Which benefit is actually safe?


  • Coca-Cola ( KO ) has a 64-year upside, a 2.6% yield, and a 72% FCF payout ratio. PepsiCo ( PEP ) has 54 years of $7.67B FCF, a 3.5% yield, and a 98% FCF payout barely covering the $7.64B in dividends.

  • Coca-Cola’s improved FCF guidance rebuilds dividend coverage after 2025 analyzed results, while PepsiCo’s near-zero FCF margin leaves no buffer for further earnings or volume pressure.

  • An analyst named NVIDIA just named his top 10 AI stocks in 2010. Get it for free here.

Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO ) and PepsiCo (NASDAQ: PEP ) are both dividend kings, but “reliable” isn’t the same as “equally safe.” Here’s what the numbers show.

Coca-Cola sells beverages in nearly every country, generating $47.9 billion in revenue by FY2025 from brands such as Coca-Cola Zero Sugar, Sprite, Fair Life, and Powerade. The dividend streak stands at 64 consecutive annual increases. The current quarterly payout is $0.53 per share, with an ex-dividend date of March 13, 2026.

Matric

value

Annual dividend

$2.06 per share

Dividend yield

2.6%

Continuous increase

64 years

King of Vish

yes

FY2025 EPS

$3.04

Earnings payout ratio

67%

An income payout ratio of 67% sounds healthy, but cash flow is more complicated. Coca-Cola paid $8.8 billion in dividends in fiscal 2025 against $7.4 billion in operating cash flow and $5.3 billion in reported free cash flow. Reported FCF was depressed by the one-time Fair Life mandatory consideration payment. Management has guided FY2026 free cash flow of approximately $12.2 billion, management’s FCF payout ratio to around 72%, and the 2025 figure is skewed. The balance sheet has $70.5 billion versus $10.3 billion in cash and $32.2 billion in shareholders’ equity.

READ: The analyst named NVIDIA in 2010 Just naming his top 10 AI stocks

“I am encouraged by our performance in 2025, which demonstrates both the flexibility and momentum that define our business,” CEO James Quincey said in the Q4 2025 earnings call. 2026 guidance for 7% to 8% comparable EPS growth from a $3.00 base suggests the dividend cushion will rebuild this year.

Coca-Cola shares were sold by multiple executives in late February and early March at prices between $77 and $80.75, while the consensus equity offering suggests a normal tax-driven balance rather than a loss of confidence.

PepsiCo combines beverages with Frito-Lay snacks and Quaker foods. Fiscal 2025 revenue reached $93.9 billion, but it was a difficult year: operating income fell 19.6% and net income fell 14%, driven by $1.993 billion in Rockstar brand impairment and restructuring costs.

Matric

value

Annual dividend

$5.92 per share (effective June 2026)

Dividend yield

3.5%

Continuous increase

54 years

King of Vish

yes

FY2025 EPS

$8.14

Earnings payout ratio

69%

FCF payout ratio

~98%

FCF image is a key concern. PepsiCo generated $7.67 billion in free cash flow in FY2025 versus $7.64 billion in dividends paid — essentially a 1.0x coverage ratio to no fault. In 2024, the FCF of $7.19 billion was only deducted from the dividend payment of $7.23 billion. Income payout ratio increased to 95% by 2025. Profitability is higher than Coca-Cola’s: total liabilities of $86.9 billion against $20.4 billion in shareholders’ equity, with the company holding nearly $9.2 billion in cash as a near-term buffer.

CEO Ramon LaGuarta announced the latest increase in Q4 2025: “We are pleased to announce a 4 percent increase in our annual dividend starting with the payment of June 2026, representing our 54th consecutive annual increase.” Management also approved a $10 billion share repurchase program through February 2030, while actual repurchases by 2025 were modest at $1.0 billion.

Coke’s Share Safety Rating: Safe

Pepsi’s Share Safety Rating: Medium Risk

Coca-Cola’s 2026 guided FCF of $12.2 billion puts 2025 diluted post-dividend on a strong footing. A 64-year streak, low profitability, and brisk EPS guidance make this dividend streak structurally more supportive. PepsiCo’s nearly 100% FCF payout ratio, increasing earnings payouts, and year-over-year earnings pressure leave little room for error. A 3.5% yield is impressive, but yield alone is not a reason for safety. If commodity costs from tariffs accelerate or North American volumes decline deeply, Pepsi’s FCF coverage could fall further below 1.0x.

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