Momentum Public Relations
Blog: June 1 2018
Marijuana Stocks Still Have Legs
Bryan, Garnier & Co: Global Marijuana Market to Hit US$140 Billion by 2027
Canadian Licensed Producers Expanding Abroad
The exact date when recreational marijuana will be legalized is still uncertain. The Trudeau government has repeatedly said that it will be legalized this summer. When that great day comes to pass it may be the only time in Canadian history that the government has created an economic stimulus package that actually works: the legal marijuana industry.
Not content with only being valued in the billions of dollars in Canada, our domestic marijuana industry is also hell-bent on international expansion.
On January 28, 2018 the CBC ran a story quoting Bloomberg that said there were 87 publicly listed marijuana companies on the TSXV and that collectively they were worth US$37 billion. In January Statistics Canada estimated that almost 5 million Canadians spent $5.7 billion dollars buying marijuana, with only 10% of that going to legal medical cannabis.
On May 28, 2018 Aurora Cannabis announced that it had signed a distribution agreement with German plant based pharmaceutical distributor Heinrich Klenk. Klenk distributes its products in more than 25,000 drug stores across Germany and Europe. Klenk is a trusted name and Aurora has launched a new brand that will be produced in Canada named Cannabis Klenk which the company will distribute. Medical cannabis is legal in Germany.
Aurora has been making international plans and putting them into action for some time. It owns Berlin-based Pedanios, the leading marijuana importer, exporter and distributor of medical marijuana in the European Union as well as 51% of Aurora Nordic which plans on constructing a one million square foot greenhouse in Denmark. To round out its diversified activities the company also owns two companies that specialize in building greenhouse lighting systems, BC Northern Lights and Urban Cultivator.
Aurora is not alone on the international stage, Canopy Growth, which has Snoop Dogg as a spokesman, has operations in seven countries on four continents. Aphria Inc. has operations in more than 10 countries on five continents. It recently created a joint venture, Canninvest Africa with the South African Verve Group of Companies that will see it gain an interest in Verve Dynamics, a licensed producer of medical cannabis extracts, which it believes will become one of if not the lowest cost producer in the extract field.
Driven by economies of scale and the desire to have all the pieces to the puzzle in one place the industry has been consolidating for some time. The most recent example is the merger of Aurora and MedReleaf, which has created the largest marijuana company in the world.
If you think the market is now too high to buy in, you may want to think again. A story published in Forbes on March 1, 2018 predicts a robust and growing legal international marijuana poised for exponential growth.
The story is based on a report by Arcview Market Research which predicts that by 2027 spending on legal recreational and medical marijuana will hit US$57 billion with a 67% market share for recreational marijuana and a 33% share for medical cannabis.
The lion’s share of the revenues will be generated in North America where the largest recreational market is expected to develop with sales going from US$9.2 billion in 2017 to US$47 billion in 2027.
All of which means that serious investors should start doing their due diligence on the marijuana industry now, if they haven’t already. That due diligence should also include bio-pharmas that are developing cannabis- based drugs for regulatory approval and for the over the counter market.
If you still think that marijuana stocks are overpriced you may wish to consider this, investment bank Bryan, Garnier & Co have just predicted that the global marijuana market is poised to grow by a 1,000 percent to hit US$140 billion by 2027.
One of the more interesting set of statistics put out by Statista is that in America, medical marijuana will take a larger slice of the pie than recreational marijuana. The company predicts that by 2025 cannabinoid-based pharmaceuticals will be valued at US$13.2 billion and the legal recreational market at US$10.9 billion.
Whether or not cannabinoid-based pharmaceuticals will surpass the legal recreational market is as yet unknown but predictions like the one above are a sure indication that bio-pharmas launching successful drugs will be lucrative.
A rising tide raises all ships. When Canadian recreational marijuana legalization takes place marijuana stocks are expected to jump and by association so will those pharmaceutical companies developing successful cannabinoid-based drugs.
Tetra Bio-Pharma, (TSXV: TBP) is one such company with a pipeline of cancer chronic pain, and other products under development. Its lead product, PPP 001, trademarked as RX Princeps has started Phase 3 clinical trials and stands to be the first cannabinoid therapy that will have its efficacy and safety proved.
Once that happens, PPP 001 will very likely become the first drug to be given Health Canada and American FDA approval. This achievement will be marked by a Drug Identification Number, DIN, which means that it can legally be prescribed by doctors and eligible for insurance plan coverage. TBP already has distribution agreements in place in Israel and in Europe.
The above does not and should not be taken as investment advice. Investors have the responsibility of performing their own due diligence. In the interests of transparency, Momentum PR represents Tetra Bio-Pharma.
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