumes declined 1% as growing sales of juice, dairy and Coca-Cola were offset by falling demand for water, sports drinks, coffee and tea.
Coca-Cola said its prices rose 8% during the quarter.
While that was down from the double-digit price increases the company put in place earlier in 2023, it said higher prices are squeezing some consumers and forcing them to trade down to stores’ own-brands.
Unit case volumes grew in the drinks-maker’s other global markets.
Net income fell 3% to 1.9 billion dollars (£1.5 billion), or 46 cents (36p) per share.
Without one-time items, including restructuring costs, the company earned 49 cents (39p) per share. That was in line with Wall Street’s forecast.
Shares in the Coca-Cola Company were unchanged in pre-market trading on Tuesday.