P&G says 'vast majority' of products in Canada to be hit by tariffs

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Many Procter & Gamble Co. products sold in Canada - from Febreze candles to Gillette shaving foam - will be affected by retaliatory tariffs on U.S.-made goods after Canadian authorities rejected a request for exemptions, a P&G spokesman said on Wednesday.

P&G said Bounty paper towels, Charmin toilet tissue and Puffs facial tissue - made in a facility in Mehoopany, Pennsylvania - would be taxed, as would Cascade automatic dish washing detergent, Febreze aerosols, Pantene hair sprays and Olay body wash and more.

"The vast majority of our Canadian products are imported from the U.S.," P&G spokesman Damon Jones told Reuters.

Jones said P&G had unsuccessfully petitioned the International Trade Policy Division of Canada's Department of Finance for exemptions on its products.

A spokesman for Canadian Finance Minister Bill Morneau - whose department is responsible for granting such exemptions - was not immediately available for comment.

This month, Canada struck back at the Trump administration over U.S. steel and aluminum tariffs, imposing taxes on C$16.6 billion of U.S. packaged goods, steel and aluminum products.

It levied a 10 percent surtax on a wide range of consumer goods from soup and whiskey to hair-care and manicure products, according to a list by the Department of Finance. (https://tinyurl.com/y8w5g895)

P&G, the second-largest packaged goods company in the world after Nestle SA <NESN.S>, said Canada accounted for about 3 percent of its total revenue of $65.1 billion last year. This amounts to just under $2 billion in sales from Canada, according to Reuters calculations.

Nestle had no immediate comment on how tariffs would affect its business, while Anglo-Dutch rival Unilever Plc <ULVR.L> declined to comment

Like other global consumer companies, P&G is already under pressure to boost sales as consumers flock to fresher products and newer brands. Profits in the industry have also taken a hit from rising commodities and freight costs, and as big retailers keep prices down to compete with Amazon.com.

"We believe in free trade, putting us and our international competitors, wherever they are, on an equal playing ground. Tariffs create a barrier to that," Jones said.

(Reporting by Richa Naidu. Additional reporting by David Ljunggren in Ottawa and Martinne Geller in London)