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Coke and Pepsi bet on cane sugar to appeal to ingredient-conscious consumers

The news: Coca-Cola and PepsiCo are expanding their portfolios by leaning into better-for-you trends and ingredient transparency.

  • Coca-Cola will debut a soda made with US-grown sugar cane this fall, signaling a nod to changing consumer preferences around ingredient transparency and nostalgia. The move comes just a week after President Trump said he’d urged the beverage giant to replace high-fructose corn syrup with cane sugar in its signature product. While Coca-Cola already sells “Mexican Coke”—made with cane sugar and bottled in glass—the new launch marks a notable shift in its domestic formulation strategy.
  • Pepsi will launch Pepsi Prebiotic Cola this fall. This news, which comes just four months after the company announced its $1.95 billion acquisition of Poppi, gives the flagship Pepsi brand an entry into the functional beverage space, where brands incorporate health-boosting benefits into familiar formats.

Why is this happening? Both companies are attempting to breathe new life into the slowing carbonated soft drink market by tapping into wellness trends and ingredient transparency—without veering too far from their iconic products. By layering perceived health benefits or ingredient upgrades onto traditional colas, Coke and Pepsi are hedging their bets against shifting consumer preferences while defending their core categories.

Our take: Even with Coca-Cola and PepsiCo’s massive brand equity, they face the same fundamental challenge as all CPG brands: competing against private labels offering innovative flavors at lower prices while better-for-you upstarts chip away at brand loyalty.

While ingredients like cane sugar and prebiotics may not sway every shopper, they appeal to increasingly fragmented consumer preferences. Expect more targeted innovations as soda makers try to balance nostalgia with modern demands for wellness, transparency, and functional benefits.

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