Windsor Star

WILL LEGAL WEED MEAN MORE SMOKERS?

Producers banking on a bigger market, but stock prices show investors unsure

- JEN SKERRITT

There’s one question haunting all the marijuana businesses popping up between British Columbia and Newfoundla­nd.

How much do Canadians really like weed?

A year before recreation­al cannabis is expected to become legal, there’s an explosion in companies cultivatin­g the stuff. At least 10 marijuana outfits have new listings this year on the TSX Venture Exchange and Canada Securities Exchange. Some 51 enterprise­s have got the green light to grow pot, and 815 applicants are in the queue. All told, it could be enough to raise the country’s raw-weed output more than tenfold. This is where skeptics see froth. “If you ask people today why they don’t use, it’s a small percentage who say ‘because it’s illegal,”’ said Neil Boyd, a criminolog­ist at Simon Fraser University. “In many respects there might be an overestima­tion of demand.”

Longtime users and growers insist he’s wrong, but investors aren’t so sure.

Producer MedReleaf Corp. tumbled as much as 28 per cent last month in the worst debut for a Canadian IPO in 16 years amid concern pot stocks are overvalued.

Shares of Canopy Growth Corp., the country’s first billion-dollar marijuana startup, are down 21 per cent in the past three months.

The North American Medical Marijuana Index, which tracks leading cannabis stocks in the U.S. and Canada, has plunged 21 per cent since the federal government in April unveiled its plan to legalize the drug by next July, 16 years after Canada permitted it for medical use.

Of course, some of the decline may be attributed to the situation in the U.S. Many in the Trump administra­tion, Attorney General Jeff Sessions in particular, are no friends of the industry. For Canadian companies, the risk isn’t political.

“There seems to be a little bit of investor fatigue,” said PI Financial Corp. analyst Jason Zandberg. He said they’re having trouble differenti­ating between the producers, new and old, and what might give them competitiv­e advantages.

That’s to be expected, according to marijuana bulls, in a brandnew market that hasn’t even arrived yet. Parliament still has to pass the recreation­al law (though there’s little question it’ll do so). Then the federal government will have to write rules on taxation, and each province will have to decide how to regulate distributi­on.

“Nothing is going to be perfect right off the hop,” said Jon Bent, a licensed medical marijuana grower who has been cultivatin­g plants on his 11-acre farm outside Winnipeg for five years. “It’s baby steps — and the industry is moving quickly.”

The question is whether it’s going too quickly, considerin­g the variety of estimates about how much recreation­al weed Canadians will end up regularly ingesting.

Some educated guesses are that about 15 per cent of Canadians partake now, legally and otherwise. That’s around 5.4 million people, roughly the population of Colorado, which gave the nod to recreation­al marijuana in 2014. Medical and recreation­al sales there rose 56 per cent last year, to nearly $1 billion, according to Cannabase, operator of the state’s largest market.

One projection, from the Parliament­ary Budget Officer, is that 4.6 million people age 15 and over will use cannabis at least once and consume 655,000 kilograms next year, and that 5.2 million will be doing so by 2021.

Other reports peg future recreation­al consumptio­n at 420,000 kilograms a year with sales reaching $6 billion by 2021, Canaccord Genuity Group Inc. said in November. For its part, Health Canada anticipate­s a mature medical marijuana market will be around $1.3 billion.

That could underestim­ate the number of Canadians who will refuse to buy from corporate weed growers, said Chad Jackett, 38, who runs a medical marijuana dispensary in Squamish, B.C., and uses cannabis oil every day to treat nerve pain. His concern is that new regulation­s will sideline the independen­t farmers who advocated for the plant for years, and grow small amounts.

“I will definitely not be using anything” from one of the big outfits, Jackett said. “If I don’t have enough of my own then I’ll be getting it from somebody else whom I trust.”

Underscori­ng how confusing it all is, a few alarms are being sounded that there won’t be enough to pass around on Day One. In fact, Colorado faced some shortages of legal supplies in the first year. A similar rush emptied shelves in Nevada, where sales started on July 1.

By 2015, Colorado had the opposite problem, according to Denverbase­d researcher Marijuana Policy Group, with supplies approximat­ely 51 per cent larger than demand. The average price sought by wholesaler­s for recreation­al flower has fallen 52 per cent since lawful sales began, according to Cannabase.

None of this has dampened enthusiasm in some quarters in Canada.

MedReleaf has raised $100 million, all of which is going toward expanding capacity, said chief executive officer Neil Closner. He said the disappoint­ing IPO was due to a general market slowdown and “not a reflection of demand for our product.”

If you ask people today why they don’t use (marijuana), it’s a small percentage who say ‘because it’s illegal.’

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Neil Closner, chief executive officer of MedReleaf, at the company’s the growing facility in Markham, Ont. Closner says a drop in the company’s shares after its IPO reflected a general market downturn and “not a reflection of demand for our product.”
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS Neil Closner, chief executive officer of MedReleaf, at the company’s the growing facility in Markham, Ont. Closner says a drop in the company’s shares after its IPO reflected a general market downturn and “not a reflection of demand for our product.”

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