Toronto Star

Pot industry underestim­ates old-school dealers

Even in states where cannabis is legal, black market is proving more resilient than expected

- CAROL RYAN THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Traditiona­l drug dealers are still formidable competitor­s in U.S. states where cannabis is legal. Government­s planning for huge tax windfalls and investors expecting rapid marketshar­e gains have to adjust to a slower burn.

Legalizati­on of cannabis in California, currently the world’s largest recreation­al pot market, has been bumpy.

Restrictio­ns on adult use were lifted in January 2018 and the California­n legislatur­e projected $1 billion in state and local taxes from cannabis sales within a few years.

However, the actual windfall is proving underwhelm­ing, and the state department of finance is now trimming its estimate.

Pot excise taxes are forecast to generate $360 million in the 2019/20 budget year, down from the $514 million projected at the start of 2019.

Several factors are stymieing legitimate sales. Although legal at the state level, a majority of municipali­ties have banned retail sales of cannabis—an unforeseen complicati­on.

California­ns also have a penchant for growing their own cannabis plants at home.

However, the main barrier is the markup on legal cannabis from high taxes and the cost of complying with complex regulation­s. Consumers pay 77% more for the same product from a legal vendor, according to BDS Analytics.

Unless taxes are cut, the research house expects almost half of California’s cannabis spending to remain in the illegal market in 2024.

Canada, which legalized recreation­al cannabis use almost one year ago, is having similar issues.

The country’s gross domestic product data, which includes cannabis sales, gives a sobering estimate for how much supply still sits in the black market. In the first quarter of 2019, just 27% of total pot sales were made through licensed channels.

The implicatio­n is that taxes on pot won’t be the panacea that many states hoped. New York, for example, wants to use revenue generated from cannabis levies to repair the city’s creaking subway system.

The black market will also loom large for investors—although pot stocks are already coming down from their highs as shareholde­rs worry about the path to profitabil­ity. The United States Marijuana Index, which tracks 24 cannabis stocks including Curaleaf Holdings and Green Thumb Industries, has lost almost onequarter of its value over the last six months.

The U.S. cannabis market is huge. The bigger question is how much business remains in the hands of illegal dealers.

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