The Standard (St. Catharines)

Pot firms shed real estate as financing options dry up

Sale-leaseback transactio­ns are now a key financial lifeline

- KRISTINE OWRAM

pot companies are increasing­ly selling off their real estate as other sources of financing dry up.

With cannabis stocks down nearly 60 per cent since their highs in March, producers that previously relied on issuing shares to raise money have been left with few alternativ­es, particular­ly in the U.S. where the drug remains federally illegal.

Sale-leaseback transactio­ns have stepped in to fill the void, becoming a key financial lifeline for an industry that needs capital to fund expansion.

Innovative Industrial Properties Inc., the largest cannabis-focused real estate investment trust and the only publicly traded one, has done $375.6 million (U.S.) worth of deals in 2019 and the pace has picked up over the course of the year, according to its chief executive officer.

“It’s becoming more and more attractive for operators because of the scarcity of alternativ­es out there,” said Paul Smithers, CEO of San Diego-based Innovative, which is more commonly known by its stock symbol IIPR. “Our pipeline has never been more vigorous than it is today.”

With pot illegal federally in the U.S., many companies in the industry struggled to find landlords willing to rent space and ended up owning property. Now, they’re using those assets to get capital, particular­ly with investors wary of putting their money into weed.

The legal marijuana industry has developed more slowly than expected in both the U.S. and Canada and investors have taken notice: in the week ended Oct. 25, cannabis companies raised a total of $26.8 million in equity and debt, compared with $707.8 million in the same period of 2018, according to Viridian Capital Advisors.

This has benefited REITs like IIPR, which owns 38 U.S. cannabis properties totalling 2.8 million rentable square feet. As of Oct. 30, IIPR’s yield on invested capital was 13.8 per cent.

The model has also proven to be popular with investors, with IIPR’s stock up 70 per cent year-to-date compared with a 42 per cent decline in the BI Global Cannabis Competitiv­e Peers index.

“When we talk to investors, they get comfort that we are a real estate company foremost,” Smithers said in a phone interview. “We’re not unlike a utility. We’re the picks and shovels, if you will.”

To be sure, the use of sale lease backs, which are popular in other industries, could wane in popularity if other fi Capital-hungry nancing options begin to open up. The SAFE Banking Act aims to allow banks to do business with legal cannabis companies and could make it easier for U.S. pot firms to raise money.

For now, the real estate transactio­ns are providing an immediate cash infusion, and many deals are structured to reimburse sellers for the cost of future improvemen­ts made to the property.

Owning your real estate is sometimes not the most ideal use of capital, said Joe Caltabiano, president of Cresco Labs Inc., which recently sold two Illinois properties to IIPR for $32.8 million.

Other U.S. cannabis companies have taken a different approach, spinning off their real estate assets into a REIT. MedMen Enterprise­s Inc. created Treehouse REIT in October 2018 and Green Acreage Real Estate Corp. was formed in May to acquire properties from Acreage Holdings Inc.

Canadian pot giant Canopy Growth Corp. has also said it’s considerin­g a real estate investment trust.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Cannabis producers that previously relied on issuing shares to raise money have been left with few alternativ­es.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Cannabis producers that previously relied on issuing shares to raise money have been left with few alternativ­es.

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