In our latest Trade To Black Podcast presented by Flowhub, hosts Shadd Dales and Anthony Varrell break down yet another cannabis company announcing a reverse split, adding more fuel to the growing talk of the cannabis industry. History seems to repeat itself, doesn’t it? A few days after Curaleaf Holdings (TSX: CURA ) (OTCQX: CURLF ) announced a reverse stock split linked to future U.S. IPO ambitions, Verano Holdings Corp. (Cboe Canada: VRNO ) (OTCQX: VRNOF ) announced a 1-for-5 reverse stock split. The company says the move is meant to position the Verano for a potential future listing on a major US stock exchange.
Verano announced a five-for-one stock consolidation, reducing its outstanding shares from roughly 364 million to about 73 million, while Vireo Growth followed much more sharply with a 30-for-one consolidation since June 5, reducing its share count from roughly 1.45 billion to 48.5 million. The moves by Curaleaf and Verano could be unmistakable signals that listing on major US exchanges is no longer a matter of if, but when.
The addition of GTI, CuraLeaf and Trulieve to Robinhood as fully commercial tickers after Glasshouse, which was the first, was seen as a meaningful but measured development. Dales and Varrell acknowledged that expanded access broadens the pool of potential investors, but were careful not to overstate the immediate impact, arguing that access alone does not translate into capital allocation when competing sectors generate large returns every day.
Michael Bronstein, president of the American Hemp and Hemp Trade Association, joined the show to address recent comments from Pennsylvania Sen. Sharif Street. Bronstein confirmed that there is a palpably different atmosphere in Harrisburg, crediting Street as a widely respected figure on both sides of the aisle.
The lawsuit, filed by the attorneys general of Indiana, Nebraska and Louisiana, challenged the federal government’s move to reclassify cannabis to Schedule III. The Louisiana AG has since withdrawn from the lawsuit. Bronstein characterized the lawsuit as a natural but limited challenge, noting that only a small number of AGs have joined, none from states with robust cannabis programs, and that resource allocation plays a significant role in whether the AG’s office pursues federal litigation.
This and more when you join.