Canopy Growth Stock Investors Should Focus On The Forest, Not The Trees

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It’s been rough few months for shares of Canada’s leading cannabis company Canopy Growth (NYSE:CGC). The lead-up to the country’s Oct. 17 legalization of marijuana fueled huge moves in pot shares, including CGC stock. Then, it quickly became a sell-the-news event, and it’s been down and out ever since.

Since then, CGC stock has lost about half of its value due to concerns surrounding supply shortages, valuation, and competition.

Indeed, supply shortages have put the legal marijuana market in Canada on pause for a few months. The valuation on CGC stock implies a $9.3 billion market cap, just a bit higher than Macy’s (NYSE:M). And, there’s a ton of competition in the nascent cannabis industry, making it tough to pick out long-term winners.

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But, all those negatives are just a few bad trees. And, when it comes to a long-term growth stock like CGC, you shouldn’t focus on a few bad trees. Instead, focus on the forest.

The forest here is quite promising. The global cannabis market projects to be several hundred billion dollars big, and thanks to a multi-billion dollar investment from Constellation Brands (NYSE:STZ) and an industry-leading production footprint, Canopy projects to be a leader in that several hundred billion dollar cannabis space.

As such, current issues are just near-term noise, and CGC stock will ultimately head way higher in a long term window.

Ignore These Bad Trees

CGC stock has lost roughly half of its value over the past two-plus months due to various headwinds.

First, everyone expected the legalization of cannabis in Canada to produce huge early results. Those early results have underwhelmed, due to supply shortages and falling cannabis prices. Such concerns are overstated. Supply shortages won’t be a thing forever. The legalization of cannabis across the provinces is an unprecedented event that ushered in unprecedented demand. Meanwhile, cannabis suppliers are still figuring out volume production. Naturally, that combination will create supply chain issues.

Such issues won’t last forever. Eventually, cannabis suppliers will figure out volume production, and supply will increase. As supply rises, more black market demand will shift to the legal scene. As that happens, cannabis prices should move higher thanks to more robust demand. Thus, supply shortages and falling cannabis prices are near-term headwinds which should ultimately correct themselves at scale.