Four executives and three other directors of Aphria Inc., Nuuvera Inc., at the time they are orchestrating a takeover deal for the cannabis firm, but did not disclose their holdings to investors and later voted to approve the transaction at a board meeting ,
The executives included Aphria chair and chief executive officer Vic Neufeld, as well as the company's chief financial officer, Carl Merton, Mr. Neufeld said.The company said the investments were not large enough to require disclosure.
Aphria agreed to buy Nuuvera for $ 826-million in late January, just three weeks after Nuuvera went public on the TSX Venture Exchange.
Aphria offered $ 8.50 by Nuuvera share it was already in most stock and some cash. In February, as Marijuana stocks fell after a rally and Aphria took a closer look at Nuuvera's assets, Aphria slashed the cash portion of the deal to 60 cents a share from $ 1.
The pair revised the previous week, hiking the cash offer to 62 cents. The deal for about $ 425-million closed Friday.
The transaction left the seven Aphria insiders with a multimillion-dollar windfall.
Last August, they earned a total of 900,000 shares in Nuuvera for $ 1 each, The Globe and Mail has been learned. Nuuvera, which was sold at the time and raised its money.
Aphria itself also in the offering, buying 2 million shares, according to regulatory filings. (Last November, Aphria said it's upped its stake in Nuuvera by another 2 million shares for $ 2.50 apiece.)
At Friday's closing price, the deal turned over $ 900,000 investment in about $ 4.75-million for the Aphria insiders.
The 900,000 shares in Nuuvera are owned by Mr. Neufeld, Mr. Merton, Aphria director and Vice President of Infrastructure and Technology John Cervini, director and vice president of growing operations Cole Cacciavillani, and three other directors, at Aphria spokesperson confirmed on Friday. Their holdings represented 0.9 per cent of Nuuvera stock on a fully diluted basis.
Aphria is one of Canada's largest legal pot producers, with a market cap of $ 2.3-billion. Nuuvera, in contrast, is much smaller and less developed.
An earlier partnership with Aphria helped fuel growth in Nuuvera's valuation and raise its profile. Last August, in addition to investing in Nuuvera, Aphria said it would provide 17,000 kilograms of marijuana a year. Aphria also announces a deal to sell some of its land in Leamington, Ont., Where it is based, as well as agreed to help design, build and run the facility Nuuvera. In January, Aphria said it would supply another 60,000 kilograms of cannabis annually.
In addition, Nuuvera owns another company that has applied for a license to grow cannabis in Canada and is pushing into new markets such as Germany.It is therefore another business that is licensed to handle and test controlled substances on behalf of third parties.
The personal investments of Aphria insiders in Nuuvera were not previously disclosed in regulatory filing on Canada's System for Electronic Disclosure by Insiders (SEDI), which tracks the trading activity of company insiders.Whether or not Aphria has any information on the material and is a lot of latitude in determining materiality.
"There is no requirement for disclose this information," Andrew Schwartz, a spokesperson for Aphria, said on Friday. "The investments are immaterial to Nuvera and to the individual who made the investments."
Nujvera's business does not really pay much and does not.
Mr. Schwartz said the Aphria insiders have their Nuuvera stock in escrow, adding that they have been selling their shares in the market. As part of the acquisition, Nuuvera stock wants to be converted into Aphria shares, which will boost the insiders' holdings in the marijuana grower. The new Aphria shares will be published and subject to blackout trading restrictions. Mr. Schwartz said, "The board is aware of the shareholding of certain directors and management members." Aphria has seven board members, according to its website - and six directors personally owned shares in Nuuvera.
Mr. Schwartz added that in consideration of the Nuuvera deal, the board appointed a special committee of independent directors, and managed the strategy for the purchase to them.
Cormark Securities Inc. is a law firm specializing in legal issues. Stoic Advisory Inc. is a Toronto based advisory firm. Legal advice came from Stikeman Elliott LLP.
The special committee unanimously approved a recommendation to proceed with the transaction to the final vote, according to Mr. Schwartz. He said the personal investments in Nuuvera did not warrant any recusals.
"The board received the special committee's unanimous recommendation and approved the deal while being aware of the immaterial investments, which did not warrant any recusal," Mr. Schwartz added.
Even though the four Aphria executives have stumbled across the potential for conflicts of interest in Nuhran, their undisclosed staff stacks in Nuuvera.
Conflicts arise when a director or officer enters into a material transaction with their company, via the Ontario Business Corporation Act. It says that it would not vote for any part of a board meeting.
The seven Aphria insiders act in Nuuvera's third private placement after its so-called founders round. By then, more than 70 million shares had already been issued. As of Friday, the company had more than 80 million shares outstanding, excluding those tied to warrants and options.
Aphria says it's not its place to disclose the investments of its executives and directors. "The disclosure of the board members and the executives who participated in the private placement is not our disclosure to make," Mr. Schwartz said.
To Mr. Neufeld, Mr. Cervini, Mr. Cacciavillani and Mr. Merton, requesting comment was not immediately returned.
During a coincidental encounter on Friday morning in the lobby of the Shangri-la Hotel in Toronto, Mr. Neufeld told The Globe and that he did not think it was necessary. "Totally immaterial," he said. "It's not a story. It's nothing."