Coca-Cola Co. KO 2.14% raised its outlook for the year, as rising vaccination rates and the reopening of restaurants, stadiums and movie theaters boost sales of soft drinks around the globe.

The beverage giant’s sales plummeted in 2020 when the Covid-19 pandemic closed dining and entertainment venues. The company’s revenue in the most recent quarter soared above last year’s levels and topped revenue in the same period in 2019.

Coke Chief Financial Officer John Murphy said the results show that consumers are starting to return to pre-pandemic consumption patterns. “There was a lot of conversation a year ago on whether social behavior was going to be permanently impacted by the pandemic,” Mr. Murphy said. “What we’re seeing is that is actually not the case. People want to get out and about.”

Coke’s sales volume for the quarter ended July 2 grew ahead of 2019 levels in markets such as China and Brazil but trailed in India, which was battered by the pandemic this spring. Overall, volume was down slightly from 2019.

The company’s net revenue for the quarter was $10.1 billion, a sharp rise from a year ago and up slightly from $10 billion in the same period in 2019.

Coke now expects organic revenue growth of 12% to 14% in 2021, up from a prior view of growing at a high-single-digit rate. It projects per-share earnings will grow between 13% and 15% this year, up from a prior forecast growth rate of between high single digits and low double digits.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

What did you find most interesting in Coca-Cola’s quarterly report? Join the conversation below.

“The second quarter has been a lot stronger than we anticipated given the progress made on vaccination and, ultimately, on mobility,” Mr. Murphy said.

Coke’s unit-case volume, or the number of 24 8-ounce servings of finished beverages sold, grew 18% in the quarter compared with the same period a year earlier. Its volume grew by 17% in North America; by 21% in Europe, the Middle East and Africa; by 12% in Latin America and by 16% in Asia.

Last week, PepsiCo Inc. —Coca-Cola’s biggest competitor—also raised its profit outlook for the year, citing an increase in consumer mobility this spring. Unlike Coke, PepsiCo is also in the snacks business. PepsiCo now expects a 6% organic revenue increase and an 11% increase in adjusted earnings in 2021, following a year in which sales dipped because of the pandemic. The company’s net revenue for the quarter ended June 12 was $19.2 billion compared with $16.4 billion in the same period in 2019.

Coke said its organic revenue for the quarter grew 37% compared with the same period last year. Profit for the quarter rose 49% to $2.6 billion.

Coke last year mitigated revenue declines and improved operating-profit margins through layoffs and other cost-cutting measures like narrowing its focus on core brands. It discontinued Tab, a diet soda popular in the 1970s, and Zico coconut water.

The company, which employed 80,300 people as of the end of last year, in December said it would cut 2,200 jobs.

Earnings in a Changing Pandemic

Copyright ©2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

This post first appeared on wsj.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Workers in China flee one of world’s largest iPhone factories amid Covid curbs

BEIJING — Migrant workers in central China are fleeing one of the…

In Duluth, Real Estate Collides With Climate

Times Insider explains who we are and what we do and delivers…

Prosecutors in Trump classified docs case plan to call digital forensics experts as witnesses

Federal prosecutors in special counsel Jack Smith’s office revealed in court filings…

Intel Ousts Chief Executive Bob Swan

Intel CEO Bob Swan on Jan. 7. Photo: Christoph Dernbach/Zuma Press By…