Revenue growing 16% with perfect inflation correlation trades at 8.42x earnings — boring stalwart priced like a turnaround.
This stable stalwart generates predictable cash flows with 13.4% operating margins, but at 8.42x earnings it's priced like a dying business — classic Lynch value in boring territory.
What type of company is this, and what should we expect from it?
This framework classifies CCEP as a textbook stalwart — the large, steady grower Lynch appreciates for downside protection. Revenue growth at 16% pushes the upper boundary of stalwart territory, while the massive shareholder returns and stable margins confirm a mature business generating reliable cash.
Can I explain to an eleven-year-old why this company grows?
The growth story is beautifully simple: CCEP bottles the world's most recognized beverages and raises prices with inflation. Any child understands Coca-Cola, and the 0.973 inflation correlation proves pricing power that drives consistent growth.
Am I paying a fair price for the growth I'm getting?
Applying this lens reveals exceptional value — the P/E of 8.42x against double-digit growth produces a PEG well below Lynch's 1.0 threshold. The market's implied negative growth rate creates the kind of pessimistic pricing Lynch sought in stalwarts.
Can this company survive trouble?
The balance sheet passes Lynch's survival test with flying colors — 15x interest coverage means debt poses no threat, while the COVID stress test proved the business can weather extreme disruption. This financial strength enables the massive shareholder returns Lynch appreciates in mature companies.
Applying the Lynch framework reveals a classic stalwart trading at fast-grower discounts — 8.42x earnings for a business with perfect pricing power, fortress balance sheet, and 16% growth. The simple story (everyone knows Coca-Cola), sustainable competitive advantages, and pessimistic valuation create the setup Lynch loved in boring companies. Why is the market pricing permanent decline into a business that profits from inflation?
This analysis applies Peter Lynch's published investment framework to publicly available financial data. It is not authored by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Peter Lynch. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.