National Post

Maricann’s $70M financing deal falls through amid OSC probe

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TORON TO • Medical cannabis company Maricann

Group Inc. s ays a $70 million financing deal announced l ast month has fallen through after the companies behind it terminated an underwriti­ng agreement.

The decision by Eight Capital, Canaccord Genuity Corp., GMP Securities L. P., Industrial Alliance Securities Inc. and Clarus Securities Inc. follows the resignatio­n Wednesday of Maricann’s chairman Neil Tabatznik and Raymond Stone, a board director.

It also comes as the Ontario Securities Commission reviews the timing and reporting of certain trades of shares owned or controlled by and Tabatznik and Eric Silver.

It added that the regulator has also told the company on Feb. 8 that Maricann chief executive Ben Ward is the subject of an investigat­ion into his activities while he was CEO of Canadian Can- nabis Corp., a wholly unrelated company.

Maricann said earlier this week that it had been advised orally by the underwrite­rs that they were not prepared to proceed and said Thursday that no reason was given for terminatin­g the agreement.

“We are disappoint­ed to have received the notice of terminatio­n and are considerin­g our options for further action,” said interim chairman Paul Pathak.

CEO Benjamin Ward added that “it’s business as usual” and the company is “moving full speed ahead in all operationa­l areas.”

Maricann said Wednesday that OSC staff have said they are unable to provide any further informatio­n about the review. An OSC spokeswoma­n said the regulator was not in a position to comment further.

According to insider trading records, Tabatzniko­n Jan .23 sold 412,000 shares he indirectly owned through Copper Lake Investment­s Inc. at roughly $ 4.16 each or a t otal of $ 1.714 million. A day later, Tabatznik s old 438,000 shares at roughly $ 4.26 each, or a total $ 1.864 million. And on Jan. 25, he sold another 5,000 shares for $4.25 each, or $21,250.

Stone also sold shares he indirectly owned, through either Felicity Stone or R & FS Investment­s Inc., in January. On Jan. 22, records show he sold 915,837 shares for roughly $ 4.22 each or $3.87 million. A day later, he sold 104,421 shares at $ 4.20 each, and another 128,000 for $ 4.22 each, or a total of $978,728.

Maricann, which has production facilities in both Langton, Ont., and Dresden, Germany, announced a proposed acquisitio­n on Jan. 24 of all outstandin­g shares of Haxxon AG, a cultivator of female hemp cannabis flowers based in Regens- dorf, Switzerlan­d. The deal, which was targeted to close on March 30, would allow Maricann to produce cannabis flowers in Switzerlan­d that would then be manufactur­ed into products such as cannabis vape cartridges, the company said at the time.

It has also been ramping up production capacity at home, as Canada moves to legalize marijuana for recreation­al use this year, c urrently expanding its cultivatio­n and support facilities in Canada to 87,515 square metres. When complete, Maricann’s facility is expected to produce 95,000 kilograms of dry cannabis flower per year, the company says.

Company stock has fallen as much as 30 per cent on the Canadian Securities Exchange on Wednesday to $ 1.70 per share from Tuesday’s closing price of $ 2.49. It closed Friday at $2.21.

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