The stock market has gotten off to a rocky start to the year, with the broader market down about 5% this year (as of March 28) and regularly experiencing wild swings.
Coca-Cola (KO) closed the most recent trading day at $71.87, moving +0.35% from the previous trading session.
Recently, Zacks.com users have been paying close attention to Coca-Cola (KO). This makes it worthwhile to examine what the stock has in store.
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In January 1967, Berkshire Hathaway did something it's done only once in the company's history: It paid a cash dividend. Warren Buffett wrote to Berkshire shareholders earlier this year: "I can't remember why I suggested this action to Berkshire's board of directors.
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Shares of Coca-Cola ( NYSE: KO ) remained mostly flat over the past month, experiencing a -0.39% loss compared to the S&P 500's loss of -5.76% over the same period.
Coca-Cola (KO) reachead $68.81 at the closing of the latest trading day, reflecting a -0.2% change compared to its last close.
The recall began on March 6, when a Milwaukee-based bottling company alerted authorities that plastic fragments might have entered certain cans.
If I were Warren Buffett, I probably wouldn't be able to wipe the smile off my face. While the overall stock market has fallen this year, his beloved Berkshire Hathaway has delivered an impressive gain of around 17%.
For investors who are old enough to remember, the latter half of 1990s was an incredible time. The advent of the internet and the subsequent proliferation of personal computers was going strong, yet conventional cable television and broadcast radio were still the chief way people consumed live media.
It's not every day, or every year, that Coca-Cola (KO -1.46%) stock beats the market. In fact, it's been a rare occurrence over the past 30 years.