Apparently the name was derived from two ingredients: coca-leaf extract and caffeine from the kola nut.
A year later, Asa Candler, bought Pemberton out for $2,300.
Out of the 30.3 billion cases sold last year, 45% of those are from Coca-Cola itself. The company also owns Sprite, Fanta, Vitamin Water, Fresca, etc.
What are the components of the value chain? What role exactly does Coca-Cola play?
The other 83%, where the concentrate is sold, consists of independent bottlers.
They invest money in plants where the mixing of the concentrate and the bottling is done and in return, they get syrup supply and the weight of the Coca-Cola brand.
However, Coca-Cola is capital light. It's a whole lot easier making a combination of sugar than a car.
Gross margins are 61% and EBIT margins are 27%. Especially as the company has transitioned to selling concentrate, margins have increased.
Over the past 8 years, revenue has declined $9 billion but EBIT has stayed the same.
For instance, a few of Coca-Cola's bottlers are public like Coca-Cola Bottling (the ticker is COKE).
Rather than 60% gross and ~ 30% EBIT margins, COKE's margins are 34% and ~ 4% respectively.
Split into concentrate and finished products the revenue looks like this:
Concentrate: $20.5 billion
Finished: $16.8 billion
If you break that down per bottle (a case is 24, 8-oz servings) Coca-Cola gets 3 cents in revenue on the concentrate but keeps a little less than half of that in profit.
I don't think that's true but it's definitely not high. And the re-franchising strategy would back that up.
Stay asset-light by continuing to sell the concentrate to independent bottlers.
If you've enjoyed this, please check out the Business Breakdowns newsletter where we break down 2 business per month:
businessbreakdowns.substack.com