Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) took a significant hit on Friday as investors reacted sharply to news of a cyberattack targeting one of its subsidiaries.
The beverage giant’s shares fell 4% on Friday after the company disclosed that its dairy brand fairlife had been compromised by an unauthorized third party.
Coca-Cola revealed the breach after market close on Thursday, describing “unauthorized access by a third party to a portion of its systems” in connection with a ransomware situation.
The affected subsidiary, fairlife, is a producer of ultra-filtered milk products and other next-generation dairy offerings with annual revenue topping $3 billion.
Upon detecting the breach, Coca-Cola said it activated its incident response and business continuity protocols to contain the damage and protect its systems.
As part of its response, the company has temporarily suspended fairlife production operations in the United States, though Canadian production facilities have not been affected at this stage.
Coca-Cola confirmed it continues to investigate and assess the full impact of the breach, and has notified law enforcement about the incident.
The company’s internal investigation into the incident is ongoing, and law enforcement has been contacted as authorities look into the ransomware situation.
Coca-Cola did not provide any estimates on the potential economic impact of the hack or the subsequent production shutdown at fairlife.
Zooming out, however, Coca-Cola operates a massive portfolio of beverage brands, many of which post significantly higher sales than the rather niche fairlife business.
The $3 billion fairlife operation, while substantial, represents only one piece of a much larger corporate empire that spans dozens of well-known global beverage categories.
Analysts and observers will be watching closely to see whether the production suspension extends to Canadian operations or causes broader supply disruptions across the fairlife product range.
