Marijuana Stocks Are Destroying Shareholder Value

The marijuana industry is budding, and investors are really beginning to take notice. According to Cowen & Co., legal marijuana sales in the U.S. have the opportunity to reach $50 billion annually by 2026, with cannabis research firm ArcView projecting compound annual growth of 26% in North America through 2021. No matter the source, few, if any, industries are growing as quickly as legal marijuana.

Underlying this sales growth potential is a discernible shift in the way the public views pot. What was once a taboo topic that a majority of folks felt should remain an illegal substance, is now a drug that 64% of respondents in Gallup's October 2017 poll believe should be legal for adults to use. Presumably, the higher the favorability for weed goes, the more pressure will be placed on lawmakers in Washington to alter its scheduling. As a reminder, marijuana is currently a Schedule I substance, putting it on par with LSD and heroin.

The result has been incredible gains for marijuana stock investors. More than a dozen pot stocks now boast market caps in excess of $200 million (i.e., out of true penny-stock and small-cap territory), and many have seen their share price double or triple over the trailing year. The green rush has paid off for investors willing to take risks.

A cannabis joint lying atop a cannabis leaf on a table.
A cannabis joint lying atop a cannabis leaf on a table.

Image source: Getty Images.

Marijuana stocks have a dark secret

However, nearly all marijuana stocks come with a dark secret. Namely, that they're steadily destroying shareholder value despite delivering healthy gains over the past couple of years.

What investors have to realize about cannabis is that in many countries it's still illegal. Despite 29 states having legalized medical cannabis in the U.S., and eight states green-lighting recreational weed, it's entirely illegal at the federal level. In fact, recreational marijuana is illegal in every single country worldwide, save for Uruguay. This makes operating a publicly traded pot business quite challenging.

Most marijuana stocks are losing money and set to face a variety of challenges, especially if operating in the United States. For example, U.S.-based companies are unable to take corporate income tax deductions if they sell a federally illegal substance. This forces them to pay considerably higher income tax rates if they're profitable (which most aren't).

Also, pot businesses have very little or no access to basic banking services. This means they can't get traditional lines of credit, a loan, or even a checking account, from a bank. Financial institutions in this country answer to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which is a federally created entity. This means banks that offer services to marijuana companies run the risk of federal prosecution or fines at a later date.