Welcome to our dedicated page for Coca Cola Co SEC filings (Ticker: KO), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
The Coca-Cola Company's SEC filings document the regulatory record for a global beverage issuer with NYSE-listed common stock and multiple registered notes. Form 8-K reports record material corporate events and identify the company's listed securities, including common stock and notes maturing across several years.
Proxy materials for The Coca-Cola Company cover board composition, director elections, governance practices and executive compensation disclosures. The filings provide formal detail on shareowner voting matters, officer and director governance, capital-structure securities and other disclosure obligations tied to KO's public-company status.
Coca-Cola (KO) disclosed a new insider filing. A Form 3 initial statement of beneficial ownership shows Director Max R. Levchin as a reporting person. As of the event date, 10/16/2025, he reported 0 shares of Coca-Cola common stock beneficially owned in Table I and listed no derivative securities in Table II. The filing indicates it was submitted by one reporting person.
The Coca-Cola Company appointed Max Levchin to its Board of Directors, effective immediately on October 16, 2025, and named him to the Board’s Talent and Compensation Committee.
For 2025, he will receive a prorated portion of the standard non‑employee director compensation: $90,000 paid in cash quarterly and $200,000 in deferred share units under the Directors’ Plan. The company stated there are no transactions requiring disclosure under Item 404(a) of Regulation S‑K and no arrangements or understandings pursuant to which he was selected. A press release announcing his election was furnished as Exhibit 99.1.
Luisa Ortega, Europe OU President at The Coca-Cola Company (KO), filed an initial Form 3 reporting ownership and equity awards. She directly holds 31,576 shares of Common Stock, which include 6,437 restricted stock units that vest 100% on February 29, 2028. The filing lists employee stock options covering 7,628, 10,684, 21,848, 18,284, 29,343 and 33,424 underlying shares with specified exercise prices and staggered exercisable dates from 2019 through 2034.
KO Form 4 (filed 08/07/2025, trade date 08/05/2025): Europe OU President Nikolaos Koumettis sold 37,396 shares of Coca-Cola common stock. The open-market transaction (Code “S”) was executed at a weighted-average price of $69.1011 within a $69.08-$69.135 range. After the sale, the insider’s direct holdings decline to 209,513 shares; no indirect or derivative positions were reported.
No shares were purchased and no derivatives exercised; the filing does not list a 10b5-1 plan check-box as marked. This single disposal equals roughly 15% of Koumettis’s previously reported direct stake but is immaterial relative to Coca-Cola’s ~4.3 bn shares outstanding.
Insider sales can reflect diversification rather than a view on fundamentals, yet sustained or clustered selling may warrant monitoring. Overall company financials and guidance are unaffected by this isolated Form 4.
Coca-Cola (KO) Form 4 – insider activity. Executive Vice President Beatriz R. Perez reported gifting 43,847 common shares on 08/04/2025 (transaction code G). The entry shows a $0 price, confirming a no-consideration transfer, likely charitable, rather than an open-market sale. Following the gift, Perez’s direct holdings fall to 143,869 shares, while she retains 23,808 shares in the company 401(k) plan and 12,125 hypothetical shares in a supplemental 401(k). No derivatives were exercised and no cash proceeds were realized. The change represents roughly 0.003 % of Coca-Cola’s shares outstanding and does not affect the company’s share count, liquidity or guidance. Overall market impact appears negligible.
The Coca-Cola Company (KO) posted solid profit growth in Q2-25 despite essentially flat top-line trends. Net operating revenue rose 1.4% to $12.54 bn, but operating income jumped 63% to $4.28 bn as selling & admin costs fell 2% and other operating charges plunged to $71 m (vs. $1.37 bn a year ago). Net income attributable to shareowners surged 58% to $3.81 bn; diluted EPS climbed to $0.88 from $0.56.
For the first half, revenue was unchanged at $23.66 bn, yet operating income advanced 66% to $7.94 bn and diluted EPS increased 28% to $1.65. Equity income, gains on divestitures (notably a $331 m gain on partial sale of CCEP stake and $102 m gain on India refranchising) and lower operating charges all supported margin expansion.
Balance sheet trends: cash declined to $9.59 bn (-11% YTD) as operating cash flow swung to a $1.39 bn outflow, driven by a $9.2 bn working-capital build. Long-term debt rose 6% to $44.98 bn; shareowners’ equity improved to $28.59 bn, aided by $8.23 bn of comprehensive income.
Key risks: KO paid a $6.0 bn deposit related to its ongoing U.S. transfer-pricing dispute; potential incremental tax/interest exposure for 2010-24 is estimated at ~$12 bn, and tax reserve was lifted to $493 m. Operating cash drain, higher inventories, and a 34% increase in short-term borrowings (commercial paper) also warrant monitoring.
Overall: Profitability and margins strengthened materially, but flat revenue and weaker cash generation offset some positives. The pending tax case remains a material overhang.
Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) filed an 8-K dated June 26 2025. The submission, labeled as a material event, contains only XBRL taxonomy references and balance-sheet tag listings. No narrative explanation, quantitative results, management changes, transactions, or forward-looking statements were provided. The document appears to satisfy routine reporting requirements rather than announce a discrete corporate action. Investors are advised that no material changes were disclosed.