With 64 consecutive years of increasing its dividend and a 2.6% yield, Coca-Cola (KO +0.20%) is one of the most reliable ways to participate in the stock market while collecting passive income. But Coke’s dividend has played a supporting role in recent years.
The real star of the show has been its soaring stock price. Coke jumped 12.3% in 2025 and is already up 14.2% year to date – crushing the S&P 500’s (^GSPC +0.77%) 0.9% return.
Coke remains one of the most intriguing dividend stocks to buy now. But I think **Campbell’s **(CPB +0.68%) is a far better buy. Here’s why.
Image source: Getty Images.
Campbell’s is more than just a soup company
Campbell’s is known for its flagship soup label, but it also owns several meal and snack brands, from Prego, Rao’s Homemade, Pace, and V8 to Goldfish, Lance, Snyder’s of Hanover, Pepperidge Farm, Cape Cod, and Kettle. The company has been diversifying its revenue stream by relying less on salty meals and snacks, with brands and product versions specially catered to health-conscious consumers.
Expand
NASDAQ: CPB
Campbell’s
Today’s Change
(0.68%) $0.18
Current Price
$27.30
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$8.1B
Day’s Range
$26.95 - $27.69
52wk Range
$25.62 - $43.85
Volume
207K
Avg Vol
7M
Gross Margin
29.84%
Dividend Yield
5.72%
Coke faces the same challenge, given its heavy reliance on Coca-Cola and other sodas. In 2025, 69% of Coke’s worldwide case volume was soft drinks. Meanwhile, its trademark cola accounted for 42% of U.S. unit case volume and 48% of non-U.S. unit case volume.
Lower-calorie and sugar-free versions of Coke continue to perform well, but the company is still heavily reliant on one brand, leaving it vulnerable to changing consumer preferences.
Still, Coke’s results speak for themselves, as the company has done a masterful job of maintaining organic growth and ultra-high margins thanks to its elite supply chain, distributed bottling network, and unmatched global brand recognition.
Expand
NYSE: KO
Coca-Cola
Today’s Change
(0.20%) $0.16
Current Price
$80.72
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$347B
Day’s Range
$79.85 - $81.09
52wk Range
$65.35 - $81.09
Volume
3.9K
Avg Vol
18M
Gross Margin
61.75%
Dividend Yield
2.53%
A better value with a higher yield
Coca-Cola deserves a premium valuation, but Campbell’s is simply too deep in the bargain bin to ignore.
Campbell’s fetches a mere 11.1 forward price-to-earnings ratio compared to 24.7 for Coke.
CPB PE Ratio (10y Median) data by YCharts
Unlike Coke, Campbell’s has struggled to pass along costs to consumers. But it is still generating ample free cash flow and earnings to cover its dividend. In fact, Campbell’s has a similar payout ratio to Coke and better free-cash-flow conversion over the trailing 12 months.
CPB Free Cash Flow Per Share data by YCharts
Campbell’s doesn’t have Coke’s elite track record of boosting its payout, but it has maintained or raised its dividend every year since 2002. And it yields 5.8% – which is substantially more than Coke.
Campbell’s is the better income stock
Coke remains an ultra-reliable dividend stock, but the stock price has increased at a far faster rate in recent years than its earnings, which has inflated its valuation. By comparison, Campbell’s is deeply discounted even though its dividend expense is manageable.
All told, Campbell’s is the better buy for income investors looking to give their passive income stream a jolt.
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Coca-Cola Stock Is Interesting, but Here's What I'd Buy Instead
With 64 consecutive years of increasing its dividend and a 2.6% yield, Coca-Cola (KO +0.20%) is one of the most reliable ways to participate in the stock market while collecting passive income. But Coke’s dividend has played a supporting role in recent years.
The real star of the show has been its soaring stock price. Coke jumped 12.3% in 2025 and is already up 14.2% year to date – crushing the S&P 500’s (^GSPC +0.77%) 0.9% return.
Coke remains one of the most intriguing dividend stocks to buy now. But I think **Campbell’s **(CPB +0.68%) is a far better buy. Here’s why.
Image source: Getty Images.
Campbell’s is more than just a soup company
Campbell’s is known for its flagship soup label, but it also owns several meal and snack brands, from Prego, Rao’s Homemade, Pace, and V8 to Goldfish, Lance, Snyder’s of Hanover, Pepperidge Farm, Cape Cod, and Kettle. The company has been diversifying its revenue stream by relying less on salty meals and snacks, with brands and product versions specially catered to health-conscious consumers.
Expand
NASDAQ: CPB
Campbell’s
Today’s Change
(0.68%) $0.18
Current Price
$27.30
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$8.1B
Day’s Range
$26.95 - $27.69
52wk Range
$25.62 - $43.85
Volume
207K
Avg Vol
7M
Gross Margin
29.84%
Dividend Yield
5.72%
Coke faces the same challenge, given its heavy reliance on Coca-Cola and other sodas. In 2025, 69% of Coke’s worldwide case volume was soft drinks. Meanwhile, its trademark cola accounted for 42% of U.S. unit case volume and 48% of non-U.S. unit case volume.
Lower-calorie and sugar-free versions of Coke continue to perform well, but the company is still heavily reliant on one brand, leaving it vulnerable to changing consumer preferences.
Still, Coke’s results speak for themselves, as the company has done a masterful job of maintaining organic growth and ultra-high margins thanks to its elite supply chain, distributed bottling network, and unmatched global brand recognition.
Expand
NYSE: KO
Coca-Cola
Today’s Change
(0.20%) $0.16
Current Price
$80.72
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$347B
Day’s Range
$79.85 - $81.09
52wk Range
$65.35 - $81.09
Volume
3.9K
Avg Vol
18M
Gross Margin
61.75%
Dividend Yield
2.53%
A better value with a higher yield
Coca-Cola deserves a premium valuation, but Campbell’s is simply too deep in the bargain bin to ignore.
Campbell’s fetches a mere 11.1 forward price-to-earnings ratio compared to 24.7 for Coke.
CPB PE Ratio (10y Median) data by YCharts
Unlike Coke, Campbell’s has struggled to pass along costs to consumers. But it is still generating ample free cash flow and earnings to cover its dividend. In fact, Campbell’s has a similar payout ratio to Coke and better free-cash-flow conversion over the trailing 12 months.
CPB Free Cash Flow Per Share data by YCharts
Campbell’s doesn’t have Coke’s elite track record of boosting its payout, but it has maintained or raised its dividend every year since 2002. And it yields 5.8% – which is substantially more than Coke.
Campbell’s is the better income stock
Coke remains an ultra-reliable dividend stock, but the stock price has increased at a far faster rate in recent years than its earnings, which has inflated its valuation. By comparison, Campbell’s is deeply discounted even though its dividend expense is manageable.
All told, Campbell’s is the better buy for income investors looking to give their passive income stream a jolt.