The social stigma against marijuana continues to slowly dissipate.
A construction worker’s pick-up truck passed me twice during a recent walk, apparently looking for a job site, the smell of marijuana smoke redolent in the air. It’s still illegal to smoke in Georgia, but that doesn’t mean the illegal market isn’t operating …
But what about the legal market?
Stock in Tilray (NASDAQ:TLRY), the Canadian pot company, now sits finely poised between due on today after the bell and a shortage of stock to short.
Tilray stock is expected to lose 12 cents per share on revenue of $14.15 million. ( puts the numbers for earnings and revenue at -15 cents and $17.69mm, respectively.) But that may be less important to speculators than Tilray’s efforts to create credibility with the marijuana and general investor communities.
Consider the following: Tilray has appointed Andrew Pucher, a former managing director at Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS), as chief corporate development officer.
Pucher joins a team that now includes from Nestle (OTCMKTS:NSRGY), Diageo (NYSE:DEO), Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) and Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX). Further, Tilray has a partnership with Novartis (NYSE:NVS), a joint venture with Anheuser-Busch InBev (NYSE:BUD) and a production agreement with the privately-held Authentic Brands Group.
Finally, Tilray last week announced a deal to buy Manitoba Harvest from Compass Group (NYSE:CODI) for
With all this corporate star power and deal-making, you would think Tilray would be a major pot producer.
What ¶¶Òõ×îаæ the Product?
What product?
Tilray sold no marijuana during the first two weeks after Canada legalized it in October. CEO Brendan Kennedy insisted that this will have changed by this quarter, while simultaneously announcing he bought producer Natura Naturals
If all this is leaving you skeptical about the company, you’re not alone …
Tilray short interest recently stood at 4 million shares, 24.62% of the company’s float, and there’s That’s why shares of a company that may report revenue of $17 million trade at a market capitalization of almost $7 billion.
The other is that most of the shares don’t trade, with over 78% held by There are 79 million shares outstanding.
The Marijuana Market
Speculators are betting that over the next few years, many more U.S. states will legalize marijuana sales and are looking to legislators for guidance.
New Jersey is the latest with to allow recreational sales. Meanwhile, Massachusetts is getting , debate has begun and New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is
But despite the examples of Colorado and Washington, the path to legal pot is still not a straight line.
Minnesota Republicans recently a legalization effort, prospects are in New Mexico and New York’s move is being held up by black legislators who want for their communities to benefit.
As a result, most moves lately have been toward legalizing medical marijuana, with doctors’ prescriptions and extensive regulation. in that direction. So is
All that said, marijuana remains under U.S. law.
People are still for marijuana offenses and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) CEO Elon Musk may lose his SpaceX security clearance after smoking pot on a podcast.
Bottom Line on Tilray Stock
Despite the success of Colorado, where marijuana sales are now growing at in the , the product remains controversial.
Tilray and its competitors are preparing for an opportunity that may not come to them for years. Meanwhile, marijuana stocks have been bid well beyond fundamentals. A lot of people are cashing big paychecks, and the dream of a well-regulated American pot market remains hazy.
is a financial and technology journalist. He is the author of a new mystery thriller, , available now at the Amazon Kindle store. Write him at danablankenhorn@gmail.com or follow him on Twitter at . As of this writing, he owned no shares in companies mentioned in this article.