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At £32.87, I couldn’t resist this dirt-cheap FTSE 100 growth stock!

Looking for top FTSE 100 stocks to buy? Here’s a UK blue-chip share Royston Wild recently bought more of in his SIPP.

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Like Warren Buffett, I love buying top stocks when they’re trading cheaply. So I’ve used recent weakness in the Coca-Cola HBC (LSE:CCH) share price to boost my holdings in the FTSE 100 stock.

At £33.40 per share, the Coca-Cola bottler remains roughly 20% more expensive than it was at the start of 2025. But it’s dropped sharply from its record peaks above £41.02 hit back in May.

XXX

This was a bargain opportunity I thought was too good to pass up, and bought more at £32.87 per share. Here’s why.

Immense strength

Major consumer goods companies often command higher valuations than the broader market. Investors are drawn to their predictable earnings and robust cash flows, making them reliable selections over the long term.

In Coca-Cola HBC’s case, stock pickers have been willing to pay a premium for the exceptional brand power of drinks like Coke, Fanta, Sprite, and Monster Energy. The soft drinks market is largely immune to changes in the economic cycle. With globally-recognised labels like these, the FTSE company enjoys even greater demand resilience.

Furthermore, this unrivalled brand strength allows the drinks bottler to raise prices without losing much (if any) market share. This is a powerful weapon in offsetting rising cost pressures and growing profits over time.

Latest financials in August underlined these defensive qualities in action. Despite some tough conditions, organic revenues rose across all regions in the first half, improving 2.6% at group level. Its operating profit margin increased 50 basis points to 11.5%, while operating profit leapt 13.9% year on year.

Growth potential

It’s not just Coca-Cola HBC’s sturdiness that’s a major attraction, though. Thanks to its substantial footprint in fast-growing regions — including parts of Africa and Central and Eastern Europe — the business also has significant growth potential that investors are happy to pay for.

This is another advantage recently displayed in those half-year results. The firm’s organic revenues in emerging and developing markets rose 6.2% and 17.4% in the period. These regions now make up more than two-thirds of group revenues combined.

So given this resilience, why have the shares dropped so sharply? One reason could be that the ‘discount rate’ used to value future earnings rises when interest rates stay high. With hopes of sustained rate cuts fading, stable growth stocks like this are coming under pressure.

It’s possible that fears of how weight-loss jabs like Ozempic will impact demand have hit the shares. While a threat, my view is that the company’s large (and increasing) stable of low-sugar drinks and presence in regions where jab usage is low substantially reduces this danger.

A cut-price FTSE 100 share

Coca-Cola HBC’s share-price drop now leaves it trading on a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 14.5 times. That some way below the five-year average of 18.7 times, and represented a compelling entry point for me to increase my holdings in the drinks bottler.

I’m convinced the FTSE 100 stock will rebound to reach new highs. If City analysts are correct, this could happen sooner rather than later. The average 12-month share price forecast among 17 analysts is £41.78. That’s up more than 25% from today’s levels.

Royston Wild has positions in Coca-Cola Hbc Ag. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

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