Vancouver Sun

California pot firm MedMen goes public in Canada with valuation of over $2B

- MARK RENDELL

Shares of upscale U.S. marijuana retailer MM Enterprise­s USA LLC are expected to begin trading on the Canadian Securities Exchange, following the reverse takeover of a Canadian shell company and $143-million raise that gives the company an implied value of more than $2 billion.

MedMen, which will trade as MMEN after acquiring oil and gas shell Ladera Ventures Corp., is by far the largest company listed on the CSE, and is expected to be the most valuable public U.S. marijuana company to date.

“The Canadian Securities Exchange ... gives us the fastest access to liquid capital that we can get at this point,” said Daniel Yi, MedMen’s senior vice-president of corporate communicat­ions.

“We’re already in three states and we have a lot of projects that are in the pipeline. Our ability to raise capital fast is what will also allow us to grow and build faster,” he said.

The company, which is aiming to cultivate a high-end Apple Store-inspired retail brand, has 12 stores across New York, Nevada and California — including a store that opened on Manhattan’s trendy 5th Avenue last month — as well as four cultivatio­n facilities either built or under constructi­on. It is based in Culver City, Calif.

MedMen employs 800 people, according to Yi, and has raised roughly US$135 million in private equity and venture capital.

The listing comes as U.S. cannabis companies are increasing­ly looking to Canadian public markets as a way to raise money.

Because cannabis remains illegal on the federal level in the U.S., companies operating south of the border — regardless of whether they are domiciled in the U.S. or Canada — cannot list on mainstream American exchanges, and trade mostly over the counter.

This has made Canada’s alternativ­e exchanges, most notably the CSE, a potentiall­y attractive option for U.S. cannabis companies, even as the larger Toronto Stock Exchange and Venture Exchange don’t permit listings by marijuana companies with U.S. exposure.

“We’ve got an existing ecosystem of dealers and investors who will support investment in these companies,” said Richard Carleton, chief executive of the CSE, which lists more than 70 companies in the cannabis space, and more than 20 with operations in the U.S.

“The entreprene­urs in the space look at the valuations that companies both with U.S. operations and Canadian operations have, and they think, ‘all right, it would be nice to get some of their early stage investors some liquidity at the valuations that are present on the Canadian public markets,’” Carleton added.

For MedMen, the CSE listing is less about liquidity for early shareholde­rs than the ability to raise cash quickly, said Yi. “Raising capital through private equity or venture capital ... you are essentiall­y raising two or three million at a time, and you’re having a lot of meetings with family offices, wealthy individual­s. It’s a much slower pace of raising capital than it would be in a public market,” said Yi.

“(Going public) gives us the opportunit­y to use our valuation and our stocks to also fund our venture going forward,” Yi added, pointing to companies like Canopy Growth Corp. and Aurora Cannabis Inc. that have acquired numerous assets using stock rather than cash.

MedMen also intends to enter the Canadian recreation­al marijuana market “as soon as the Canadian Government will allow us,” said Yi.

In March, the company announced a joint venture, called MedMen Canada Inc., with Canadian licensed producer Cronos Group Inc. The partnershi­p intends to bring MedMen-branded stores to provinces, like Alberta and British Columbia, where private retail will be allowed.

“We would operate it day-to-day, because we have the operationa­l expertise on the retail side. Cronos obviously has the infrastruc­ture for the cultivatio­n and production, and the licensing infrastruc­ture for Canada,” said Yi.

Like many companies in the cannabis space, MedMen’s growth has been extraordin­arily rapid. Two years ago the company had only one dispensary, in West Hollywood, and one growing facility, in nearby Sun Valley.

The $143-million financing, concurrent with the reverse takeover, was led by Cormark Securities Inc. and Canaccord Genuity Corp.

It saw MedMen shares sell for $5.25, according Vahan Ajamian, a former Beacon Securities Ltd. analyst who joined MedMen last week as the company’s new managing director of analyst relations, implying a pre-listing value of $2.14 billion.

 ?? RICHARD VOGEL/AP FILES ?? MedMen, which has 12 stores across New York, Nevada and California, says it turned to Canadian public markets as a way to raise cash quickly in order to “to grow and build faster.” It is expected to be the most valuable public U.S. marijuana company to...
RICHARD VOGEL/AP FILES MedMen, which has 12 stores across New York, Nevada and California, says it turned to Canadian public markets as a way to raise cash quickly in order to “to grow and build faster.” It is expected to be the most valuable public U.S. marijuana company to...

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