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Excluding items, Coca-Cola earned 87 cents per share, beating estimates of 83 cents.Brandon Bell/Getty Images

Coca-Cola (KO-N) beat estimates for quarterly revenue and profit on Tuesday, benefiting from resilient demand for zero-calorie drinks as well as higher pricing, and laid out plans to launch a new product made with cane sugar in the U.S. this year.

Food companies are increasingly looking to include healthier substitutes as they respond to Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Make America Healthy Again campaign. Last week, President Donald Trump said Coca-Cola had agreed to use real cane sugar in the U.S.

While there are some slight differences between cane sugar and corn syrup as sweeteners, experts have said that too much of either is not good for consumers.

Trump says Coca Cola will use real cane sugar instead of corn syrup after talks

Watch here: What is the difference between sugar cane and corn syrup in Coca-Cola?

Coca-Cola already sells Coke made from cane sugar in other markets, including Mexico, and some U.S. grocery stores carry glass bottles with cane sugar labeled “Mexican” Coke.

The switch to cane sugar will also drive up costs for the company, industry analysts have said. Changes in the formulation of the rest of the Coke sold in the U.S., and other beverages and candies, would involve significant adjustments to supply chains. Rival PepsiCo, which topped quarterly earnings estimates last week, also said it would use natural ingredients in its products if consumers want it.

Coca-Cola reiterated that the hit to costs due to “global trade dynamics” remained manageable.

The company has said it would look at affordable packaging options such as plastic bottles when Trump imposed a 25 per cent duty on aluminum imports. As of June, tariffs on aluminum imports have doubled to 50 per cent.

Coca-Cola’s comparable revenue rose 2.5 per cent to US$12.62-billion in the second quarter, beating estimates of US$12.54-billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Annual comparable earnings per share is expected to be near the top end of its target of a two to three per cent rise, helped by a weaker dollar.

Volumes fell in North America “due to the continued uncertainty and pressure on some socioeconomic segments of consumers,” CEO James Quincey said on a post-earnings call.

Demand for pricey sodas has remained choppy in recent quarters, especially in developed countries as consumers, especially in lower-income segments, turned more price-sensitive.

Coca-Cola’s volumes slipped one per cent in the three months ended June 27 after rising two per cent each in the previous two quarters, largely due to declines in key markets such as Mexico and India, as well as for its Coca-Cola brand in the U.S.

Quincey added that a boycott-related hit to demand in the U.S. and Mexico was now largely resolved.

Volumes had fallen in the first half of the year in North America due to Hispanic consumers in the U.S. and Mexico boycotting the company’s legacy brands after a viral video of Coca-Cola laying off Latino staff and reporting them to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Prices rose six per cent overall in the second quarter, led by increases in some inflationary markets.

Coca-Cola’s shares fell 1% in early trading. They have risen 12.5 per cent this year, as of Monday’s close.

Coca-Cola Zero Sugar volume jumped 14 per cent, driven by growth across all geographies, and was a bright spot in the quarter.

Excluding items, the company earned 87 cents per share, beating estimates of 83 cents.