Best Stock to Buy Right Now: Coca-Cola vs. Walmart

Source The Motley Fool

Key Points

  • Both companies are leaders in their respective markets.

  • Consumer preferences are changing, in turn changing what makes these two industries tick.

  • One of these names is more prepared for this evolution than the other.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Walmart ›

Obviously the two companies are different; Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) is a family of several popular beverage brands, while Walmart (NYSE: WMT) is a consumer goods retailer.

Their fortunes, however, are ultimately tethered to the same market dynamics -- both companies must offer value to value-conscious consumers, and both companies must constantly promote themselves. And, both organizations have typically done a great job on both fronts, similarly rewarding shareholders as a result.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Continue »

If you've only got room in your portfolio for one of these names right now though, it's Walmart -- probably.

A customer purchasing canned soda in a retail store.

Image source: Getty Images.

Walmart and Coca-Cola, up close and personal

Coca-Cola is the world's biggest and best-known beverage company, while Walmart is the world's biggest and best-known brick-and-mortar retailer. The beverage giant has been around since 1886, and has woven itself into the fabric of our culture. Indeed, it's not unusual to see the Coca-Cola name and familiar red and white logo on home décor, clothing, or Christmas ornaments.

Walmart hasn't been around nearly as long, only opening its first store in 1962, and not becoming prolific until the 1980s. In a way it's also woven itself into the same fabric of our culture, though, operating almost 10,800 stores, nearly half of which are located within the United States. If you live in the United States, there's a 90% chance you live within 10 miles of a Walmart store (when including its Sam's Club warehouses). Roughly 150 million people living in the U.S. buy something from Walmart every week, contributing to its annual revenue on the order of $700 billion.

Both companies continue to improve their top and bottom lines, too, leveraging their reach and established brand names. Notably, Walmart continues to attract higher-income shoppers it didn't prior to the pandemic.

One of these organizations isn't quite what it seems to be on the surface, however. That's Coca-Cola.

And it matters.

Coca-Cola isn't actually much of a bottler anymore, here or abroad. It instead punts most of its bottling work to third-party partners who handle production as well as distribution. Also bear in mind that while you prominently see its branded sodas on store shelves, that's far from being its only business. Roughly two-thirds of last quarter's $12.5 billion in revenue came from the sale of concentrated flavor syrups to restaurants and similar venues, which mix and serve these beverages in a cup. The Coca-Cola Company is also parent to non-soda brands like Gold Peak tea, Powerade sports drink, Minute Maid juices, Dasani water, and more.

And this is where and why things are starting to get tricky for Coca-Cola, while Walmart just keeps chugging along.

The seemingly little things aren't always little

Coca-Cola isn't built to thrive in the future like it has in the past, for a couple of key reasons.

One of these reasons is changing consumer preference. Although sugary sodas are certainly still marketable, more and more consumers are looking for healthier options. The company is responding to this shift, launching a line of prebiotic sodas -- called Simply Pop -- in February of this year. But Coca-Cola may find it isn't easy to meaningfully break into a new sliver of the market when other, smaller players like Olipop, Zevia, and Poppi have already been around a while and established their own customer bases.

Adding to this challenge is consumers' growing support for smaller brands that offer the authenticity they crave. Although Coca-Cola's marketing approach worked well for decades, well-informed consumers can now recognize a product like Simply (or any of the company's other efforts to remain relevant) are merely corporate-manufactured responses to trends. The Coca-Cola Company's mass-marketing apparatus may not be ready for the next era of marketing, which focuses heavily on social media and word-of-mouth recommendations from real people.

And the other change quietly working against Coca-Cola? Inflation in an environment where consumers as well as bottlers have alternatives.

It's not blatantly obvious, but there are more beverage brands now than there have been in the past. Credit the internet, mostly, which has allowed these small brands to not only connect with consumers, but also sell directly to them, further fragmenting the beverage market. Even restaurants are getting creative, coming up with their own concoctions to compete with the Coca-Cola products they're also serving. It's not clear to what extent -- if any -- these innovations have chipped away at Coca-Cola's dominance. They've certainly not helped.

As for bottlers, when Coke and Pepsi were the only two viable options, partnering with one or the other made sense. These aren't bottlers' only options anymore, however. While they're still two of the best, pressured by ever-rising costs and a Coca-Cola name that doesn't quite have the marketing cache it did in the past, it's conceivable that more and more bottlers could begin pushing back on Coke, questioning the value and cost of these partnerships.

Meanwhile, Walmart continues to sail forward, with no competitors that can match the power of its sheer scale. For perspective, whereas Walmart's same-stores sales in the U.S. last quarter were up 5.3% year over year, rival Target's fell 3.8%, while Coca-Cola's unit volume sales improved a scant 1% for the same three-month stretch.

