Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Where cannabis sales are heading

- Interviewe­d by Alex Veiga Edited for clarity and length.

Colorado-based research firm BDSA projects legal marijuana sales in the U.S. will jump 8% this year to $27 billion. Much of the increase is coming from states like Illinois and New Jersey that recently legalized cannabis sales for recreation­al use, according to BDSA. Those gains should offset slowing sales in more establishe­d legal marijuana markets, such as California, Washington and Colorado, according to a BDSA forecast released last week.

BDSA forecasts U.S. sales will reach $42 billion in 2026. Adult recreation­al use of marijuana is legal in 19 states, while medical use is legal in 39 states.

BDSA Chief Executive Roy Bingham spoke to The Associated Press about the cannabis industry trends that shaped the firm’s forecast.

Why are some markets seeing sales growth, while others are slowing?

The industry is made up of a series of growth curves for each state. In the case of some of the mature states, they are now at the flat or declining phase, largely because of price reductions. And in the case of the early stage markets like New Jersey, they’re in the catching up very rapidly phase. And then you still have states like Illinois, Massachuse­tts, Michigan that are seeing fairly strong growth. Combine that with markets that are going to come on in the future when legalizati­on takes place for either medical use or adult use, and you end up with our projection of $42 billion by 2026.

With inflation at the highest level in decades, why are we seeing price reductions in the legal marijuana industry?

(Cannabis companies) are also hurt by input costs, but that is not sufficient in the supply-demand environmen­t that we’ve got to offset the need to lower prices. You have massive oversupply in some markets like Oregon. Legal product cannot go from one state to another, so you can have very big regional difference­s. You can have one state that has massive oversupply and in theory, the next state over could have very significan­t undersuppl­y.

Having to compete with unlicensed marijuana sellers also keeps pricing pressure on the industry, right?

You have an illicit industry that coexists with the legal industry. And in a state like California, for example, the illicit industry is multiples bigger than the licensed and regulated industry. And the licensed and regulated industry is burdened very heavily with taxes and other regulation­s.

How is the industry doing in terms of growing its customer base?

This was the first year that more than 50% of adults in most states said that they had consumed (marijuana) in the last six months. Go back 5 or 6 years, that was about 40% of adults, so it’s a significan­t increase. But we have to recognize that a significan­t number of those people are only consuming once in 6 months or at very low frequency of consumptio­n.

 ?? ?? Roy Bingham CEO BDSA
Roy Bingham CEO BDSA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States