The Jerusalem Post

Israeli medical cannabis plans Nasdaq listing in 2019

- • By STEVEN SCHEER

InterCure, which recently entered the medical cannabis market, plans to list on Nasdaq by mid-2019, its controllin­g shareholde­r, Alex Rabinovitc­h, said on Thursday.

InterCure, an Israel-based holding company of small medical firms that bought medical cannabis developer Canndoc in September, is in the process of hiring bankers, preparing a prospectus and meeting with potential investors, Rabinovitc­h told Reuters.

“We consider ourselves a pharma grade cannabis leader and the major market for pharma players is Nasdaq,” Rabinovitc­h said, declining to say how InterCure will raise funds.

InterCure, whose chairman is former prime minister Ehud Barak, is already traded in Tel Aviv with a market capitalisa­tion of NIS 437 million ($117m.) after its shares rose 1,300% so far this year to 5.30 shekels per share.

Last month, the company raised NIS 45m. ($12.1m.) in a private funding round led by Rabinovitc­h and joined by Gary Fegel, the founder of private equity firm GMF Capital. Last week it raised another $5m. with participat­ion from Adam Neumann, CEO and co-founder of WeWork.

The company sells from a farm in the north of Israel, but it is building farms in 10 other countries in Europe and elsewhere to take advantage of new regulation­s that recognize medical cannabis as a drug that can be prescribed by a doctor and picked up at pharmacies.

At the same time, Israel’s medical cannabis industry is awaiting the approval of government export licenses.

Rabinovitc­h said InterCure is expanding Canndoc’s production to 100 tons in the next 18 months, from about five ton now. “It’s a big number and will make us one of the biggest players in the world so we need [more] capital,” he said.

In meeting investors, he said that some initially have concerns but become more receptive once they understand the company works with doctors and pharmacies and their product is a regular medicine.

(Reuters)

 ?? (Reuters) ?? An employee sorts freshly harvested cannabis buds at a medical marijuana plantation in northern Israel last year.
(Reuters) An employee sorts freshly harvested cannabis buds at a medical marijuana plantation in northern Israel last year.

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