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Maker of Jack Daniel’s worried about impact of trade war

Posted at 2:00 PM, Jun 06, 2018
and last updated 2018-06-06 14:00:19-04

The company, Brown-Forman reported strong revenue and profit growth for the fiscal year that ended in April, and expects to report more gains ahead.

(CNN Money) – The maker of Jack Daniel’s says tariffs are making it difficult to plan for the future.

The company, Brown-Forman, reported strong revenue and profit growth for the fiscal year that ended in April, and expects to report more gains ahead.

But it said competition in the developed world, coupled with “potential retaliatory tariffs on American spirits” means that it’s “difficult to accurately predict future results.”

U.S. bourbon is one of the products targeted by foreign governments in retaliation for the Trump administration’s tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from the EU, Mexico and much of the rest of the world.

Mexico on Tuesday levied a 25 percent tariff on bourbon. Canada and the EU have threatened to slap tariffs on bourbon and American whiskey as soon as July.

“It is necessary and urgent to impose measures equivalent to the measures implemented by” the U.S., said the statement issued by the Mexican government. Mexico had signaled last week that it intended to retaliate against the U.S. steel and aluminum tariffs.

The list of products that Mexico is imposing tariffs on specifically includes Tennessee whiskey as well as bourbon. While Jack Daniel’s is sometimes popularly referred to as bourbon, that name derives from Bourbon County, Kentucky, while Jack Daniel’s is made in Tennessee. Thus the label of Jack Daniel’s describes itself as Tennessee whiskey, not bourbon.

Brown-Forman said that 53 percent of its sales come from outside the United States. The United Kingdom, Germany, France, and Poland account for about 18 percent of sales between them. Mexico by itself accounts for 5 percent of sales.

The threat of retaliatory tariffs by U.S. trading partners is a major reason that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce says that 2.6 million jobs are threatened by the Trump administration’s hardline stance on imports. According to a survey of U.S. CEOs, many are scaling back their hiring and spending plans due to fears of a trade war.