now, the thesis behind andina is simple.he beverage distribution business is about as stable as it gets. normally there's not a whole lot of growth. in latin america, especially in in the city where they do most of their business, it continues to grow at a pretty torrid pace, which means more people are drinking more beverages, creating opportunities for volume growth at companies like andina. bottling is usually profitable. ask the pepsi ceo, a cramer fav and i think a yankee fan, that just made a brilliant move to buy the pepsi bottlers back from pepsi the other day. it's going to boost pepsi's numbers. and i bought some for my charitable trust. you should get some. why latin america? chile, argentina and brazil are in better shape than the u.s. a low ratio of dependents to working-age population. i know it's an embarrassment when even argentina is pantsing us, but that's just another reason to own a company like andina. right now it pays $1.08 per share, which means it's got a red hot, habanero pepper, 6% yield. one kav y