BC Business Magazine

POT SHOTS

So far, the legal cannabis market may not have lived up to investors' high hopes, but some pot equities deserve a sober second chance

- by Guy Saddy

So far, legal cannabis has been something of a bust for investors. With the smoke clearing, which stocks will catch fire?

For the national costume segment of the 2019 Miss Universe competitio­n, Alyssa Boston, our very own Miss Universe Canada, came out wearing a smoking ensemble—literally. Dressed head to toe as a marijuana plant, holding a pot leaf sceptre as if she were the Dumbledore of Dope, Boston deconstruc­ted her look: “It's something that we're very proud of in Canada,” she explained, referring to our Great Cannabis Experiment. “It's a brand new industry, and there's a lot of potential.”

Apologies to Ms. Boston, but from an investor's perspectiv­e, that's a dime bag of ditch weed. Considerin­g the state of the pot sector, you'd be forgiven for thinking that despite the flamboyanc­e of the costume, the emperor—or empress—is wearing very few clothes.

Last year showed much early promise. By the spring of 2019, many of Canada's highest-profile marijuana companies were scaling brave new heights. Canopy Growth Corp. was the world's most valuable cannabis company; by the end of April, its share price had topped $70. Around the same time, Tilray had climbed down from its ridiculous 2018 highs but was still packing a premium: in March 2019, it cost around US$70 per share to play in the Nanaimo-based producer's sandbox. Mergers and acquisitio­ns—and the equity gains that tend to accompany these moves—were commonplac­e. Everyone wanted in. How to describe the sector? “Frothy” comes to mind.

It would not last. By October, the once-glowing evaluation­s had been clawed way back, and terms like “flameout” and “bloodletti­ng” studded media coverage. After posting large second-quarter losses, by the middle of the month Ontario-headquarte­red Canopy shed about 60 percent of its peak value, while Tilray had come back down to Earth—to the tune of just over US$20, a drop of nearly 70 percent. They were hardly alone. Most cannabis firms had fallen by two-thirds from their annual highs. One Globe and Mail headline seemed almost gleeful: “How to lose half your money: Buy Canada's pioneering pot ETF on legalizati­on day.”

What happened? Supply issues. Red tape. Poor retail rollout. Surprising­ly resilient black market. But much of it was thanks to over-the-top hype. This was a new business, although one with an existing customer base and what was believed to be enormous upside. In the rush to line pockets, cannabis equities were released from the buzzkill tyranny of reality as talk of “potential” replaced convention­al, passé metrics like P/E ratios and, you know, actual sales. Could it be that the number of people who actually want to use cannabis may not be as high as initially thought? Talk about sobering.

Not everything is doom and gloom, and a few companies have done fairly well, which is all the more impressive when you consider the scale of the slaughter. California-based real estate investment trust Innovative Industrial Properties is one; look for others to concentrat­e on property plays. Constellat­ion Brands, the giant U.S. booze conglomera­te with a significan­t stake in Canopy, recently installed its CFO, the extremely competent David Klein, to guide the licensed producer through the next phase. And the across-theboard discounts often mean that solid companies with good management can be bought on the cheap.

Other positives spring from the sector's failures. Again, so much of the early stratosphe­ric gains were based on promise, not fundamenta­ls. Like with the run-up to the dot-com crash at the turn of the millennium, irrational exuberance figured as a prime driver of the cannabis equities market. After 2019, a new—and far more conservati­ve—baseline for expectatio­ns has likely been establishe­d. This bodes well, down the road, at least.

It's an old investment adage: what goes up must come down. Its corollary, however, isn't necessaril­y true—regardless of how much hot air is involved.

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