After a boom in 2018 and bust in 2019, here's what to expect from weed stocks in 2020

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After a 2018 that featured cannabis stocks exploding to record highs, there weren’t many highs for the cannabis industry to celebrate in 2019.

Despite a strong start in the first quarter to recover from the overall market’s year-end jitters last December, the marijuana sector as measured by the Alternative Harvest MJ ETF (MJ) has trailed the 27% annual return posted by the S&P 500 since July. The marijuana-focused ETF is now pacing to close 2019 about 35% in the red.

Out of the 10 largest publicly traded cannabis companies, only one — Massachusetts-based Curaleaf (CRLF) — is slated to end 2019 in positive territory, gaining 6% as of mid-December. And even the man at the helm of that company, Curaleaf CEO Joe Lusardi, defended the overall sector in November, noting that stock performance and underlying fundamentals don’t always move in lockstep. “The equity markets aren’t always necessarily correlated to the underlying business,” he said.

That may be true, but if 2018 was a year in which irrational excitement perhaps pushed cannabis valuations above fair value and 2019 was the year things came back down to earth, is 2020 shaping up to be another strong year for the sector?

The answer might depend on some crucial regulatory votes — from who wins the presidency, to more states legalizing marijuana, to whether Congress decides to finally advance landmark marijuana legislation that now hangs in the balance.

“That’s really the big wildcard as we head into 2020,” CFRA analyst Garrett Nelson tells Yahoo Finance, highlighting a nearly 20% rally in weed stocks after the first-ever bill set to legalize marijuana at a federal level advanced out of the House Judiciary Committee this November. The bill, the so-called MORE Act which also looks to address certain criminal justice reform issues, has yet to be approved by the U.S. House of Representatives, but another, the Safe Banking Act, which would allow legal cannabis companies to work with banks, now just awaits Senate approval after overwhelmingly passing the House.

Illinois became the 11th U.S. state to legalize recreational marijuana on Tuesday.
Illinois became the 11th U.S. state to legalize recreational marijuana in June.

Legalizing marijuana

Then there is the presidency. As President Trump battles for re-election, it’s worth noting that all of the major Democratic candidates, with the exception of former Vice President Joe Biden, have supported legalizing marijuana if they are elected. During the latest Democratic debate, Senator Corey Booker joked that he thought Biden was high when he said he wouldn’t support federal legalization. The next day, the Alternative Harvest MJ ETF enjoyed its greatest single-day gain since its inception.