You read this week’s publication New Cannabis Ventures Weekly Newsletter we publish from October 2015. We no longer send them. By mail as before but we post this and all newsletters On our website hereA number
Friends,
Higher blasts exploded on Monday. Despite the sharp progress that day, they ended in August and July. Despite the annual, the Cannabis Stock Index is 11.6%. 4 straight after the annual decline is nice to see the figure higher in just one quarter.
The index is repeated quarterly. Looking at the index by the end of the year, it would be 5.1% per annum without re-collecting. Three shares that have no longer have a figure, each decreased by more than 50%, and the best index performer was currently in the final dollar.
Looking at currently 28 shares in Index, the average return amounted to 21.8%, and the average return is 14.3%. Here is the list, the shares of which are moving more than 30% underlined.
Currently, the top 5 returns to canning shares are not attractive to me. I estimate the SNDL and VFF sales Alpha, and CURLF and TCNNF appreciate the strong sales there. These two MSOS positions in MSOS are both the largest positions and benefited from the great growth of ETF. For those who love big msos, # 3, GTBIF, which descends as much as 9/30, seems much more attractive to me. I finished the month with the model portfolio, about 6%.
I really liked VFF at the beginning of the year and shared my positive prospect in this newsletter. I think that their transportation removed was brilliant, but the fund is exaggerated for me. The company does not have a list of NASDAQ at the moment, and it is trying to get a medical cannabis license in Texas. It can build itself like CGC or SNDL to avoid if it wins and the unit of case. SNDL is very diversified and has a decent balance, but in the United States, their MSO impact is suspicious. While MSOS bought a very curly and TCNNF, it has added new positions to both SNDL and VFF. Hm.
The stock I have discussed is very driven by cannabis. Again, it’s up to you to see if 2,80e taxation will disappear. It would be very useful for US MSOS, if so, but there are a number of shares in the global hemp stock, which are going well, but do not have US operations. This rally makes it more expensive to access the US market.
My model portfolio keeps one of the shares in 420 investors more than 30%. There are currently eight names in the portfolio, and one is not in the index. The other six, which are index, but less than 30%, 4, 4 are 2. I have more than 19% cash.
Cannabis shares have risen in 2025, but they have been one ton of risks since 2021 and face risks. At the moment, the shares are not as much as S & P 500 or Russell 2000 at the moment, despite the growth of this week. I hope that cannabis is resumed and that 280E taxation is deleted, but it may not be the case. Builders of Cannabis Shares should be aware of what can happen if Marie 280e taxation.
Frankly,
Alan
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Published by Alan Brochstein CFA
Based on the Houston, Alan cries out his experience as the founder of the online community 420 InvestorThe first and still the biggest decent diligent platform focused on the shares sold in the cannabis industry. Alan continues to find new ways to connect industry and facilitate its sustainable growth in the Canepuni community. Approximately New hemp enterprisesHe is responsible for content development and strategic alliances. Until the early 2013 focuses on the cannabis industry, Alan, who began his career in Wall Street, worked as more than two decades of research and portfolio. Article 650 of the Article 650 published in 2007 Looking for alphaWhere he has 70,000 followers, Alan is a frequent speaker for industry conferences and a Frequent source The media, including NY Times, Wall Street Journal, Fox Business and Bloomberg TV. Contact Alan. Ration | Facebook | Connection | Email
You are reading this week’s edition of New Cannabis Ventures, a weekly magazine we have published since October 2015. The newsletter includes unique insight to help our readers stay ahead of the curve, as well as links to the most important news of the week. We no longer email them like we used to, but post this and all newsletters on our website here.
friends,
The big news this week was an extension of the huge news from August, when President Trump appears to be now preparing to issue an executive order to push cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III. Unsurprisingly, hemp stocks have rallied, with the NCV Global Cannabis Stock Index now at 8.23, up 35.4% in December and now up 19.6% year-to-date. MSOs to benefit from 280E tax If this continues, MSOS will rise even further to 6.69, up 92.2% in December and 75.6% year-to-date. The ETF, which closed at $6.87 on Election Day 2024, fell to $2.02 in March.
