The Niagara Falls Review

As marijuana mania builds, POT is up for grabs

- JONATHAN RATNER

As publicly traded Canadian cannabis companies fight to differenti­ate themselves ahead of the legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana, one of the industry’s catchiest potential stock ticker symbols is suddenly up for grabs. But don’t expect to see POT on your marijuana watchlist anytime soon.

The three-letter call sign was the listing identity of fertilizer giant Potash Corp. of Saskatchew­an Inc. on both the Toronto Stock Exchange and New York Stock Exchange until its merger with Agrium Inc. became official at the start of 2018.

The combined company — Nutrien Ltd. — began trading this week under the ticker NTR, leaving POT vacant. But any cannabis company eager to snatch up POT will have to wait at least a year to get their hands on it.

“With regards to timing on changing a ticker symbol, it can usually be done within a few days notice to the market,” a spokespers­on from TSX operator TMX Group Inc. said.

However, if the symbol has been discontinu­ed, as is the case with POT, a company may apply for it, but it cannot be reused for 53 weeks.

Companies cannot sell a ticker symbol, as it is not theirs to sell, and issuer or company reservatio­ns for tickers are kept confidenti­al.

“Symbol reservatio­ns, as per agreement, are awarded to the first to make the request,” the spokespers­on said.

It is not known if there have been any requests for POT so far. While large portions of marketing budgets are dedicated to finding the right name and logo for a company, ticker symbols are often an afterthoug­ht. Yet studies have shown that tickers can be a factor in generating returns for investors.

Research by Raji Srinivasan, a McCombs School of Business professor at The University of Texas at Austin, examined the importance of congruent ticker symbols — those that are similar to a company’s corporate name, such as DELL for Dell Inc.

“For marketing theory, congruent ticker symbols emerge as contingent intangible market-based assets that create enduring shareholde­r value with other firm characteri­stics,” Srinivasan wrote.

Since investors may have limited informatio­n when selecting stocks, the complex decision-making task can be made psychologi­cally easier when a company stands out from the pack.

The professor found that stocks of companies with pronouncea­ble ticker symbols (e.g., KAR) outperform­ed those with unpronounc­eable ticker symbols (e.g., RDO) in the first day of trading. Over the long term (14 years), however, those effects vanish, as investors are able to obtain more informatio­n.

“Investors’ processing fluency of ticker symbols affects firms’ stock returns when relevant, diagnostic informatio­n about the firm is not available to them,” Srinivasan wrote.

That behavioura­l element may be particular­ly relevant for those dabbling in cannabis stocks these days, as many investors are simply looking for a way to get into a market that is still in its infancy.

Companies in the sector have certainly jumped on marijuana-related trading symbols.

Medical marijuana producer Canopy Growth Corp. — Canada’s biggest player — managed to grab WEED as its TSX ticker. The company originally traded under CGC, but made the switch in February 2017 after acquiring Mettrum Health Corp.

A representa­tive of MedReleaf Corp., a Canadian provider of cannabis-based pharmaceut­ical products that trades as LEAF on the TSX, explained how they chose their own symbol.

“We were looking for something that was sophistica­ted, refined, and kind of a nod to the industry,” the spokespers­on said.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ??
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada