How much do tobacco companies make in Canada? 

Answering that question became more difficult about a decade ago, after all three of the traditional tobacco companies (BAT-Imperial Tobacco Canada, PMI-Rothmans, Benson and Hedges, and JTI-Macdonald) became fully-owned subsidiaries of multinationals and the fourth (Grand River Enterprises) remained a privately held operation.

Over the past year, however, data on the earnings of some of these companies has become available from a number of sources. Using the data sources detailed below, we can now estimate that:

  • The gross revenue from cigarette sales of all tobacco companies (including Grand River Enterprises) was more than $4 billion in 2019.
  • Including estimates for excise taxes ($7 billion +) and retail mark-up (10%), Canadians likely spent in excess of $13 billion on cigarettes in 2019.
  • The gross revenue from all tobacco sales of the three major tobacco companies was around $3.4 billion in 2019.
  • From this, the 3 major companies cleared about $1.36 billion in 2019.
  • The estimated average profit per cigarette was over $0.05 cents, or more than $1 per package.

Data sources:

Mandatory reports to Health Canada:

Tobacco companies are required to make periodic reports to Health Canada, including monthly data on the amount of each brand and type of tobacco they sell and “the Canadian dollar value of sales, including the excise duty.” All companies legally operating in Canada are required to make these reports, including Grand River Entperprises, operating from Mohawk lands.

In the data released in the early new year, Health Canada identified that gross sales revenue (exclusive of excise tax and operating costs) on sales of 23.9 billion cigarettes was $4.19 billion (gross revenue of $0.18 per cigarette). This average would include all companies and all sales, including exports and duty-free. 

In previous years, Health Canada has identified that cigarette sales represent about 94% of the value of the tobacco market, and that the three major companies receive 91% of the sales.

Reports to investors:

It has been many years since tobacco companies routinely provided investors with financial data about their Canadian operations. (See historic note below.)

Yesterday, however, Philip Morris International reported on 12 weeks of sales in 2019. For the period before it “deconsolidated” its Canadian operation on March 22, 2019, it sold 1 billion cigarettes in Canada that were trademarked to Rothmans, Benson and Hedges in Canada, and declared operating revenues were USD 181 million (equivalent to CAD $250 million).

  • PMI defines net revenues as “operating revenues generated from the sale of these products, including shipping and handling charges billed to customers, net of sales and promotion incentives and excise taxes.” 
  • PMI retains the trademark for some of the brands sold by RBH in Canada, including the high-selling discount brands Next and Philip Morris 

Information from lawsuits:

Some financial information was released during the class action trial whose ruling precipitated the CCAA actions. In 2015 ruling Justice Riordan disclosed some information from financial records the companies had insisted remain confidential:  [1071]  For ITL, the five-year average of before-tax earnings between 2009 and 2013 is $483,000,000.  For RBH, it is $460,000,000.  JTM’s “Earnings from operations” for the period average $103,000,000.  The Quebec Court of Appeal later made public annual reports for 2013 and 2014 for Rothmans, Benson and Hedges and Imperial Tobacco Canada. 

Filings in the CCAA Proceedings:

For over a year now, the three largest tobacco companies operating in Canada have been operating under the provisions of the federal Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act. This unusual circumstance was triggered when the Quebec Court of Appeal upheld a lower court ruling against the companies, ordering them to pay several billions of dollars to Quebec smokers whose cancers and lung disease could be attributed to the companies’ wrongful actions in previous years.

The CCAA process has effectively stopped the clock on all the lawsuits against the companies, while they attempt to arrive at a settlement with all of the provinces, class actions and others suing them. One of the requirements imposed on the companies for the privilege of this ceasefire is a requirement to stop sending their earnings to their parent companies and to reveal their financial picture each time they ask the court for an extension to the stay.

This information was provided for 45 weeks of operation 2019 and can be found in a series of Monitor’s reports for each company (listed below). Each accounting firm uses somewhat different categories to state income and expenses, in ways that impede consolidating the data.

Links to data sources

Imperial Tobacco Canada Ltd.

2019 to 2013 reference to earnings in Justice Riordan’s ruling – 2015 QCCS 2382 (para 1071)
2014 earnings statement: Blais Létourneau appeal document 
2017 and 2018 earnings statement. Application record. (page 688) 
3 week period ending April 14. Monitor’s Second Report (page 14)
8 weeks ending June 9, 2019. Monitor’s Fourth Report (page 6)
14 weeks ending September 15, 2019. Monitor’s Fifth Report (page 7)
20 weeks ending February 2, 2020. Monitor’s Seventh Report (page 8)

Rothmans, Benson and Hedges

2009 to 2013 reference to earnings in Justice Riordan’s ruling – 2015 QCCS 2382 (para 1071)
2014 earnings statement: Blais Létourneau appeal document
2018 earnings statement.  Application Record (page 80)
12.5 weeks ending June 9, 2019. Monitor’s Second Report (page 20)
14 weeks ending Setpember 15, 2019. Monitor’s Third Report (page 14)
20 weeks ending February 2, 2020. Monitor’s Fifth Report (page 12)

JTI-Macdonald

2019 to 2013 reference to earnings in Justice Riordan’s ruling – 2015 QCCS 2382 (para 1071)
2017 earnings statement. Application Record (page 141 and 211)
12 week period ending June 14, 2019. Monitor’s Fourth Report (page 10)
13 week period ending September 13, 2019. Monitor’s Fifth Report (page 13)
20 week period ending January 31, 2020. Monitor’s Seventh Report (page 11)

Historic note:

For decades, two of the companies (Imperial Tobacco Canada Ltd and Rothmans, Benson and Hedges) were components of Canadian publicly-traded corporations (Imasco and Rothmans Inc). As such, they submtited annual reports and other documents with stock-market authorities. After they became fully-owned subisidaries (Imperial Tobacco acquired by British American Tobacco in 2000 and Rothmans Benson and Hedges acquired by Philip Morris International in 2008), these reports were no longer required. The records, however, remain available on the SEDAR website (Rothmans Inc and Imperial Tobacco).  The third-largest company, now JTI-Macdonald, was never publicly traded. It was a private company owned by the Stewart family until 1974, when it was sold to Reynolds and subsequently re-sold to Gallaher and then Japan Tobacco. Through all those structures, the revenues and profits of that company have rarely been disclosed.

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