In August, when the news broke, I issued a newsletter pitching to investors consider hemp REITs. After initially moving higher, they have since fallen behind;
Since 8/13, MSOS has advanced 28.4% and the Global Cannabis Stock Index is up 15.9%. Only one of the four hemp REITs rallied, Innovative Industrial Properties, and it was up just 6.9%. A very weak one is Advanced Flower Group, which is in the process of becoming a business development company
I continue to believe that eliminating 280E taxes will be good for hemp REITs, which include two equity REITs and two mortgage REITs. I have two of them, IIPR and REFI, in my Focus List at 420 Investor and my model portfolio holds both right now. I’m overweight the utilities index and underweight all other subsectors, including MSOs and Canadian LPs;
The two REITs I include in my Focus List make up 27.8% of the model portfolio and increase my ancillary exposure. All four REITs are in the Global Hemp Stock Index and make up 13.6% of the index, so I am currently very overweight. IIPR, which trades on the NYSE, trades at 0.7X tangible book value. REFI, which trades on the NASDAQ, trades at 0.9X. Both stocks pay very high dividends that may be at risk. So far in 2025, both stocks are down more than 12%, and two other hemp REITs are down more. Even if dividends are included, all are down year-over-year;
The two REITs I follow closely serve MSOs: IIPR owns and leases properties, and REFI owns mortgages that MSOs take out against their properties. The poor financial health of their clients weighed on both stocks. If 280E goes away, the client will be healthier. Certainly there will be challenges if 280E remains, but it could be much worse for MSOs saddled with debt and unpaid taxes. The reprogramming will not automatically result in NASDAQ admitting MSOs for trading, nor will it necessarily result in SECURITY banking, an action that could increase competition for REITs. Hemp REITs, which are still down year-over-year and down for much longer periods, look attractive to me for hemp investors here.
This fight to stop 280E taxation was bitter. Let’s hope it ends.
Sincerely,
Alan:
New Cannabis Ventures publishes curated articles as well as exclusive news. Here is what we published last week.
Follow Alan for real-time updates X.com:. Share and discover industry news with like-minded people on the largest group of cannabis investors and entrepreneurs LinkedIn:.
Stay on top of the most important communications from public companies by watching what’s coming cannabis investor calendar.
Based in Houston, Alan leverages his experience as an online community founder 420 Investorthe first and still the largest due diligence platform focused on publicly traded stocks in the cannabis industry. With his extensive network in the cannabis community, Alan continues to find new ways to connect the industry and facilitate its sustainable growth. time New Cannabis Ventureshe is responsible for content development and strategic alliances. Before turning his attention to the cannabis industry in early 2013, Alan, who began his career on Wall Street in 1986, worked as an independent research analyst with more than two decades of research and portfolio management experience. A prolific writer, with over 650 articles published since 2007 Looking for Alphawhere he has 70,000 followers, Alan is a frequent speaker at industry conferences and frequent source Media including the NY Times, Wall Street Journal, Fox Business and Bloomberg TV. Contact Alan. Twitter: |: Facebook |: LinkedIn: |: El
You are reading this week’s edition of New Cannabis Ventures, a weekly magazine we have published since October 2015. The newsletter includes unique insight to help our readers stay ahead of the curve, as well as links to the most important news of the week. We no longer email them like we used to, but post this and all newsletters on our website here.
friends,
Last week when I was pointing out how overpriced Curaleaf is, I mentioned that the ETF MSOS had a redemption on 12/2 and then it had another redemption on 12/4. Shares traded down 1.3% for the week. They are down 3.4% from their peak in mid-November. However, the stock is up 39.6% year-to-date.
