Toronto Star

Ottawa’s pot plan sparks merger talk

Industry consolidat­ion likely as government set to outline recreation­al marijuana policy

- JOSH WINGROVE AND JEN SKERRITT

OTTAWA— Canada is set to detail its plans for legalized recreation­al marijuana, with the industry expecting a rush of mergers as companies seek a national footprint amid a patchwork of different rules in each province.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government will unveil its proposed law as early as this week but is likely to leave many facets — potentiall­y including distributi­on and the legal age — up to individual provinces, as recommende­d by a federal panel. That suggests Canada’s pot market could be similar to its ad hoc system of restrictio­ns on the sale and shipment of alcohol.

The developmen­t may spark further consolidat­ion as companies seek to expand their geographic footprint as the shape of the market becomes clear. Shares of marijuana companies such as Canopy Growth Corp. have surged more than fourfold over the past 12 months amid investor optimism over recreation­al sales, which Canaccord Genuity Group Inc. said in November could reach $6 billion annually by 2021. Pot entreprene­urs have also turned to Canadian equity markets to raise funds for U.S. operations.

“There will be some M&A activity,” said Cam Battley, executive vicepresid­ent of Aurora Cannabis Inc., a licensed marijuana producer in Alberta. “I think you anticipate there will be rapid building of capacity.”

That will come as the government warns of a long road ahead developing regulation­s with provinces and cities once it introduces its proposed legislatio­n.

“There’s a clear recognitio­n we’ve got a lot of work to do,” Bill Blair, the federal lawmaker and former Toronto police chief leading Trudeau’s legalizati­on effort, said in an interview.

Both he and Bardish Chagger, the government house leader, declined comment on whether the law would come this week, the last before a twoweek parliament­ary break.

Companies may seek acquisitio­ns across multiple provinces to hedge against the risk jurisdicti­ons will implement the legislatio­n in different ways or at different times, according to Daniel Pearlstein, a research analyst at Toronto-based brokerage Eight Capital. The rollout will take time as provinces need to decide how marijuana will be distribute­d, he said, noting municipali­ties may have oversight of licensed storefront­s.

Smiths Falls, Ont.-based Canopy, the first Canadian company with a market value of $1billion — making it a marijuana unicorn — announced last week it will expand west by acquiring closely held rTrees Producers Ltd. in Yorkton, Sask. Aurora Cannabis, which has a production facility north of Calgary and is building an 800,000-square-foot facility at the Edmonton Internatio­nal Airport, acquired Peloton Pharmaceut­icals Inc., a late-stage marijuana producer applicant in Montreal.

“Ultimately, there might be a handful of big players remaining, so I think we assume there’s going to be a fair amount of consolidat­ion along the way,” Pearlstein said.

Battley echoed that prediction, noting there’s good access to capital in the sector. Clear timelines give companies confidence to expand, he added, noting Aurora plans to boost production to 100,000 kilograms per year from 5,500 kilograms when its Edmonton facility is complete.

“We are going to be opportunis­tic,” he said.

Canopy’s strategy is to keep building infrastruc­ture to ensure they don’t run out of product and the company has two staffers that do nothing but review expansion and acquisitio­n opportunit­ies, according its chief executive officer. The firm, which also has a footprint in Quebec, will “probably do one more location to get a little further west,” Bruce Linton said Monday.

Once the federal law is in place, talks on regulation­s — the nuts and bolts of the rules — will ramp up with provinces and cities.

A recent CBC report said the government would unveil the law this week and wanted to legalize by July1, 2018. Blair said the government wouldn’t necessaril­y enact the legislatio­n on that exact date because “Canada Day is Canada Day,” describing it instead as an aspiration­al target “that’s a reasonable thing to aim for.” The government has committed to releasing the proposed legislatio­n this spring.

Provinces have been waiting for this week’s law before plunging into detail. Mike Morris, British Columbia’s public safety minister, said work has nonetheles­s begun on “the future developmen­t of the provincial regulatory framework.”

Alberta Justice Minister Kathleen Ganley said last week she’d seek to recuperate costs of regulation and product testing from the federal government. “We intend to make sure the views of Albertans are reflected in how we legalize,” she said in a written statement.

Federal testing, taxation and any provincial compensati­on will pile on costs to marijuana at a time when Trudeau has said a key objective is undercutti­ng the black market. How much each producer will make as a share of sales isn’t yet clear.

A key outstandin­g issue is which provinces, if any, will allow producers to set up their own stores.

A federal advisory panel recommende­d that Trudeau set a minimum age of purchase at 18 while allowing provinces to set a higher age, and that marijuana not be sold by retailers alongside alcohol and tobacco.

It also recommende­d working with provinces to determine a tax regime, while also leaving wholesale distributi­on and retail sales up to provinces and municipali­ties.

In addition, it suggested the government consider a direct-order mail system for recreation­al marijuana, akin to the one already in place for medical marijuana, including possibly only allowing sales by mail initially before phasing in retail locations.

 ?? LARS HAGBERG/AFP FILE PHOTO ?? Canaccord Genuity Group Inc. predicts recreation­al marijuana sales could reach $6 billion a year by 2021.
LARS HAGBERG/AFP FILE PHOTO Canaccord Genuity Group Inc. predicts recreation­al marijuana sales could reach $6 billion a year by 2021.

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