22 November 2024

Howe Street Reporter Title

Khiron (KHRN.V): Why Mexican farmers are converting poppy fields to corn


I have never tried opium.  But I suspect I would like it.

Derived from the milky sap of the poppy, the Greek poet Homer (800 BC) referred to it as “a drug to quiet all pain and strife”.

Opium provides such a delicious euphoric high, that it spawned a recreational market for synthetic opioids, including fentanyl – which is 50 times stronger than heroin (a few grains can cause death).

“More than 70,000 Americans died from drug overdoses last year, and a growing number of those deaths are attributed to the powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl, much of which comes from China.”

Recently, China’s President Xi promised to stop the flow of fentanyl to the west – but he hasn’t – and it’s not 100% clear that he can (there is a galaxy of mom-&-pop chemical factories wedged deep in the Yunnan mountains).

Tit-for-tat?

In the 19th Century, Queen Victoria decreed that the UK would smuggle opium out of British-colonized India to China – and pay for tea with black market opium.

China already had lot of opium addicts. Many of them suffered from Narcotic Bowel Syndrome.

The economics of fentanyl production are attractive.

One kilogram of fentanyl costs $32,000, which can be used to make one million pills with a street value of more than $20 million.

In January, 2019, U.S. border agents seized 254 pounds of fentanyl hidden in a truck carrying cucumbers into Nogales, Ariz from Mexico.

The flood of synthetic opioids damaged the demand for pure opium in Mexico.

Two years ago, poppy fields in Mexico covered 110,000 acres.  Pure opium was selling for about $600 a pound.  There is now 62,000 acres. As fentanyl poured in, the price of opium plummeted to $95 a pound.

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Now Mexican many opium growers have torn up their poppy fields and have gone back to growing corn.  Others have converted to the chemical drug trade.

“You earn a lot more cooking fentanyl than farming,” one Mexican ex-poppy grower declared. “It is less work and less investment and more profit.”

Mexico’s army recently seized 24 tons of fentanyl at a commercial port in southwest Michoacán state.  The fentanyl was hidden on a Danish vessel that had sailed directly from China.

Two years ago, a tsunami of data concluded that marijuana is effective in weaning patients off opioids, and diverting them from the deadly drug in the first place. From the headlines:

  • “Marijuana Legalization Reduces Opioid Use, Studies Show”
  • “Studies: Medical Marijuana Helps Ease Painkiller Addiction Crisis”
  • “Despite the Skeptics, Legal Marijuana is Having a Positive Impact on the Opioid Crisis.”

This caused changes in conservative political thinking. Example: last year, Republican Illinois’ Governor Bruce Rauner signed Senate Bill 336 – giving patients access to medical marijuana in place of pharmaceutical opioid medications.

“Our country has been flooded with an over-prescription of opioids medications,” confirmed Jacob Miguel Vigil, co-author of “The Effectiveness of Self-Directed Medical Cannabis Treatment for Pain, “This man-made disaster is killing our families and friends.”

2017 unnatural U.S. deaths

  • Lightening: 29
  • Homicide: 16,000
  • Car crash: 33,000
  • Suicide: 45,000
  • Drug overdoses: 83,000

In the last 12 months, numerous research studies have pushed back against the claim that THC is an effective treatment for opioid addiction.

However, U.S. states that legalize rec weed experienced an immediate 20% reduction in fatal opioid overdoses.

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Whatever your political or therapeutic stripe, most reasonable people agree that cannabis is a relatively benign drug.

“No deaths from overdose of marijuana have been reported,” the DEA wrote in the 2017 resource guide titled Drugs of Abuse.

To put that in perspective, in 2017, 160 people died by auto-erotic asphyxiation (hanging yourself while masturbating), 67 people were the victims of serial killers, 2 were fatally shot by toddlers.

In the mainstream press, the medical marijuana market is often eclipsed by its fun-loving sexy cousin, the “adult-use market”.

But make no mistake, the medical marijuana market is monster, expected to generate about $40 billion globally by the end of 2024, according to Zion Market Research.

At Equity Guru, we represent numerous cannabis companies who have invested shareholders’ dollars on the future of the THC/CBD “health and wellness market”.

Last year, Equity Guru’s Ethan Reyes hopped on a plane and flew to Colombia to research a cannabis company called Khiron Life Sciences (KHRN.V) .

Khiron is moving aggressively into the massive Latin American health & wellness market.

“Mexico has a population roughly five times that of Canada, its climate allows for outdoor growing all-season and its labour force costs pennies on the dollar compared to Canadian workers,” wrote Reyes..

Khiron operates like a pharmaceutical company:

  • Commercializing medical cannabis products
  • Operating medical clinics;
  • Developing and selling cannabis wellness products; and
  • Developing brands for international distribution.

Last week, Reyes reported that Khiron has been backed by the Colombian Association of Gerontology and Geriatrics (CAGG), bolstering the company’s reach with the key demographic of Latin American seniors.

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“The endorsement gives Khiron further integration into another specialized field of medicine,” stated Reyes, “giving them access to specialists in such fields as orthopedics and internal medicine.

In 1804, Oxford student Thomas De Quincey took opium to relieve a toothache.

“Oh! Heavens!” declared De Quincey, “What an upheaving, from its lowest depths, of the inner spirit! What an apocalypse of the world within me!”

Cultivation of opium dates back ancient Mesopotamia. The locals called the red poppy flowers Hul Gil, “the joy plant.”

Joy from opium?

Maybe.

But fentanyl users aren’t getting much joy.

Two years ago, I lost a 19-year-old family friend to an over-dose.

I believe he was a “weekend-cowboy”.

A reckless dabbler.

“I am writing to express my deepest sorrow at your son’s death,” I informed his parents from Beijing, “I have cried more for your son than for the death of my own mother – who I adored. She was ready to go. Your son was not.  A luminous boy. The world is dimmed without him.”

Young companies like Khiron are positioning themselves to be part of the solution to this soul-crushing epidemic.

It’s also a shitty time to be a Mexican poppy farmer.

– Lukas Kane

Full Disclosure:  Khiron is an Equity Guru marketing client

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