The ETF ended the week slightly leveraged, as it was invested in hemp stocks at 102.8% of its NAV, although sales were made this week. While Curaleaf rallied 9.3% after my piece last week, MSOS actually fell 0.5% to $3.67. Looking at the 6 stocks that have more than 5% exposure, it is the only one that is up, while the rest are down at least 2.8% to 6.8%. These six stocks include the five largest ETFs and also the Glass House brands. Here’s MSOS and its six current holdings, which make up 88.5% of the ETF so far in 2025:
I remain very concerned about the high concentration of MSOS to name just a few. The ETF is down 3.5% this year, while the NCV Global Cannabis Stock Index is down 11.6%. The top three, led by CURLF at 29.5%, includes Trulieve, which I think is currently overpriced relative to peers at 21.2%, and Green Thumb Industries, which I like relative to peers at 20.9%. There is 71.6% in just three stocks.
If MSOS receives more redemptions, it will likely sell some of its large positions. So far, with MSOS’s shares outstanding down 3.4% since mid-November, sales of its shares have been made. MSOS reduced its exposure to shares of Curaleaf by 3.4%, TCNNF by 3.4% and GTBIF by 3.0%. We are nearing the end of the year and this bad trade could end badly. Of course, MSOS may hold for the next few weeks, but it’s already down 34.1% since closing at its 2025 high of $5.57 on 8/29. Redemptions could lead to a dire sale of his holdings.
The latest repayments are not the first, as there were more significant repayments from late 2022 to early 2023. There were also a few small repayments in early 2025. Given the year-over-year growth of the past two years, it was on the rise in the second half of 2024, likely tied to Florida’s election-legalization hopes. from medical to also for adults.
Currently up nearly 40% over the past year, that’s a high rise that has already had a big impact on MSOS’s price. At its peak in August, it was up 55% over the previous year. The world of cannabis investors has become much smaller, leaving the entire industry, including MSOS and MSOs, less liquid.
A potential reshuffle by the Trump administration has excited traders who like MSOS because it’s one security that trades higher and has options. That play started in mid-August before the big news, as someone started buying MSOS shares in early July. Both the number of shares increased and so did the price, and trading volumes also increased. Despite the rise in shares outstanding, MSOS is down year-on-year, although it could fall much further if the restructuring announced under discussion four months ago does not take place. The latest excitement in MSOS 2024 saw it tumble 70.6% from the close on 11/05/24, when the election took place, to its all-time intraday low of 2.02 set in early April.
How MSOS does will ultimately be up to him 280E tax leaving. Otherwise, expect more Widow-like situations. Last week I discussed Curaleaf’s large amount of debt due in 2026 and this is something to watch.
If 280E stays, it will be bad for all MSOs and this ETF. I keep thinking that some of the Canadian LPs are safer than the MSO’s and they can be collected more. I also see some ancillary firms that would benefit greatly if their clients faced less heavy taxation. MSOS fell 23.4% in Q4, while the Global Hemp Stock Index fell 20.8%. If realignment doesn’t happen, this pressure on hemp stocks, especially on IPOs, could get much worse.
Sincerely,
Alan:
New Cannabis Ventures publishes curated articles as well as exclusive news. Here is what we published last week.
Follow Alan for real-time updates X.com:. Share and discover industry news with like-minded people on the largest group of cannabis investors and entrepreneurs LinkedIn:.
Stay on top of the most important communications from public companies by watching what’s coming cannabis investor calendar.
Based in Houston, Alan leverages his experience as an online community founder 420 Investorthe first and still the largest due diligence platform focused on publicly traded stocks in the cannabis industry. With his extensive network in the cannabis community, Alan continues to find new ways to connect the industry and facilitate its sustainable growth. time New Cannabis Ventureshe is responsible for content development and strategic alliances. Before turning his attention to the cannabis industry in early 2013, Alan, who began his career on Wall Street in 1986, worked as an independent research analyst with more than two decades of research and portfolio management experience. A prolific writer, with over 650 articles published since 2007 Looking for Alphawhere he has 70,000 followers, Alan is a frequent speaker at industry conferences and frequent source Media including the NY Times, Wall Street Journal, Fox Business and Bloomberg TV. Contact Alan. Twitter: |: Facebook |: LinkedIn: |: El
You are reading this week’s edition of New Cannabis Ventures, a weekly magazine we have published since October 2015. The newsletter includes unique insight to help our readers stay ahead of the curve, as well as links to the most important news of the week. We no longer email them like we used to, but post this and all newsletters on our website here.
friends,
What a tough month it has been for the cannabis industry so far. While not as bad as last November, the Global Hemp Stock Index is down 16% this month, and at 5.74 it is now down 16.6% year-to-date. I’ve been very cautious with my model portfolio at 420 Investor, which is down 2.6% so far in 2025, and I’ve been cautious here as well.
