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An Underwhelming Pot Shop Rollout for Ontario: Cannabis Weekly

An Underwhelming Pot Shop Rollout for Ontario: Cannabis Weekly

(Bloomberg) -- Canada’s most populous province will finally open its first pot shops Monday, nearly six months after legalization. The initial result will be underwhelming, to say the least.

As of Friday, only 10 stores in Ontario had received the necessary licenses to open on April 1. That’s one store per 1.4 million people.

An Underwhelming Pot Shop Rollout for Ontario: Cannabis Weekly

In Toronto, the biggest city in Canada with a population of nearly 3 million, there will be one store ready to open its doors.

Located on the city’s trendy Queen Street West, The Hunny Pot Cannabis Co. is run by real estate agent Hunny Gawri. Gawri was lucky enough to win the provincial government’s lottery after it set a temporary initial cap of 25 stores, citing a national supply shortage that’s plagued the industry since recreational pot was legalized in October.

Gawri has hired a public-relations firm to help him manage the media mayhem that’s likely to result from having the only store in a city that’s home to most of the country’s biggest news outlets. Whether customers will be as excited remains to be seen. Ontario residents have been able to buy cannabis legally since Oct. 17 through the government-run Ontario Cannabis Store website, and the black market remains robust due to lower prices and better selection. The illicit market accounted for about 80 percent of the C$5.9 billion ($4.4 billion) Canadians spent on cannabis in the fourth quarter, according to Statistics Canada.

Other cities will be better serviced than Toronto at first. Ottawa, the nation’s capital with a population of nearly 1 million, has three stores ready to open on Monday. Kingston, with a population of about 124,000, will have two.

Weak Earnings

Despite the limited rollout, the opening of Ontario stores is “a very significant development” for the industry, Peter Aceto, chief executive officer of CannTrust Holdings Inc., said in an interview.

“I think it’s a very important part of getting us out of the black market and I definitely do think it’ll have an impact on demand,” he said.

Demand, however, wasn’t the problem for CannTrust and competitor Cronos Group Inc., which both posted significant stock declines last week after reporting sales that missed the lowest analyst estimate.

Both failed to capture much of Canada’s recreational market in the fourth quarter, with Cronos’s share estimated by analyst Tamy Chen at BMO Capital Markets at 2 percent and CannTrust’s at 4 percent. However, both also stressed that revenue should improve over the course of 2019 as new growing capacity comes online.

While most of the larger Canadian licensed producers stress that Canada will ultimately be a small piece of a much bigger international opportunity, the direction of their stock price is still very much determined by their performance in the Canadian market. Cronos’s stock fell 9.5 percent in the two sessions following its earnings, while CannTrust’s shares plunged 19 percent the day it reported.

Pot Stock Leadership

Those declines weren’t enough to remove Cronos or CannTrust from the S&P/TSX Composite Index’s leaderboard. Cannabis stocks made up six of the top 10 performers on the Canadian benchmark in the first quarter. Hexo Corp. led the way with a gain of 87 percent, followed by Aurora Cannabis Inc., up 78 percent. Cronos was in fourth place, Aphria Inc. in sixth, Canopy Growth Corp. in seventh and CannTrust in eighth. Those results helped the benchmark post its best first quarter in 19 years.

An Underwhelming Pot Shop Rollout for Ontario: Cannabis Weekly

The cannabis sector as a whole ended the weekly slightly lower, with Bloomberg Intelligence’s Global Cannabis Competitive Peers index falling 1.2 percent. Mixed messages from south of the border weighed on stocks after New Jersey lawmakers scrapped a planned legalization vote due to a lack of support, while the House Financial Services Committee voted in favor of the SAFE Act, which would permit commercial banks to offer services to cannabis companies that are in compliance with state law.

Upcoming Events This Week

  • Ontario, Canada’s most populous province, will open its first bricks-and-mortar pot shops April 1, nearly six months after legalization
  • Cannabis Conference 2019, presented by Cannabis Business Times and Cannabis Dispensary magazine, will be held in Las Vegas April 1-3
  • International Cannabis Business Conference Berlin, billed as “the preeminent European meeting point for the cannabis industry,” runs March 31-April 2
  • CannaTech hosts a medical cannabis conference in Tel Aviv, April 1-2
  • iAnthus Capital Holdings Inc. will report fourth-quarter earnings post-market April 1 with an analyst call scheduled for 8:30 a.m. New York time on April 2
  • The Flowr Corp. reports fourth-quarter results post-market on April 4, with a call scheduled for 5 p.m. Toronto time

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To contact the reporter on this story: Kristine Owram in Toronto at kowram@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brad Olesen at bolesen3@bloomberg.net, Steven Frank, David Scanlan

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