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Coca-Cola’s decision to offer its flagship drink with cane sugar instead of high fructose corn syrup is as much about trade policy as it is about health policy.
James Quincey, CEO of The Coca-Cola Company, gave Fox News an exclusive first look at a prototype of the new product during an interview earlier this week.
Coca-Cola FEMSA offers growth, yield, and stability. Undervalued with strong margins, it's a top pick for long-term investors ...
That’s according to a new MarketWatch poll on X that elicited more than 1,800 responses. The survey followed Coca-Cola’s KO ...
Coca-Cola said it will add a cane-sugar version of its trademark cola to its U.S. lineup this fall, confirming a recent ...
Coca-Cola’s announcement to launch a new cane sugar-sweetened variant in the United States this fall marks a departure from ...
Few people preferred Coca Cola sweetened with cane sugar during an unscientific taste test at the Navy Pier offices of the ...
It will likely taste a lot like Mexican Coke, which is made with cane sugar and has long been touted as being “better” than U ...
Cane sugar and high fructose corn syrup both consist of similar sugars and calories, but consumers often debate their health impacts.
Top soda makers are expanding or contemplating use of cane sugar as a sweetener. But this move is likely to cause ...
Trump said in a social media post last week that Coca-Cola had agreed to use real cane sugar in its flagship product in the U ...
Coca-Cola's move comes a week after President Trump said he had been talking to the soft drink giant about using cane sugar ...