At least in the current, early stages of the legal marijuana sector, Canopy Growth (NYSE:CGC) is the clear leader. Canopy Growth stock has by far the highest market capitalization among marijuana stocks, and Canopy has the largest peak production capabilities.
As a result, the CGC stock price is somewhat of a weather vane for investor sentiment towards the cannabis sector more broadly.
Thatâs good news, and bad news, for CGC stock. On the plus side, CGC is simple. The companyâs reach is broad and continues to grow. However the industryâs growth plays out, Canopy Growth is going to play a significant role in it and generate significant profits. If the marijuana sector exceeds investorsâ expectations, the CGC stock price likely will do the same.
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The flip side is that itâs unlikely that Canopy Growth stock will be the best marijuana stock over time. Smaller niche plays might have more room for growth and are more likely to become M&A targets. Canopyâs wide reach guarantees at least a few wins, but some of its myriad initiatives will fail to bear fruit (or, more accurately in this case, flowers).
Overall, the outlook of CGC stock is pretty simple. If an investor believes in cannabis, CGC stock remains the simplest play, as Iâve argued in the past. But with the CGC stock price still not too far from its highs, itâs worth remembering that an awful lot of belief, and potential success, looks priced into Canopy Growth stock.
The $4 billion-plus investment Canopy Growth received from Constellation Brands (NYSE:STZ,NYSE:STZ.B) gave the company an unparalleled war chest. Only Cronos Group (NASDAQ:CRON), which received $1.8 billion from tobacco giant Altria (NYSE:MO), comes close.
Canopy is putting that cash to work. It negotiated a complicated deal with Acreage Holdings (OTCMKTS:ACRGF) to enter the U.S. market, including a $300 million upfront payment. (An activist Acreage shareholder could scuttle that purchase, however.) CGC is adding production capability. Canopy brought a German cannabinoid compounder into the fold earlier this month. Its smaller deals include a buyout of a U.S. hemp manufacturer and a stake in a ââcannabis beauty brand.â
Those acquisitions add to the companyâs already-strong portfolio. Canopy Growth sells marijuana under six different brands. Its existing production capabilities appear to exceed 500,000 kilograms annually. Canopy produces oil and softgels in addition to dried flower. The Constellation partnership should give the company an edge in cannabis-infused beverages and edibles.
Canopy already has a reach that far exceeds that of any other cannabis company. Aurora Cannabis (NYSE:ACB) is probably its closest rival in terms of breadth of geographic and market exposure. But even Aurora doesnât reach Canopyâs levels, and ACB doesnât have an extra few billion dollars on its balance sheet that it can use to take advantage of more opportunities along the way.
At this point in the marketâs evolution, one key argument for Canopy Growth stock is that it can function like an ETF. The point of an ETF is to capitalize on a trend without making the effort or taking the risk that investing in single stocks requires. There are, by one count, over 400 marijuana stocks at the moment. As is usually the case with a âhotâ trend, many of those stocks will decline or go bust. (Think, for instance, of the dot-com bubble, or more recently, cryptocurrency/blockchain plays.)
In fact, Iâd rather own CGC stock than the largest marijuana ETF, the ETFMG Alternative Harvest ETF (NYSEARCA:MJ). Two marijuana pharmaceutical plays, GW Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:GWPH) and Corbus Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:CRBP), together make up more than 12% of Canopyâs assets. And, again, Canopyâs reach means it should have at least some success, no matter how the marijuana industry develops.
If oversupply makes production less profitable, CGCâs distribution and retail operations should benefit. If consumption moves towards edibles and away from flowers, it should be well-positioned for that shift. Thatâs not the case for many smaller plays, including those that make up the MJ ETF.
Thereâs one obvious catch for Canopy Growth stock, however. Even if Canopy can capture marijuana growth in myriad ways, that growth needs to support the current CGC stock price. And Iâve become increasingly cautious about that recently.
At its December lows, CGC was available for less than the price that Constellation paid. (Constellation handed over roughly $35 per share, depending on how warrants Constellation received as part of the deal are valued). But now that CGC stock price has reached the mid-40s, thatâs no longer the case. As the Acreage activist noted, CGC trades at a stunning 178 times its estimated 2020 EBITDA.
That multiple isnât out of line for the sector, but thatâs precisely the point. Current valuations in the industry, including that of Canopy Growth stock, suggest that massive industry growth is all but a foregone conclusion. And Iâm skeptical about whether it will play out quite that way.
For instance, recreational sales in Canada already are starting to flatten out., so the explosive rallies of marijuana stocks are going to end. Marijuana prices have plunged in the few regulated U.S. markets. And legalization, given the size of the existing black market (and the relative ease of using it for most consumers), wonât necessarily lead to higher sales.
Those trends suggest that the initial optimism toward marijuana, and the enormous valuations assigned to marijuana stocks, may have gone a bit too far. That, in turn ,suggests that the CGC stock price may have done the same. For marijuana bulls, thereâs no simpler play than CGC stock. But for CGC stock to rise further, those bulls must be right.
As of this writing, Vince Martin has no positions in any securities mentioned.
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