This Wall Street Firm Advises Pumping the Brakes on Aurora Cannabis

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Over the past couple of years, no industry has had investors seeing green quite like the legal cannabis industry. Some of the most popular pot stocks, including Aurora Cannabis (NYSE: ACB), Canopy Growth, and Cronos Group, have advanced by a quadruple-digit percentage since the beginning of 2016, on the expectation of rapid but long-term sales growth.

Just how big could the legal weed industry become? According to various Wall Street firms, global sales could grow fourfold to sixfold by the end of the next decade, with peak sales easily topping $100 billion a year at some point in the distant future.

But as investors, we've seen these once-in-a-generation growth opportunities crop up from time to time, and what we've learned is that not every company within a fast-growing industry can be a winner. Sometimes, even the most popular stocks fail to produce as expected.

A man in a suit putting up his hands as if to say, no thanks.
A man in a suit putting up his hands as if to say, no thanks.

Image source: Getty Images.

This Wall Street firm is wary of the most popular pot stock

Projected leading producer Aurora Cannabis is easily the most popular and polarizing pot stock of the bunch. With at least 662,000 kilos of peak annual production -- probably a conservative estimate from management -- no other company outside of Canopy Growth will be within a stone's throw of catching Aurora on aggregate output. This production, compounded with a presence in 24 countries, including Canada, is a big reason Aurora Cannabis is a favorite among millennials investors, as well as most of Wall Street.

Wall Street cheerleader Cowen Group, arguably the most bullish of all firms on the marijuana industry, rates Aurora Cannabis as its top pick in the industry. Meanwhile, Christopher Carey at Bank of America anointed a buy rating on Aurora nearly two months ago, with a price target that would give the company about 50% upside from its current levels. Jefferies analyst Owen Bennett also rates Aurora as a buy.

Generally speaking, Wall Street views Aurora Cannabis very favorably, but one firm isn't going along with the crowd.

Last week, investment bank Stifel initiated coverage on Aurora with a "hold" rating and a price target of $10 Canadian, or $7.48 U.S., which is actually a few pennies below where the company closed this past Thursday, June 6. Covering analyst W. Andrew Carter, who prefers Canopy Growth as the top industry choice, had this to say about Aurora in his note to investors: "We are cautious on Aurora in the near term given the company's reliance on the capital markets to execute upon its near-term business plans [and] the lack of a definitive strategy for entering the U.S. market, and we believe the slower development of the global medical opportunity will yield downside versus consensus estimates."