National Post

Aurora bids to quash CanniMed poison pill

- Geoff Zochodne

Aurora Cannabis Inc. says it will try to strike down the poison pill standing in the way of its hostile takeover of CanniMed Therapeuti­cs Inc.

Alberta- based Aurora, a licensed medical marijuana producer, said it would apply for a hearing before the Financial and Consumer Affairs Authority of Saskatchew­an and the Ontario Securities Commission in an attempt to quash the shareholde­r rights plan Saskatoon’s CanniMed adopted earlier this week to try to keep Aurora’s proposal from reaching critical mass.

CanniMed has said the plan, otherwise known as a poison pill, would allow its shareholde­rs to vote on its preferred deal, the firm’s proposed acquisitio­n of Ontariobas­ed cannabis producer Newstrike Resources Ltd. CanniMed is offering 33 of its shares for every 1,000 shares of Newstrike, with the companies trying to close the deal by January.

“The Poison Pill is oppressive and serves only to thwart Aurora’s compelling offer to CanniMed shareholde­rs,” Aurora said, adding it has filed a complaint with securities regulators alleging that CanniMed did not disclose “certain important informatio­n regarding the Newstrike transactio­n.”

Aurora made an all- stock offer last month of up to $24 per share for CanniMed, an acquisitio­n that would create a combined cannabis company with a market capitaliza­tion of more than $3 billion. CanniMed, a fellow medical marijuana company, has responded by enacting the shareholde­r rights plan.

Prior to Aurora’s press release late Thursday, CanniMed fired off one of its own, accusing senior management and directors of Aurora of selling off $17.8 million of the company’s shares, “while at the same time trying to convince CanniMed shareholde­rs and the market of their stock’s long-term value under their opportunis­tic and coercive hostile bid for CanniMed.”

“The most logical inference from what they have done is that they believe Aurora cannot and will not remain at its currently inflated valuation,” said Brent Zettl, president and chief executive of CanniMed, in a press release.

CanniMed said Zettl “has maintained his significan­t ownership interest in CanniMed.” CanniMed has also continued to tell its shareholde­rs to take no action toward Aurora’s bid until hearing back from the company’s special committee studying the Aurora deal.

Cam Battley, executive vice- president at Aurora, said in an interview that the share sales had been planned prior to CanniMed shareholde­rs reaching out to Aurora about a deal, at a time when Aurora’s shares were trading below $6 each.

Battley also said Aurora officers and directors have been in an almost constant series of trading blackouts due to the number of transactio­ns that the company is attempting to make.

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