The Niagara Falls Review

Tilray’s cannabis shares go on wild ride after export OK

- ARMINA LIGAYA

TORONTO — Shares in marijuana company Tilray Inc. went on a wild ride — surging by more than 90 per cent then briefly dropping into negative territory and rebounding — one day after the licensed producer said it got approval to export medical cannabis from Canada to the U.S. for a clinical trial.

The stock closed at more than US$214, up 38 per cent, after being halted five times within one hour.

The drastic swings in the stock follow a nearly 30 per cent jump on Tuesday, after the Nanaimo, B.C.- based firm announced it got the green light from the U.S.

Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion to export cannabis in capsule form to a researcher at a university in the U.S., where the drug is still illegal at the federal level.

Tilray will be exporting to the University of California San Diego capsules with two active ingredient­s — cannabidio­l and tetrahydro­cannabinol, better known as CBD and THC — extracted from the cannabis plant for a clinical trial as a potential treatment for essential tremor, a neurologic­al disorder that causes uncontroll­able shaking. The one-year trial is scheduled to begin in 2019.

On top of being positive for the sector, the clinical trial supports Tilray’s medical cannabis prospects as it competes with Smiths Falls, Ont.-based Canopy Growth in an intellectu­al property-arms race, said Cowen analyst Vivien Azer in a recent note.

“(The) news is a positive for both TLRY and the broader cannabis stock universe, as additional medical applicatio­ns and improved government support add another domino to future legalizati­on in the U.S.,” she said in a note on Tuesday.

While pot is legalized in several states for recreation­al and medical use, it remains a Schedule 1 drug under U.S. federal law.

Tilray shares shot up over US$230 just after the trading day began on Wednesday, but quickly backed off. But by late afternoon they surged to US$300, up 94 per cent from its previous close of US$154.98. Roughly an hour later, the share price slipped to US$151.40 before climbing back up to close at US$214.06, up 38.12 per cent. Tilray’s stock was halted five times between 2:52 p.m. and 3:48 p.m. — all volatility trading pauses.

Tilray completed its initial public offering in July with its shares priced at US$17 per share.

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Tilray president Brendan Kennedy says the firm has got approval from the U.S. to export a medical cannabis product south for a one-year test.
CHAD HIPOLITO THE CANADIAN PRESS Tilray president Brendan Kennedy says the firm has got approval from the U.S. to export a medical cannabis product south for a one-year test.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada