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Glass House Intends To Become Second Company To Uplist

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Glass House Intends To Become Second Company To Uplist

Will Glass House be the next company to climb the list? In our latest TDR Trade To Black podcast presented by FlowHub, Shadd Dales and Anthony Varrell are live from the Glass House Brands (NYSE: GLAS ) facility in California for the company’s Investor Day, broadcasting around the clock from inside one of the largest hemp operations in the country. The team is on the ground, walking the facility, talking to staff and hosting a full cast of guests, including CEO Kyle Kazan, President Graham Farrar, Mark Codes, Noah Hamman, The Big Short’s Fred Gomez, Vinny Daniels and Seth Yacatan.

Two major regulatory developments dominated the early conversations. The DEA has begun conducting on-site inspections of cannabis businesses that have applied for federal protection under President Trump’s reclassification order, with operators reported being cooperative rather than adversarial with inspectors. Hours later, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously 9-0 that prosecuting a marijuana user for having a firearm violates the Second Amendment, a decision that homeowners described as a powerful data point for a July 15 deadline before an Administrative Law Judge to reschedule.

Glass House Brands has made headlines by becoming the second cannabis company to list on a senior exchange, announcing plans to trade on the New York Stock Exchange. AdvisorShares ETF portfolio manager Noah Hamman joined the show to address questions about the lack of new inflows into cannabis ETFs, explaining that market makers can build inventory on their balance sheets without triggering formal creation or redemption events, and that rising stock prices benefit ETF shareholders regardless.

The conversation shifted to industry consolidation, where guests and hosts debated whether a major MSO merger could happen before the end of the year. Consensus Tier 1 operators were identified as Verano, Curaleaf, GTI and Trulieve, with Glass House identified as Tier 1 in its own zone as a developer. Private MSOs including Good Day Farm and STIZI have been mentioned as potential acquisition targets.

Prominent Glass House investor Mark Codes joined in personally touting the rise of big tobacco partnerships, pointing to the NYSE listing as a benchmark of credibility that removes a major objection from risk-averse corporate partners. He predicted that Glass House could eventually sell more than a million shares a day, and speculated that a strategic stake sale to the tobacco company could send the stock skyrocketing.

CEO Kyle Kazan and President Graham Farrar closed the episode by discussing the benefits of California’s climate cultivation, ongoing dialogue with other MSOs regarding biomass supply partnerships, the company’s DEA Form 225 bulk drug manufacturer license as a mechanism for interstate commerce, and early-stage CBD shipments to Europe as a revenue opportunity outside of the current regulatory framework. Hear it all when you join.

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Bankers Urge House And Senate To Pass SAFER Banking

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Organigram & Village Farms Earnings Breakdown

Today on the Trade To Black podcast presented by Flowhub, Shadd Dales and Anthony Varrell respond to the movement out of Washington after the American Bankers Association sent a letter to House and Senate leaders calling for a move to SAFE banking. We’ve seen emails like this before, but this one comes at a time when the cannabis industry is on the brink of major reform, with ongoing ALJ hearings and everything else happening in the federal realm.

In addition to the bankers association’s SAFE question move, the presenters addressed the recent public sparring with Dwayne Boyes of MMJ International, who has criticized the hearing process on social media and is involved in a lawsuit challenging the medical realignment. Dales and Varell disagreed with his assessment, and they’ll explain why. The conversation also touched on speculation about a possible executive order from the White House to form a deregulation commission, which broadcasters say could land as early as August, ahead of November’s midterm elections.

In an interview with Hirsch Jain, founder of Ananda Strategy, he and the hosts explored the emerging “Southern Corridor” of cannabis markets. Virginia just passed adult cannabis. Georgia is expanding the medical market. Texas is quietly positioning itself for growth as patient numbers rise and lawmakers signal openness to broader reforms. Louisiana continues to have one of the strongest medical programs in the region. And Arkansas, surprisingly, has more cannabis users per capita than Florida, which says a lot about how engaged that market is already.

We also cover the Supreme Court’s unanimous decision on cannabis users and gun rights. Jain linked recent Supreme Court gun-rights jurisprudence to a potential increase in medical cannabis registration, arguing that as courts shift from limiting cannabis rights based on “status” to focusing on actual behavior, more patients, particularly gun owners, may feel safer registering.

