Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Investors get no buzz from marijuana legalisati­on

- By Paul Ausick

When a Tuesday morning report hit the wire that U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer planned to introduce a bill on Wednesday that decriminal­ises marijuana, cannabis stocks posted some solid gains, up as much as 15%.

The high didn’t last.

By the closing bell, only two U.S.-traded cannabis-related stocks traded more than 1% higher for the day, although all but one closed up a bit. The big winner was OrganiGram, which closed with a gain of nearly 11% for the day, primarily due to a solid earnings report and an improved outlook announced earlier in the day.

Schumer’s proposed legislatio­n would remove marijuana’s listing as a Schedule I drug under the Controlled Substances Act, the same category as heroin and cocaine, among others. The federal government would regulate and tax the cannabis industry while leaving states in control of how they operate cannabis businesses and regulate adult use of the drug. There would no longer be a federal threat of punishment for possession and use of cannabis products.

If the federal legislatio­n is enacted, marijuana businesses also would gain access to federally regulated banking services that have been withheld due to fears that banks would lose their federal licenses.

Proponents of decriminal­ising marijuana no doubt think that the legislatio­n is long overdue. Medical marijuana use has been legalised in 37 states and recreation­al marijuana use has been approved in 18 states and the District of

Columbia.

Share prices of cannabis-related stocks already may have priced in U.S. legalisati­on.

Following the November elections that left Democrats in (fragile) control of the White House and Congress, many people believed it was only a matter of time before marijuana was decriminal­ised.

Another limiting factor on share prices is the experience of legal sales of recreation­al marijuana products in states where they are already legal.

Regulation­s and taxes make marijuana more expensive when purchased legally than when purchased from a non-legal source. Business owners have pleaded for more enforcemen­t, but the impact of tougher enforcemen­t has been limited.

How Schumer’s proposed legislatio­n deals with this issue could be key. (24/7 Wall St.com)

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