Here comes the cannabis-infused beverages from Corona-maker Constellation Brands.
âWe donât see actual cannabis being infused with beer, but we would see cannabis-based beverages being a big portion of what you will see going forward,â Constellation Brands CEO Bill Newlands tells Yahoo Finance.
âThere is a lot of upside to what cannabis could be around the world in the next decade,â Newlands adds.
Newlands will be the first to give his new friends at Canopy Growth a hat tip when those beverages start hitting shelves in the not too distant future.
Constellation Brands spent $4 billion in August 2018 to up its stake in Canopy Growth to 38% from 9.9%. The company received four seats on Canopyâs board of directors â Newlands holds one of those seats.
No cannabis-infused drinks from the partnership have hit the market yet, but they are coming.
âOn May 1, weâll have a building thatâs about 197,000 square feet and weâll then be able to house five bottling lines. About three or four months after May 1, the lines will be running and theyâll be producing beverages,â Canopy Growth CEO Bruce Linton told Yahoo Finance in February.
Constellation Brands isnât alone in its interest to tap the surging cannabis space.
Anheuser-Busch InBev set the stage in December 2018 for making a foray into cannabis-infused drinks. The beer maker inked a research partnership with upstart Canadian cannabis producer Tilray.
The joint venture will see each company invest $50 million to research drinks infused with THC or CBD. THC is the compound that generates psychoactive effects. CBD doesnât have those properties, but some believe it has health benefits.
Ricardo Marques, group vice president of core and value brands at Anheuser-Busch, declined to comment in an April interview with Yahoo Finance when a cannabis-infused drink would arrive.
No doubt both of these big beverage makers smell potential.
The U.S. market for cannabis- and hemp-infused drinks could grow to over $1.4 billion by 2024, according to food and drink consultancy Zenith Global. Sales for these lines of products only hit $89 million in 2018.
âYou have an overwhelming majority of people in this country believing it should be legal and we fully expect it will be legal on the federal level in the not too distant future,â says Newlands.
Brian Sozzi is an editor-at-large and co-host of âThe First Tradeâ at Yahoo Finance. Follow Brian Sozzi him on Twitter @BrianSozzi
Read Sozziâs latest:
Why this tech titan is bullish on Beyond Meat
Pizza chains like Domino's and Pizza Hut 'are under siege'
Starbucks might have solved one its biggest problems
Why your Budweiser isn't infused with cannabis â yet