The Guardian (USA)

Medical cannabis companies cleared for London stock market

- Rob Davies

Medicinal cannabis companies have been cleared by the UK’s financial regulator to float on the London Stock Exchange but firms that sell marijuana to recreation­al users will still be banned.

The Financial Conduct Authority said businesses that grow and sell recreation­al cannabis, even in countries such as Canada where it is legal, cannot list in London because of the Proceeds of Crime Act. Income from the sale of cannabis and cannabis oil outside the

UK could constitute “criminal property” under the act, because it covers conduct abroad that would constitute a crime if it happened in the UK.

But the regulator said UK medical cannabis firms could float in London, as could overseas firms, although they would have to satisfy the regulator that they should be allowed to do so because of the more nuanced legal position.

The rules for overseas firms are complicate­d by the UK’s restrictiv­e regulatory environmen­t for medicinal cannabis, legalised in 2018. Cannabis growers require a licence from the Home Office, while any imports of the drug require patients to get a prescripti­on first.

The FCA said regulation­s, which limit the extent to which medicinal cannabis is being used in the UK, meant overseas firms could not automatica­lly be granted the right to list in London, even if they only sold a medical product. While firms might have a licence to sell in other countries, that did not mean they would be able to secure the same permission­s from the Home Office, the regulator said.

“For medicinal cannabis and cannabis oil companies with overseas activities, the company will need to satisfy us that their activities would be legal if carried out in the UK,” the FCA said.

“We will also need to understand the legal basis of the company’s overseas activities, for example the nature of the local licensing and the licences the company holds.”

Despite the complex position for overseas producers, the fast-growing cannabis industry is expected to celebrate the clarity from the markets regu

lator, which will help firms tap funding from new investors.

Roby Zomer, co-founder and managing director of the pharmaceut­icals firm MGC, said: “MGC started the process of looking to list on the London markets over a year ago. During that time we have struggled with the pace of the process but have continued to push forward, with a view to being one of the first UK-listed medical cannabis companies.

“Given the news today, we will again push ahead with our listing ambitions for the business, which will support its future growth and offer investors the opportunit­y to access a significan­t and growing opportunit­y.”

Nick Davis, chief executive of the law firm Memery Crystal, which counts MGC and other cannabis companies among its clients, said: “This is great and overdue news for the medicinal cannabis sector in the UK, both for medicinal cannabis companies themselves, but also for patients, who have yet to receive easy access to the products they need.

“Our firm, and a number of our clients, have worked hard over the past few years to have medical cannabis companies admitted to the London markets. With greater clarity from the FCA we hope investors will also support companies coming to market to drive the sector forward.”

 ?? Photograph: Amir Cohen/Reuters ?? An employee at an Israeli medicinal plant inspecting a cannabis leaf in June. Overseas firms will only be able to list in London once they have satisfied the regulator.
Photograph: Amir Cohen/Reuters An employee at an Israeli medicinal plant inspecting a cannabis leaf in June. Overseas firms will only be able to list in London once they have satisfied the regulator.

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