Toronto Star

Disappoint­ing pot inventory has investors craving more

Cannabis stocks started to dip a day before legalizati­on

- KRISTINE OWRAM

Pot stocks continued a six-day rout Tuesday amid Canadian supply shortages, creating a favourable environmen­t for the next big investment in the space, according to one investor.

Aurora Cannabis Inc. fell as much as 15 per cent in its U.S. trading debut, Canopy Growth Corp. lost 12 per cent and Tilray Inc. tumbled as much as 18 per cent amid broader market weakness. This compounded a string of declines that began a week ago, one day before Canada legalized recreation­al marijuana on Oct. 17.

Investors appear disappoint­ed in the lack of inventory, with several stores and websites running out of products in the first days after legalizati­on, as well as a dearth of brand awareness, said Charles Taerk, chief executive officer of Toronto-based Faircourt Asset Management, which runs the $50-million pot-focused UIT Alternativ­e Health Fund.

Canadian cannabis retailers were sold out of about 46 per cent of pot products, Cowen analyst Vivien Azer said, based on her survey of online retailers in five

provinces. Meanwhile, more than 95 per cent of customers surveyed across four provinces last week were unaware of the brands they had just purchased, according to GMP Securities analyst Martin Landry.

“We thought the sector was going to be weaker at the beginning of the month as we slid into Oct. 17 and we were kind of surprised that markets stayed pretty buoyant up until early last week,” Taerk said in an interview, adding that his fund is currently 23 per cent in cash.

“Not to say that a correction is ever overdue but we were prepared to a certain degree for some weakness.”

Investors shouldn’t be rushing to sell their holdings, Taerk said, especially since weakness in the sector could prompt the next big investment in the space, much like Constellat­ion Brands Inc. bought into Canopy in August following two months of declines.

“It didn’t just happen out of nowhere, Constellat­ion was watching,” said Taerk, who likes CannTrust Holdings Inc., Organigram Holdings Inc. and Aphria Inc.

“They’re not going to invest when the companies are trading at all-time highs.”

About 56 per cent of Canopy Growth’s 144 products available were sold out in Azer’s checks, while Tilray, which doesn’t have licenses to sell cannabis goods in three of the five provinces she surveyed, saw a sellout rate of 64 per cent across its 22 products. .

 ?? JOSH EDELSON AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Some marijuana stocks have experience­d volatile share-price swings in recent days.
JOSH EDELSON AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Some marijuana stocks have experience­d volatile share-price swings in recent days.

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