In August, the market rallied after President Trump said he was considering rescheduling cannabis. There has been no action for more than three months. If cannabis is moved to schedule III, it will disappear 280E tax. I called for it loudly in late 2022 in a newsletter here about essentials for hemp stocks.
I warned in the newsletter after Labor Day that several hemp stocks were in danger of falling significantlyand many have. I shared the Q3 earnings for the 23 stocks that were in the Global Hemp Stock Index at the time. The index now has 28 names, as we detailed back in late September two shares are subtracted and seven are added. In that newsletter from early September, I named 8 stocks that I was very concerned about. Here’s how they’ve performed since then.
While not all of them declined, as Village Farms continued to grow, the remaining seven were down at least 12.3%. The eight stocks I alerted readers to fell an average of 18.6%. The Global Hemp Stock Index fell 17.9%, while the MSOS ETF fell 35.1%. It is now down 21.5% year to date and remains too much of a risk for what it is investing in. In fact, there was redemption yesterday, with outstanding shares down 0.7%. Shares of 187.21 million were still up 43.4% year-to-date, with most of the increase coming in the third quarter.
Here is the full list of Global Hemp Stock Index members and their change in Q4 so far:
The 28 stocks fell an average of 25.3%, which is how much the index has fallen since it’s flat, with an average decline of 28.3%. MSOS is down 37.6% so far in the 4th quarter. The eight stocks I warned about in early September have one gainer, Village Farmers, but the other seven are all down more than the index. I’ve written negative articles on Seeking Alpha about several of these, including RYM, SNDL, and TLRY recently.
In my 420 Investor model portfolio, I currently have four stocks that are down more than 30% in Q4 and have gained in each of the positions this week. As it relates to the eight stocks I invited, I am no longer so negative on one of them (Canopy Growth, which I updated in an article published today looking for Alpha). The hemp sector has been very volatile, but it still appears to be in a bear market despite the huge rally from the lows.
Hemp stocks are crashing, but for many of them for good reasons from my perspective. The industry as a whole faces challenges, and there is no progress on two potential catalysts that I called for here three years ago: the elimination of 280E taxation, and large exchanges starting to list US hemp operators. Investors can make money by investing in the industry if 280E taxation is removed and other opportunities remain for companies outside the MSO space. However, investing in cannabis is quite risky.
Sincerely,
Alan:
New Cannabis Ventures publishes curated articles as well as exclusive news. Here is what we published last week.
Follow Alan for real-time updates X.com:. Share and discover industry news with like-minded people on the largest group of cannabis investors and entrepreneurs LinkedIn:.
Stay on top of the most important communications from public companies by watching what’s coming cannabis investor calendar.
Based in Houston, Alan leverages his experience as an online community founder 420 Investorthe first and still the largest due diligence platform focused on publicly traded stocks in the cannabis industry. With his extensive network in the cannabis community, Alan continues to find new ways to connect the industry and facilitate its sustainable growth. time New Cannabis Ventureshe is responsible for content development and strategic alliances. Before turning his attention to the cannabis industry in early 2013, Alan, who began his career on Wall Street in 1986, worked as an independent research analyst with more than two decades of research and portfolio management experience. A prolific writer, with over 650 articles published since 2007 Looking for Alphawhere he has 70,000 followers, Alan is a frequent speaker at industry conferences and frequent source Media including the NY Times, Wall Street Journal, Fox Business and Bloomberg TV. Contact Alan. Twitter: |: Facebook |: LinkedIn: |: El