By Amy Guthrie 

MEXICO CITY--Soft-drink bottler Coca-Cola Femsa said Wednesday its first-quarter earnings were hit in several markets by headwinds that could persist for the remainder of the year.

Currencies have depreciated significantly throughout Latin America in recent months as investors brace for an eventual interest rate increase in the U.S. Meanwhile, consumer spending has been weak in key markets for Coca-Cola Femsa, such as Brazil and Mexico, Chief Financial Officer Héctor Treviño said on an earnings call.

Latin America's biggest soft drink bottler expects 2015 to be a "tough year" for Brazil, Mr. Treviño said, as inflation and unemployment rise there and the country flirts with recession. In Mexico, meanwhile, he said consumers seem keen to embrace beverages that appear more natural, such as sparkling waters infused with real juices.

Yet the reception in Mexico has been disappointing for Coca-Cola Co.'s lower-calorie Stevia-sweetened soda, called Coca-Cola Life, which rolled out in the country last year.

Coca-Cola Life "has not been working as we were expecting," Mr. Treviño said, citing disappointing sales volumes in the Mexican market.

Mexico City-based Coca-Cola Femsa's net income slid 5% on the year during the first three months of 2015, to 2.19 billion Mexican pesos, or around $145 million, while revenue fell 11% to 34.37 billion pesos. Although weaker currencies curbed results across the board, the biggest hit came from Venezuela, where Coca-Cola Femsa adopted a new official exchange rate and wrote down its equity in the operation by 2.79 billion pesos.

The Venezuelan business now represents 7% of Coca-Cola Femsa's consolidated volume sales, but just 2% of its total revenue. Mr. Treviño said that Coca-Cola Femsa "remains fully committed to Venezuela" despite the country's economic travails and the complexities of doing business there.

The bottler is trying to source more raw materials locally in Venezuela, to reduce the unit's foreign-exchange burden and need to obtain U.S. dollars from the Venezuelan government. The imported material mostly consists of plastic resin and caps for bottles. Coca-Cola Femsa is also attempting to boost the percentage of its returnable soda bottles that circulate in the country, from 7% of the current sales mix.

Amid all the adversity, Venezuelans are still clamoring for Coca-Cola products. "We're selling everything we produce," Mr. Treviño said, predicting a sales increase of 10 million unit cases this year in Venezuela.

Across its Latin American markets, Coca-Cola Femsa's volume sales declined 1% on the year during the first quarter, with the most notable decreases in the company's Mexican water sales. Weather in Mexico didn't favor beverage sales during the quarter, the company said, although the decline in bulk water sales could also indicate that consumers are boiling their drinking water rather than buying the packaged variety. Mexico represents just under half of Coca-Cola Femsa's total volume sales.

Write to Amy Guthrie at amy.guthrie@wsj.com

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