The market is full of earnings anxiety. With that, there’s something quietly reassuring about a company that sells the same product it did a hundred years ago, and keeps finding ways to grow faster than almost everyone around it.

Coca-Cola (KO) delivered a first-quarter 2026 earnings report that caught Wall Street‘s attention in the best possible way. While peers wrestled with cost pressures, Iran conflict disruptions, and downward EPS revisions, Coke beat estimates, raised full-year guidance, and saw its stock jump 3.9% on a day when the S&P 500 fell 0.5%.

“We’ve had a strong start to the year,” said Coca-Cola CEO Henrique Braun. “Our performance this quarter reflects our unwavering focus on staying close to the consumer, executing locally, and managing complexity.”

Morgan Stanley was already calling Coke its top pick heading into the print. After the results, the bank raised its price target to $89 from $87, reiterating its overweight rating, and the note carried the kind of conviction that goes beyond a routine quarterly update. 

The firm sees Coca-Cola as having long-term organic sales growth potential that is sustainably higher than its mega-cap consumer peers. In fact, that’s a bold claim in a category where everyone fights for fractions of a percentage point.

Coca-Cola’s Q126 results beat on volume, earnings, organic sales growth

The first quarter of 2026 wasn’t just a beat. It was a broad-based beat, the kind that holds up under scrutiny, regardless of which line you’re looking at.

Coca-Cola’s Q126 earnings results included:

  • Global unit case volume growth was 3%, versus 0.8% consensus, Morgan Stanley confirms.
  • Net revenues grew 12% to to $12.5 billion; organic revenues grew 10%.
  • Comparable EPS grew 18% to $0.86, ahead of the $0.81 consensus estimate, according to Morgan Stanley.
  • Operating income grew 19%.
  • Comparable operating margin was 34.5%, versus 33.8% in the prior year.
    Source: Coca-Cola First Quarter 2026 Results & Morgan Stanley Note

The volume number is the one Morgan Stanley highlighted most prominently. At 3% unit case growth against a tough 2% year-over-year comparison, Coca-Cola delivered balanced growth across all segments and well ahead of expectations. The company estimates that Easter’s shift into Q1 pulled forward approximately +0.5 points of volume benefit, a timing factor that will reverse in Q2.

The one blemish was gross margins, which missed by 80 basis points, primarily due to a one-time inventory item in Asia Pacific related to juice cost phasing.

Management characterized the miss as anomalous and confirmed that the item is not expected to repeat, according to Morgan Stanley’s note. However, commodity pressure in the APAC coffee business is expected to persist through the rest of the year.

Coca-Cola management noted that volume in the Eurasia and Middle East region declined in March after the onset of the Iran conflict.

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Coca-Cola raises full-year 2026 EPS guidance, while most peers cut theirs

The guidance raise is what separates Coca-Cola’s Q1 from a crowded field of decent prints.

  • FY2026 comparable EPS growth rose to 8% to 9% (from 7% to 8%), implying $3.24 – $3.27 versus $3.22 consensus, according to Morgan Stanley.
  • The growth was driven by a lower effective tax rate of 19.9% (from 20.9%), adding roughly $0.04 to EPS.
  • Organic revenue growth guidance was unchanged at 4% to 5%.
  • Operating cash flow held steady at approximately $14.4B.
  • FX tailwind is now expected at 1% to 2% for revenue and 3% for EPS.
  • Morgan Stanley raised 2026-2027 EPS estimates by 1%, maintaining a 25x CY27 P/E and a new $89 price target (14% upside).
    Source: Coca-Cola First Quarter 2026 Results & Morgan Stanley Note

The context matters. Morgan Stanley explicitly noted that the guidance raise stands in contrast to the negative EPS revisions broadly expected across consumer peers facing higher cost pressure from the Iran conflict.

Coke’s ability to raise guidance into that environment, not despite it, is precisely why the bank is paying a premium multiple.

Fairlife and pricing power are also Coca-Cola long-term growth engines

The bull case on Coke at Morgan Stanley is about a structural growth argument that the bank has been building for months. Not just about one strong quarter.

The firm identifies three interlocking reasons it believes Coca-Cola can sustain organic sales growth above its mega-cap consumer peers over the long term, according to its April 29 note.

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First, structural pricing power. Coke continues to gain share, supported by higher marketing spend, lower private-label exposure, and stronger emerging market pricing. U.S. scanner sales outperformance versus PepsiCo and Keurig Dr Pepper has reaccelerated to approximately 500 basis points, year to date (YTD), up from 350 points in 2025.

Second, the Fairlife ultra-filtered milk and protein brand is seen as an underappreciated contributor, positioned in high-growth segments. Expanded capacity in 2026 is flagged as one of two key near-term catalysts.

Third, durable volume growth. Coke has delivered above-peer historical volume growth even while pushing outsized pricing, a combination that most consumer staples companies can’t sustain simultaneously.

What Coca-Cola’s Iran conflict positioning means for investors 

Of course, Coke isn’t immune to geopolitical disruption. Management noted that volume in the Eurasia and Middle East region declined in March after the onset of the Iran conflict, according to Morgan Stanley’s note.

However, the company still gained value share in the region during Q1, and its exposure to commodity cost pressures stemming from the conflict remains more limited than that of most consumer peers.

That relative insulation is part of why Morgan Stanley views Coke as well-positioned in the current environment. With Iran war-driven commodity costs pressuring food and beverage margins broadly, a company that can raise EPS guidance while peers are cutting it occupies a rare and valuable position in a portfolio.

For investors navigating a market where certainty is scarce, Coca-Cola’s combination of pricing power, volume momentum, Fairlife growth optionality, and a management team willing to raise guidance in a difficult environment represents exactly the kind of durable compounding story Morgan Stanley is willing to call its top pick.

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