Cape Breton Post

Aurora Cannabis negotiates big pot deal

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After an acrimoniou­s, months-long takeover battle, Aurora Cannabis Inc. has struck a friendly deal valued at $1.1 billion to buy rival licensed producer CanniMed Therapeuti­cs Inc., marking the biggest deal yet in Canada’s marijuana sector.

The agreement announced Wednesday comes after executives at both companies traded harsh public criticism and CanniMed filed a lawsuit against its suitor, alleging it conspired to harm its economic interests.

But following long days of negotiatio­n after entering talks last week, the two rivals were able to agree on a deal that now includes both shares and cash, a sweeter deal than the earlier all-stock transactio­n offered in November.

“We are very pleased to have come to terms with CanniMed on this powerful strategic combinatio­n that will establish a best-in-class cannabis company with operations across Canada and around the world,’’ Aurora chief executive Terry Booth said in a statement.

CanniMed had argued that Aurora’s earlier all-stock offer valued at up to $24 per share for the company was too low, given the wild upward swing in marijuana stocks in recent months.

This deal is the latest in a wave of consolidat­ion in the sector ahead of legalizati­on expected this summer.

Rival producer Aphria Inc. earlier this month announced a deal buy B.C.-based Broken Coast Cannabis Inc., a transactio­n it valued at $230 million in cash and stock.

“This is by far the largest M&A transactio­n to occur in the cannabis space — so far,’’ said Russell Stanley, special situations analyst at Echelon Wealth Partners.

“The largest players have strong share prices to use as acquisitio­n currency, and can afford to be aggressive on the M&A front. Scale might be one driver, but further M&A may also be powered by geographic or product developmen­t needs.’’

Prior to the Aurora-CanniMed deal, the largest deal had been Canopy Growth’s 2016 friendly all-stock deal to acquire Mettrum Health Corp. valued at $430 million.

Under the agreement announced Wednesday, CanniMed shareholde­rs will receive 3.4 Aurora shares or a combinatio­n of cash and shares for each CanniMed share they hold.

Based on an implied Aurora share price of $12.65 and the 3.40 exchange ratio, the companies said the new offer would amount to $43 per share.

However, Aurora shares closed at $14.79 on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Tuesday and CanniMed shares closed at $37.51, making the offer worth currently worth about $50.29 and the value could bounce around significan­tly before the deal closes due to volatility in the marijuana sector. CanniMed shares shot up another 17 per cent in Wednesday trading to $43.93.

The total amount of cash available under the deal is capped at $140 million.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Cannabis seedlings at the new Aurora Cannabis facility are seen on Nov. 24, 2017 in Montreal. Aurora Cannabis Inc. has struck a friendly deal valued at $1.1 billion to buy CanniMed Therapeuti­cs Inc.
CP PHOTO Cannabis seedlings at the new Aurora Cannabis facility are seen on Nov. 24, 2017 in Montreal. Aurora Cannabis Inc. has struck a friendly deal valued at $1.1 billion to buy CanniMed Therapeuti­cs Inc.

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