Corrected: Coca-Cola bets on Kobe sports drink in fight with Gatorade (Aug. 14)

Reuters 

(Corrects paragraph 2 in Aug. 14 story to show is not ceding market share to Gatorade)

By Aishwarya Venugopal

(Reuters) - is buying a minority stake in a sports drink brand backed by basketball star Kobe Bryant, it said on Tuesday, seeking to mount a stronger challenge to PepsiCo's

Coca-Cola's investment in - which will make it the brand's second largest shareholder - comes as its drink competes for market share with Coke has also been rattled by falling demand for its trademark fizzy drinks.

While Coke says there is "much work to be done" at Powerade, said last month that was seeing higher demand after launching zero-sugar versions.

"Proud of our team at @DrinkBODYARMOR and our new partnership with the @CocaColaCo who believes in our mission of becoming the #1 Global Sports Drink. Thanks @Gatorade, we'll take it from here," Bryant said on

Gatorade and PepsiCo's other account for nearly a third of a $20 billion U.S. market, according to Beverage and Red Bull follow close behind, with Coke trailing in fourth place with a 7 percent share. Coca-Cola also has a 16.7 percent stake in

"(BodyArmor) is a positive for Coca-Cola, which is continuing to pursue its product portfolio diversification strategy," said

is also backed by Dr Snapple - now part of Dr - which made a $20 million investment in 2015 and boosted its ownership to 15.5 percent in 2016.

But said Coca-Cola's investment could end BodyArmor's agreement with Dr

"We have learned that has notified Dr Pepper that they are terminating their existing distribution agreement," she said. "Although the timing and mechanism by which distribution will transition over to Coca-Cola's bottling system is still uncertain."

Neither Dr Pepper nor BodyArmor responded to Reuters' requests for comment.

Coke did not disclose the size of its investment or other financial details but said it could increase its ownership in BodyArmor, whose higher-priced use natural flavors and sweeteners such as pure cane sugar and coconut water concentrate.

"We would not be surprised if Coca-Cola eventually acquires the remainder of BodyArmor," Wells Fargo's Herzog said.

Coca-Cola, however, has historically stayed away from full-blown acquisitions, settling instead for acquiring partial stakes in companies - a strategy that allows it to test-drive potentially risky bets.

Bryant, who first invested in BodyArmor in 2013 two years after it was launched, is now its third biggest shareholder. The brand also has endorsement deals with and another star,

(Reporting by in Bengaluru; Editing by Sai Sachin Ravikumar)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, August 15 2018. 21:50 IST