Jim Cramer on Keurig Dr Pepper: “They’re Doing Some Good Things”

Keurig Dr Pepper Inc. (NASDAQ:KDP) is one of the stocks Jim Cramer recently answered questions about. When a caller asked if they are safe in the stock, Cramer commented:

“Yeah, I think you are. They’re cleaning… They’re doing some good things. The stock is down huge, yields 3.3%. I think that’s a safe field yield. I would actually join you in that. We did a piece saying that maybe this is finally the bottom, and I think it very much is.”

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Keurig Dr Pepper Inc. (NASDAQ:KDP) produces and distributes beverages and single-serve brewing systems. The company’s products include soft drinks, specialty coffee, tea, and ready-to-drink beverages. During the September 11 episode, Cramer mentioned the company and said:

“If you want a company with a perfect track record of strategic decision making, whoa, this one is not for you. But if you want a company that’s finally headed in the right direction with a stock that’s gotten too cheap, then I think Keurig Dr Pepper makes a lot of sense. First, they’re right to break up the business. In retrospect, there were never any real benefits to combining a coffee machine company with a soda company. Wall Street likes bite-sized companies that are easy to understand…

This is how breakups create value. Money managers who were turned off by the combined entity might happily buy one of the components as soon as it trades separately. Second, in terms of valuation, now this is what really intrigues me, I think finally the stock has gotten way too cheap. If you use Keurig Dr Pepper’s current enterprise value… and divide it by the company’s trailing 12 months… EBITDA, you get an enterprise multiple of 8.5%. This is a metric we like to use in merger breakup situations…

Of course. that ignores the new debt that Keurig Dr Pepper’s going to have to take on to buy the JDE Peet. But even if we assume that they’re going to plan to borrow 18 billion, the stock would have an enterprise multiple of 11.4, which is still a huge discount to Coke and a small discount to Pepsi. I think this gap is pretty compelling. Of course, there will likely be twists and turns over the next year and a half as this merger breakup unfolds.

So I need more details before having real conviction in the new companies that will be created by the breakup. But the bottom line: Regardless of how Keurig Dr Pepper got to this point, I think the breakup could unlock a tremendous amount of value. Given how much the stock’s come down since the announcement, I think you have to be a buyer here, not a seller, as shocking and contrarian as that is to the current Wall Street wisdom on the matter.”

While we acknowledge the risk and potential of KDP as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and doing so within a shorter time frame. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than KDP and that has 10,000% upside potential, check out our report about this cheapest AI stock.

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Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.