Tag: 1933 Industries
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U.S. cannabis companies to open bank accounts – just like 5-year-old children!
In most U.S. states children can open bank accounts with parental consent, though the little tykes must pay federal taxes if they book more than $2,100 in interest income. “In a landmark first step toward normalization of the cannabis industry, the House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly (321-103) Wednesday to pass the SAFE Banking Act,” reported…
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1933 Industries (TGIF.C) guidance predicts Q4, 2019 rev. of $5.2 million
On September 12, 2019, 1933 Industries (TGIF.C) provided guidance for Q4, 2019 – the quarter ended six weeks ago on July 31, 2019. 1933 Industries owns cannabis cultivation, extraction, processing and manufacturing assets, along with a portfolio of brands including: AMA flower and AMA concentrates, CBD-infused Canna Hemp, Canna Hemp X, and Canna Fused. “Guidance” refers to…
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Marijuana update: No, the market isn’t getting killed… we’re just not rewarding bullshit anymore
Top tip: You guys out there whining about ‘the market’ being down are finding excuses for the wrong problem. Folks be running about with their hair on fire right now, pointing to a sky that for sure is falling because a few of their favourite weed stocks have come off absurd highs and what if…
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Reading between the lines: Nutritional High’s (EAT.C) misplaced weed, and 1933’s (TGIF.C) respectable loss
Back in mid-2018, when everyone was talking about how MedMen (MMEN.C) was going to be the biggest weed debut ever, one of my guys looked at their listing docs, specifically under the section relating to executive compensation. What they found was egregious; the founders had all the shareholder votes, giant compensation packages, insane retention bonuses,…
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1933 Industries (TGIF.C): how to raise money without stock dilution
Publicly-traded cannabis companies that are not run by nutbars, piglets or hype-merchants, currently have good access to capital. If you’re selling weed, hemp or vape pens – it’s just not that hard to find institutional money. A fast-growing cannabis company like 1933 Industries (TGIF.C) with 2018 revenues of $12.6 million – can snap its fingers…
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Shell Game: How Wayland Group (WAYL.C) built a paper empire and the loan that may drag it under
PROLOGUE: Cannabis companies, as we know them in our minds, rarely exist. Oh sure, some have buildings and staff, some grow things and others might even have a license. But even those with big buildouts and massive market caps are, for the most part, a promise of what’s to come, maybe, some time, kinda. But…
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Cannabis Life Sciences (CSE:CLSH.U): The US multi state operator value pick
I love it when the market is busy fighting over inflated market caps, because I’m a Moneyball guy. I like value, and while a lot of money has moved toward Canadian cannabis operators in recent years, the size of the market down south is only now starting to become clear. There’s still some value floating…
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Let’s talk weed infrastructure: 3 Sixty Secure Corp (SAFE.C) to debut Tuesday
I’ve not exactly been hiding my opinion that a lot of weed investments right now are overpriced market plays that, when the rubber hits the road, will struggle to do real business. The reasons for that are many, but mostly apply to really big valuations attached to what are really agri plays. If you don’t…
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Too professional: Pure Global (PURE.V) and the companies discounted because they’re actually building businesses
Had a conversation on the phone with Stephen Pynn, VP of Corporate Devs at Pure Global (PURE.V) this week that got me thinking. Pure has had an up and down run since landing on the public markets in July of this year. It ebbs and flows like the tides, never getting really beat up, but also…
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1933 Industries (TGIF.C) vs 1964 Supply Co (Rubicon): Will heritage/art branding land with consumers?
We’ve written a lot about branding as it pertains to the cannabis space, and the challenges that will face any licensed producer as it transitions from growing to marketing to retail. Those challenges are plentiful; chiefly among them, you’re not allowed to market your weed brand in Canada. Can’t do it. Against the law. Not…