CannTrust, Tilray Show Crashes Often Follow Big Highs In The Pot Sector

 | Sep 24, 2019 07:06AM ET

It's been a year since the meteoric rise of cannabis stocks, which occurred in the weeks just before the legalization of marijuana in Canada last October. Since that time the landscape in the sector has shifted—dramatically.

Many of the major players that emerged at that time with headline-grabbing stock price hikes are far from the best performers in the market today. In fact, some of the major Canadian-based pot companies are among the worst performers of late.

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Just last week, some of the biggest names in Canadian cannabis were among the 12 worst performing stocks on the S&P/TSX Composite, the leading index in Canada. They held five of the top 12 position on the list of stocks that recorded the largest losses in the week.

These companies, which are also traded in the U.S., included the embattled CannTrust Holdings (NYSE:CTST), (TSX:TRST), down 14.57% last week; Cronos Group (NASDAQ:CRON), (TSX:CRON), which shed 9.8% in the same period; followed by Canopy Growth (NYSE:CGC), (TSX:WEED), down 8.99; Aphria (NYSE:APHA), (TSX:APHA), down 7.35; and Aurora Cannabis (NYSE:ACB), (TSX:ACB), down 6.47%.

Many cannabis stocks have been on a virtual rollercoaster ride in the last 12 months, reaching unprecedented peaks and neck-wrenching dips. The latest downward trend, however, has been almost constant since this past spring. In fact, since April, the Global Cannabis Competitive Peers Index has recorded about a US$25-billion (C$33 billion) loss. Yes, that’s right...$25 billion U.S. dollars.

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The two biggest disappointments have been the scandal-plagued CannTrust Holdings and the U.S-traded Tilray.

CannTrust has been in a death-spiral since July when it was disclosed to have been growing weed in unlicensed space in its greenhouse facilities in Ontario. That original admission has been followed with a series of headlines, including how top company officials were aware of the illegal growing operations and had attempted to hide these plants by installing false walls, in a bid to conceal it from regulators.

Despite firing its CEO, the company last week was stripped of its growing licences. It can no longer sell or produce marijuana. Next week, it will be delisted from the Toronto Stock Exchange, a direct result of the company falling below the minimum standards for remaining on the index.

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