Wall Street Thinks You Should Buy These 2 Beaten-Down Pot Stocks

In This Article:

Despite some early-stage growing pains in Canada, you'd have a hard time finding a better-performing industry in 2019 than marijuana. Since the year began, the Horizons Marijuana Life Sciences ETF, the very first tradable cannabis exchange-traded fund, has risen by 42%, which is more than triple the return of the broad-based S&P 500 of nearly 13%, through this past weekend.

The bullishness surrounding pot stocks primarily has to do with their long-term sales potential. It's no secret that the cannabis black market is generating tens of billions of dollars in annual sales worldwide, so moving even a portion of those sales into legal channels can have a big impact on marijuana stocks and legalized countries.

However, not every pot stock has participated in the 2019 rally or kept pace with their peers. For some Wall Street investment firms, a few of these beaten-down marijuana stocks look like potential bargains, as evidenced by covering initiations and rating reiterations this past week.

An investor writing and circling the word buy underneath a dip in a stock chart.
An investor writing and circling the word buy underneath a dip in a stock chart.

Image source: Getty Images.

Aphria

On Friday, Jefferies analyst Owen Bennett initiated coverage on Aphria (NYSE: APHA) with a buy rating and a price target of 15 Canadian dollars ($11.16). Based on the previous day's close, Jefferies foresees up to 74% upside in Aphria's share price. Said Bennett in a note to investors:

On our strategic scorecard Aphria scores highly, and third overall behind only Canopy [Growth] and Aurora [Cannabis]. Despite its strong global outlook, its valuation is the cheapest across our space, with allegations around inflated assets/insider deals weighing.

The big surprise here is that Aphria, while fundamentally inexpensive, has been a complete mess at the managerial level.

In early December, it was rocked by a short-seller report from Quintessential Capital Management and forensics analysis firm Hindenburg Research, which claimed Aphria had grossly overpaid for Latin American assets that had been purchased by SOL Global investments (the company Aphria purchased these assets from) for mere pennies on the dollar. An independent committee investigated these claims and determined that Aphria had paid a price that was within reason for these assets. However, the committee did uncover that there were conflicts of interests with related parties in this transaction, ultimately leading to a handful of executives, including longtime CEO Vic Neufeld, stepping down.