These seemingly small disparities arguably point to much bigger -- and longer-lived -- underpinnings.

Not a warning -- just a risk/reward-minded choice

Coca-Cola is hardly doomed. And if you need dividend income, this Dividend King is a good one to own, yielding 2.8% based on a dividend that's now been raised for 63 consecutive years. This streak isn't likely to end anytime soon, either.

If you're looking for reliable growth and value-building profits -- and don't need immediate investment income -- Walmart is the better option here and now. Unlike Coca-Cola, consumers as well as its suppliers/partners still have every reason and desire to continue doing business with the retailing behemoth.

Should you invest $1,000 in Walmart right now?

Before you buy stock in Walmart, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Walmart wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $563,022!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $1,090,012!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 991% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 192% for the S&P 500. Don’t miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of November 24, 2025

James Brumley has positions in Coca-Cola. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Target and Walmart. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
2025 Black Friday is coming! Which stocks may see volatility?Coming on the day right after Thanksgiving in the United States, Back Friday marks the start of the holiday shopping season. Sales data from this shopping frenzy day reflects investor confidence and consumer trends. The National Retail Federation (NRF) predicts that holiday season (Nov and Dec) retail sales in 2025 will likely exceed $1 trillion for the very first time, which represents a year-over-year increase of 3.7 to 4.2 percent. Historic data from the past decade show that the retail sector has generally outperformed the S&P 500 during the weeks before and after Black Friday. The following retailing companies are expected to be big winners:
Author  Insights
Nov 24, Mon
Coming on the day right after Thanksgiving in the United States, Back Friday marks the start of the holiday shopping season. Sales data from this shopping frenzy day reflects investor confidence and consumer trends. The National Retail Federation (NRF) predicts that holiday season (Nov and Dec) retail sales in 2025 will likely exceed $1 trillion for the very first time, which represents a year-over-year increase of 3.7 to 4.2 percent. Historic data from the past decade show that the retail sector has generally outperformed the S&P 500 during the weeks before and after Black Friday. The following retailing companies are expected to be big winners:
placeholder
Bitcoin Bleeds to $86K, But This Key Indicator Screams "The Top Isn't In"Bitcoin’s adjusted Spent Output Profit Ratio (aSOPR) has spent nearly two years coiling below the extremes seen at past bull-market peaks, even as BTC trades around $86,300 and down 9% on the week — a setup that leaves open the possibility that this cycle’s true top may still lie ahead.
Author  Mitrade
Nov 25, Tue
Bitcoin’s adjusted Spent Output Profit Ratio (aSOPR) has spent nearly two years coiling below the extremes seen at past bull-market peaks, even as BTC trades around $86,300 and down 9% on the week — a setup that leaves open the possibility that this cycle’s true top may still lie ahead.
placeholder
Bitcoin Price Rebound Gains Traction with $90K Break in SightBitcoin is trading above $87,000 and its 100-hour SMA after rebounding from $83,500, with a bearish trend line at $88,200 and resistance at $89,000–$90,000 now in focus as BTC either breaks higher toward $91,750–$94,000 or slips back toward $86,700, $85,000 and lower supports.
Author  Mitrade
Yesterday 02: 58
Bitcoin is trading above $87,000 and its 100-hour SMA after rebounding from $83,500, with a bearish trend line at $88,200 and resistance at $89,000–$90,000 now in focus as BTC either breaks higher toward $91,750–$94,000 or slips back toward $86,700, $85,000 and lower supports.
placeholder
Bitcoin Targets $89K Breakout as S&P 500 Nears ATH on Fed Rate Cut HopesBitcoin price action shows signs of a potential short squeeze as it hovers near $88,000, with analysts watching liquidity dynamics that could push it toward $89,000 or retrace to $85,000.
Author  Mitrade
7 hours ago
Bitcoin price action shows signs of a potential short squeeze as it hovers near $88,000, with analysts watching liquidity dynamics that could push it toward $89,000 or retrace to $85,000.
placeholder
Ethereum Reclaims $3K Handle—Is a Breakout Imminent?Ethereum has jumped back above $3,000 and reclaimed key Fib levels, with a bullish trend line at $2,880 and strong MACD/RSI readings putting a breakout above $3,120–$3,165 — and a possible run toward $3,320–$3,350 — on the table, as long as support around $2,980–$2,920 holds.
Author  Mitrade
7 hours ago
Ethereum has jumped back above $3,000 and reclaimed key Fib levels, with a bullish trend line at $2,880 and strong MACD/RSI readings putting a breakout above $3,120–$3,165 — and a possible run toward $3,320–$3,350 — on the table, as long as support around $2,980–$2,920 holds.
goTop
quote