HomeBusinessShould You Forget Coca-Cola? Why these unstoppable stocks are better buys.

Should You Forget Coca-Cola? Why these unstoppable stocks are better buys.

There’s nothing wrong with it Coca-cola (NYSE:KO) as a company. In fact, it has a storied past and probably a bright future. But Wall Street is well aware of how attractive an investment in Coca-Cola is, and today (and most of the time) leaves it as a fully priced stock.

It only does one thing: make drinks (although it does this very well). So if you’re looking at Coca-Cola, you might want to consider a direct competitor PepsiCo (NASDAQ: PEP) or shift gears and watch it Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG). This is why.

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Coca-Cola’s greatest strength is that it is a dominant beverage company. It benefits from the distribution power, marketing skills and innovation capabilities that come with its size.

But this strength is also a weakness, as Coca-Cola’s business is anything but diversified. Sure, you can argue that different types of drinks are made, but drinks are the name of the game.

Ultimately, beverages represent only a small niche in the broader consumer staples sector. That’s why you might want to take a look at PepsiCo, one of Coca-Cola’s main competitors in the beverage niche.

PepsiCo adds a dominant position in salty snacks (Frito-Lay) and a substantial packaged foods business (Quaker Oats). This diversification can help smoother financial performance over time. That may limit profits to some extent, but if there is a problem in the beverage sector, it won’t derail PepsiCo like it would Coca-Cola.

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Meanwhile, Coca-Cola’s price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) is about the same as its five-year average. PepsiCo’s price-to-earnings ratio is currently just over 5% below its five-year average. And its dividend yield of 3.3% is slightly higher than Coca-Cola’s 3.1%. So PepsiCo looks a little cheaper, offers a little more return and has a much more diversified business. That should be attractive to more conservative investors.

There is another direction investors can take, and that is to focus on the broader consumer staples sector. Doing so could bring dominant companies like Procter & Gamble into consideration.

P&G makes consumables that people use every day and buy regularly. It has leading positions in products such as toothpaste, laundry detergent, toilet paper, paper towels, deodorant and diapers, to name a few. If you’re a fan of diversification, P&G offers that to you in a big way, noting that it tends to play at the high end of the product categories in which it competes.

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