Finally, we take a critical look at New York’s enforcement exemptions against illegal dispensaries. Also, is there optimism that the pro-DEA stance on ALJ hearings signals continued movement toward realignment? Hear our thoughts.

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Ontario Cracks Down On Illegal Cannabis Landlords

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Ontario Cracks Down On Illegal Cannabis Landlords

In our latest Trade To Black presented by Flowhub, hosts Shadd Dales and Anthony Varrell cover two stories that highlight the hemp industry facing major changes. Omar Khan Chief Communications and Public Affairs Officer of High Tide (NASDAQ: HITI) joins the show to discuss Ontario rules that now hold landlords liable if they knowingly rent to illegal cannabis operators. Then, in our weekly Vantage Standard segment presented by Vantage, attorney John Malone of J. Malone PC joins the show to talk about what happens after cannabis redistricting.

In the headlines: Dr. Bertha Madras is pushing back on social media about how her court comments are being characterized. Dales and Varell disagreed with his shots, and they’ll explain why.

In the first segment, High Tide’s Omar Khan takes us through the Ontario government’s changes to landlords who rent to illegal cannabis operators. Khan explains that the $250,000 fine for cannabis landlords is not new, it has been in place since 2018, but the July 1 change creates an administrative mechanism that allows police to issue these fines without a court order. Ontario’s illicit market still accounts for 20-30% of total sales (although with legalization this has dropped from roughly 80%). A British Columbia-style Department of Community Safety that would allow regulators to use direct force against illegal dispensaries, something Ontario currently lacks.

Malone discusses with the team the 280E tax break, the murky overlap between the new DEA registration requirements and existing state licensing systems, and the risk that dispensaries may lose access to providers who are not DEA registered. He also discusses why the flower is unlikely to ever meet FDA pharmaceutical standards. Extracts and formulated cannabinoids, he argues, are a more realistic route. California’s domestic growing will benefit if interstate trade opens up, and the lengthy EU-GMP certification process faces companies looking to export markets.

As the industry prepares for potential federal changes, one question continues to arise. Is the regulatory framework ready for what’s next? Listen to their full conversation.



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States Keep Moving While Washington Waits

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States Keep Moving While Washington Waits

In our Thursday Trade To Black presented by Flowhub, Shadd Dales and Anthony Varrell welcome back FundCanna CEO Adam Stettner. We’ll take a look at the latest headlines as several new cannabis policy stories continue to develop in the United States.

Lawmakers in Virginia are working to address concerns after recent legislation may have unwittingly repealed some marijuana sanctions, raising new questions about how the law will be interpreted moving forward. Dales and Varrell noted that lawyers are already fighting over the language, debating whether the loophole allows distribution before the official air date.

In North Carolina, Gov. Josh Stein and House Speaker Destin Hall remain divided on whether to legalize marijuana, providing another example of how states are approaching reform differently. The hosts pointed to North Carolina’s illegal cannabis market, estimated at $3 billion, as the state leaves billions in uncollected tax revenue on the table amid the standoff.

There’s also news from Wyoming, where Attorney General Bridget Hill announced that the state will not automatically follow future federal cannabis planning, even if changes are made at the federal level.

And finally, does this surprise you? A new poll shows many cannabis consumers don’t expect the Trump administration to complete the federal transformation process this year, despite ongoing hearings by a DEA administrative law judge.

Elsewhere, Stetner weighed in on the ALJ’s hearing, noting that the DOJ and DEA are still fully committed to their case, and pointing to the opposition’s own witness admitting that cannabis meets Schedule III criteria as a telling moment. He cautioned against treating any one catalyst, including the recent gains of Trulieve and Green Thumb, as a “silver bullet” for the stock’s performance, framing the sector’s progress as more of an ultramarathon than a sprint.

On the business side, Stettner shared that operators are more proactive rather than reactive, with average loans from its customers rising from about 46% to the high 50s as companies prepare balance sheets ahead of a potential restructuring, and described a wave of consolidation that has already begun in the private markets. This and more when you join.

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