Warren Buffett drinks 5 cans of Coke a day — here’s why he switched from Pepsi after nearly 50 years

Warren buffett cherry cokeRick Wilking/Reuters

  • War­ren Buf­fett famous­ly con­sumes five cans of Coke a day.
  • How­ev­er, Berk­shire Hath­away’s bil­lion­aire boss drank Pep­si for near­ly 50 years, and only switched sodas because an old neigh­bor inter­vened.
  • Don Keough, a cof­fee sales­man who lived across the street from Buf­fett in Oma­ha and down a chance to with him, even­tu­al­ly became Coca-Cola’s pres­i­dent and oper­at­ing chief.
  • After learn­ing Buf­fett drank Pep­si-Cola Cher­ry, Keough sent him sam­ples of the upcom­ing Cher­ry Coke, spurring Buf­fett to switch brands and pro­nounce Cher­ry Coke as the offi­cial drink of Berk­shire Hath­away’s share­hold­er meet­ing.
  • View Insid­er’s home­page for more sto­ries.

War­ren Buf­fett famous­ly con­sumes five cans of Coke a day. How­ev­er, he drank Pep­si for near­ly 50 years, and only switched sodas because an old neigh­bor inter­vened, Glen Arnold wrote in “The Deals of War­ren Buf­fett Vol­ume 2: The Mak­ing of a Bil­lion­aire.”

“I’m one quar­ter Coca-Cola,” the 89-year-old told For­tune in 2015, explain­ing the drink accounts for 25% of his calo­rie intake.

Buf­fet­t’s mon­ey has fol­lowed his mouth. His Berk­shire Hath­away con­glom­er­ate owns about 10% of Coca-Cola, a stake worth around $22 bil­lion.

The so-called Ora­cle of Oma­ha espe­cial­ly likes Cher­ry Coke. He agreed to have a car­toon of him­self slapped on cans of the drink when it launched in Chi­na in 2017, and declined to a fee, he told Yahoo Finance.

How­ev­er, Buf­fett isn’t a life­time loy­al­ist. His son Howard used to call him “Pep­si War­ren” because of his affin­i­ty for the rival soda, one of Howard’s child­hood friends told CNBC.

Buf­fett switched to Coke because of Don Keough, a cof­fee sales­man who lived across the street from him in Oma­ha, Arnold wrote. In 1960, Buf­fett dropped by Keough’s house to inform him that he was start­ing a part­ner­ship, adding, “If you me $10,000 I might be able to do some­thing with it.”

Keough was skep­ti­cal of Buf­fett, giv­en his neigh­bor lacked a con­ven­tion­al job and found time to enter­tain his kids dur­ing the day. 

“I did­n’t have it, but I could’ve bor­rowed it from my father. But can you imag­ine giv­ing $10,000 to a guy who does­n’t get up and go to work in the morn­ing?” Keough said in a TV inter­view with for­mer Dis­ney CEO Michael Eis­ner.

Keough missed a trick. A $10,000 invest­ment with Buf­fett could have been worth $93 mil­lion by 2018, Arnold esti­mat­ed.

Keough’s com­pa­ny was ulti­mate­ly bought by Coca-Cola in 1964, and he rose through the ranks to become the group’s pres­i­dent and chief oper­at­ing offi­cer in 1981. Four years lat­er, he read in a mag­a­zine that Buf­fett was a fan of Pep­si-Cola Cher­ry. He swift­ly wrote to his for­mer neigh­bor, offer­ing to send him some sam­ples of the still-in-devel­op­ment Cher­ry Coke, which he described as “nec­tar of the gods.” 

The sam­ples hit the mark. In 1986, Buf­fett warned his share­hold­ers to expect a change at Berk­shire Hath­away’s year­ly gath­er­ing.

“After 48 years of alle­giance to anoth­er soft drink, your Chair­man, in an unprece­dent­ed dis­play of behav­ioral flex­i­bil­i­ty, has con­vert­ed to the new Cher­ry Coke. Hence­forth, it be the Offi­cial Drink of the Berk­shire Hath­away Annu­al Meet­ing.”

Keough isn’t only respon­si­ble for Buf­fet­t’s favorite soda. His lead­er­ship of Coca-Cola — com­bined with the stock-mar­ket crash in Octo­ber 1987, and the com­pa­ny’s growth and strong fun­da­men­tals — led to Buf­fett buy­ing $1.3 bil­lion worth of its stock between 1988 and 1994, Arnold wrote.

Read More

Leave a Comment