By Paul Ziobro 

Amazon.com Inc. is getting into the diaper business with a private label brand that pits it against Procter & Gamble Co. and other suppliers who increasingly rely on the online retail giant for sales.

The generic brand, called Elements, will start with two baby products, diapers and wipes, and Amazon has plans to later expand into other household products. With Elements, Amazon isn't going for the lowest price, rather it is trying to reach a consumer who is willing to pay more to get detailed information about a product's origins and the materials used.

Elements diapers will cost around 10% less per diaper than the most expensive diapers offered by P&G's Pampers and Kimberly-Clark Inc.'s Huggies, according to an analysis by Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. But they are 25% more expensive than P&G's low-end Luvs diapers and 40% higher than Target's private label diapers, Up & Up.

The move adds a formidable rival into the $5.8 billion diaper market at a time when P&G has been raising prices on its Pampers brand and Kimberly Clark is struggling with declining Huggies sales.

It also threatens to disrupt Amazon's close relationship with consumer product makers. The online giant has set up distribution operations inside the warehouses of manufacturers like P&G that allows it to ship products more quickly.

Amazon and its diaper.com business are an important platform for manufacturers as online diapers sales have grown to 5.2% of the total market last year from 0.9% five years earlier, according to Euromonitor International.

Consumer-products manufacturers will be required "to change the way they fundamentally operate to adopt to this more dynamic and potentially deflationary online pricing environment," Bernstein analysts wrote in a note to investors.

Spokesmen for P&G and Kimberly-Clark declined to comment.

Amazon is under pressure to improve profitability after recently reporting its largest quarterly loss in 14 years. The company has been spending heavily to move into new business lines, like smartphones and music and video licensing, but has acknowledged that it needs to be more selective where it spends its money. Amazon already sells its own batteries, bedding and smartphones.

Private labels add a new twist to e-commerce. Consumer products manufacturers had long had to contend with private label brands in brick-and-mortar stores that are generally sold more cheaply than name-brand products. While they sell for less, retailers make money on the sales because there little is spent marketing the products.

The dynamic could play out differently online, where analysts say display is more democratized and national brands don't enjoy the incumbent advantages they have in stores, like control of the most valuable and visible shelf space.

Amazon is only selling Elements products to its Amazon Prime members, who pay $99 annually to enjoy such perks as free two-day shipping and streaming movies. It also offering extensive information on where the products are made, something that is rare in private label offerings.

The Elements diapers, for instance, are made by Canadian company Irving Personal Care with the diaper fluff using Loblolly pine tree pulp from Alabama. The wipes, meanwhile, will use purified water from White Lick Creek Aquifer in Mooresville, Ind., where they are produced by Nice-Pak Products Inc., according to Amazon's website.

Greg Bensinger contributed to this article.

Write to Paul Ziobro at Paul.Ziobro@wsj.com

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