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In what is shaping up to be one of the most significant beverage industry mergers of the past decade, Keurig Dr Pepper—owner of brands like 7UP, Dr Pepper, Peñafiel, and Snapple—announced the acquisition of Dutch coffee and tea giant JDE Peet’s for €15.7 billion.
Following the creation of Keurig Dr Pepper in 2018, a result of the merger between Keurig and Dr Pepper, the group has doubled down on its coffee strategy. It now brings together more than 50 brands across 100 countries. The goal is clear: to build a coffee giant—Global Coffee Co.—capable of competing with Nestlé, while simultaneously consolidating a soft drink division—Beverage Co.—aimed at expanding on the same playing field as Coca-Cola and PepsiCo.
Although the deal has global reach, Latin America emerges as a central hub.
In Brazil, JDE Peet’s derives 14% of its global revenue from flagship brands like Pilão, Maratá, and Café do Ponto. Mexico, by contrast, carries less weight in the numbers—KDP generates just 13% of its sales outside the U.S.—but is critical to the strategy: the company owns Peñafiel, concentrates nearly a quarter of its North American distribution fleet there—making Mexico a key logistics bridge into the U.S.—and uses the country as a global testing ground given its status as one of the world’s most competitive beverage markets.
What does this mean for the commercial real estate market? Could the merger spark expansion?
For now, the footprint is already significant. In Brazil, where the food and beverage sector accounts for roughly 10.5% of the industrial inventory according to SiiLA, KDP and JDE Peet’s operate at least two warehouses in the north. While much of their production and distribution still relies on commercial partners, since 2024, they’ve maintained an office in Varginha (KDP Brazil Global Sourcing) that serves as a logistics, procurement, and quality control hub. In Mexico, where the sector accounts for 7% of industrial space, the company operates three plants, approximately 25 distribution centers, and its corporate headquarters, located in Torre Esmeralda III, in Mexico City.
As the market expands, it’s reasonable to expect the sector’s industrial footprint to grow with it. In 2024 alone, Latin America’s carbonated beverage business surpassed $60 billion, while coffee reached nearly $10 billion, according to consulting firm Informes de Expertos. By 2034, both segments are projected to keep rising, with annual growth rates of 2% and 3.9%, respectively.
Driving this growth is the region’s dual role. On the one hand, Latin America isn’t just a key consumer market but a pillar of global coffee production: over half of the world’s green coffee beans come from the region, led by Brazil and Colombia. On the other hand, it accounts for nearly a quarter of global soft drink demand, with markets like Argentina, Mexico, Chile, and Uruguay among the most dynamic worldwide.
For Keurig Dr Pepper, this dual role makes Latin America more than just an attractive market: it’s the axis that could tilt the entire global playing field, cause in a market where any disruption—whether from regulation, climate, costs, or competition—can reshape value chains, not only can the regional map be redrawn, but the global hierarchy of hot and cold beverages can be redefined. In that sense, Latin America functions as a customs gate for pricing, logistics, and trade, capable of accelerating or slowing the industry’s global momentum. Here, the true reach of the bet is not just measured—it’s decided.
For more insights on the sector and its key players, visit SiiLA REsource or contact us at contacto@siila.com.mx.







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