Warren Buffett has made a lot of famous bets over the years. His Coca-Cola trade might be the quietest one — and the most lucrative.
Berkshire Hathaway built its 400 million share position in KO in the early 1990s. Since then, Buffett hasn’t touched it. He’s just let the dividends roll in.
The Coca-Cola Company, KO
In 1994, that position generated $75 million in dividends. This year, it’s on track to deliver $848 million — without Berkshire selling a single share.
Berkshire’s cumulative dividend yield on its original cost basis is now around 60%.
KO currently pays a quarterly dividend of $0.53 per share, giving it a yield of around 2.84%. That alone makes it one of the more reliable income plays in the market.
More telling is the streak. Coca-Cola has raised its dividend every year for 64 consecutive years. That puts it firmly in “Dividend King” territory — a label reserved for companies with 50 or more straight years of dividend growth.
Few companies anywhere can match that track record.
The stock itself has held up well in rough markets. During the 2022 bear market, when the S&P 500 fell roughly 18%, KO returned nearly 11%.
On Wall Street, the view on KO is broadly positive. Of 15 analysts covering the stock, 14 have it rated Buy and one has it at Hold. The consensus is a Strong Buy.
The average price target sits at $85.07, implying around 8.7% upside from current levels.
KO trades at a market cap of approximately $321 billion. Its 52-week range runs from $65.35 to $82.00.
With markets volatile in 2026 — the Shiller P/E still elevated near 37, uncertainty around the Iran conflict and rising energy prices — defensive names like KO have attracted renewed attention.
Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B), also flagged as a defensive play, returned 3% during the 2022 downturn versus the S&P’s 18% loss. It’s down about 4% this year, partly attributed to the leadership transition from Buffett to new CEO Greg Abel.
KO’s current price of $74.67 is up 7% year to date, with a day’s range of $74.63 to $75.69.
The post Coca-Cola (KO) Stock — Why Buffett Has Held It for 30 Years Without Selling appeared first on CoinCentral.


