More carnage is coming for marijuana stocks, this investor says NOVEMBER 3, 2018 BY NICK WADDELL B

gb123

Well-Known Member
Canada’s pot stocks have further to fall, according to investment manager Brian Acker, who says that investors looking to jump into the cannabis sector should probably wait until the new year.



It’s been a dizzying couple of months in Canada’s marijuana space where investors began to pile into not just industry heavyweights like Canopy Growth (Canopy Growth Corp Stock Quote, Chart TSX:WEED, NYSE:CGC) and Aurora Cannabis (Aurora Cannabis Stock Quote, Chart TSX, NYSE:ACB) but smaller names, as well, all starting in mid-August when Canopy announced a new $5-billion deal with alcohol giant Constellation Brands.

Many stocks in the sector saw their valuations soar over the space of the two months leading up to Canada’s rec cannabis legalization date of October 17. The Horizons Marijuana Life Sciences Index (TSX:HMMJ) which tracks the performance of the sector in general went from a low of $14.54 on August 14 to a high of $27.00 on October 16.

Then, while Canadians celebrated the end of cannabis prohibition, many by waiting in long lines for their first purchase of legal pot, the bottom fell out of the cannabis space in no short order. Over the ensuing two weeks, Canopy has lost 37 per cent of its value as of late-day trading on Friday, Aurora is down 44 per cent and HMMJ is now down 30 per cent.

Marijuana Stocks Haven’t Seen the Bottom
But there’ll be more carnage ahead for the sector, says Acker, President and CEO of Acker Finley Inc.

“As the fundamentals come out in terms of sales and earnings, the market will suss out who the winners are going to be,” Acker told BNN Bloomberg. “We’ve had a little bit of a crash but I think there’s more to it that’s going to come.”

“These guys are going to probably start reporting after the December quarter,” he said. “I would avoid the space altogether, and as value managers, what I’d love to do is pick through the rubble — pick through the ones who you think are going to be the winners and losers based on fundamentals, and the market will tell you probably in the first quarter of 2019 who you want to own and who not.”

The late October decline in cannabis has had a major impact on Canada’s markets in general, with the drop in pot stocks contributing to one of the worst months for the S&P/TSX Composite in years. The S&P/TSX Venture Composite was hit hard as well, with ten of its 15 biggest losers for October coming from cannabis.

At the same time, even with recreational cannabis up and running, there’s still a lot left to be determined about the industry, not just in Canada but in other jurisdictions like the United States and Europe where liberalization surrounding cannabis may further open up the industry.

Acker says that going forward, investors are likely to react swiftly to any missteps by companies in the sector.

“If they miss something, a sales cycle or whatever, the market will be brutal on these names,” he said.
 

MedicatedHiker

Well-Known Member
Trying to steal an industry is harder than it seems, eh? Well, they wouldn't have tried if they had taken a second to appreciate the fact that cannabis users are on to them. I mean, we're not exactly the type of people who don't question authority...and they want to force us to buy their irradiated cannabis through threats and intimidation? Yeah, good luck with that.
 
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The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Oh that is an excellent read. Finally someone see's it for how it is and is going to be.
See ya tilray......who's next.
Loved this part....from the article:

" Long-term, the challenge for producers will be excess supply. By 2019, the production estimates of the ten-largest licensed producers alone will exceed Canada’s projected domestic demand by 20 per cent. If we include the next tier of publicly traded licensed producers, the market will be oversupplied by 140 per cent. That excess grows further when we factor in licensed private companies and the 500+ companies awaiting licensing. "

Plus these fools have greatly overestimated what they think is the domestic demand.
Wait until they see after next years outdoor homegrown stuff comes in. Allowing folks to grow is going to kill their system in a lot of ways. SO SWEET!!!!!
My guess is the smart ones are already seeing the lackluster sales in the legal system. No repeat orders. Complaints about quality. Hippies laughing so hard they piss themselves....opps...pardon me.
My opinion is that they WILL NOT tell the truth about how it's going. We will all need to read between the lines and listen for random clues.....like above.
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
500 hundred plus companies waiting for licenses.....HAHAHAHAHAHAHA.........Oh that going to help things.....lol

FOOLS....RUN NOW!
Go back to tomatoes before you ruin yourselves.

Who thought all this up? these guys by chance.......

 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
You were right @gb123 ....they must be astonished at how a buncha stoners could have pulled this black market thing off so well. They will never get it ........cause they are greed bags and not cool.
You gotta be us to know how this all works.

It's called a culture and the best part is it going to bite those who persecuted us back.....right in the heart....where they keep their cash.
 

cannadan

Well-Known Member
Its really nice to see these guys failing miserably ,since we told them so ....and here it is...
their bridge of self worth and the over inflation of their corporate cannabis dream.
It was easy, at first, to convince investors about an "unknown legal market" and how these "supposed pioneer's",were poised to take control of cannabis and the reigns..to their massive new market.
Bottom line is they have come full circle into the new business mode... and failure is a very very real possibility.
 
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