oh gosh!
Better deal is hang out in WA or OR states where much marijuana is grown, 3 different varieties of cannabis and over 400 different strains throughout the world cause of different soils. So you find knowledgeable but under financed people, offer them financing to sell in Colorado. So many different techniques now on refining your product, edibles and crushing for the oils for medical usages.

Well, not really...it's probably tracked down to about 1 lb. or so...assuming it's ever initially tracked by the grower. There's just not much black market potential except for other states that want to ban it (which we should not be paying to enforce). The most expensive dispensary in Downtown Dever starts at about twice the price of another within a mile, and you wait in line only at the expensive one. No one is going out of their way to find cheaper pot....much less black market pot.From seed to flower, in all the states that have implemented some type of legalization - all weight is tracked and under high scrutiny to the gram.
This is absolutely correct. I used to write property insurance on both vacant buildings and then marijuana grow / retail. There were towns I rewrote every single vacant building policy as a grow operation or dispensary within a single year. The number of them in Denver (and the building area they occupy) is immense...not even sure how to begin calculating this. (Did I mention Denver accepts property tax payments in cash?)If you are suggesting financing a grow op, good luck with that. The industry is already displacing Mom and Pop's once outside investment money came in. Now instead of modeling the industry around a boutique family wine model, it's moving more toward walmart weed and a similar reduction in living wage.
Most likely ALL the warehouse spaces that can scale have already been locked down.
Well, not really...it's probably tracked down to about 1 lb. or so...assuming it's ever initially tracked by the grower. There's just not much black market potential except for other states that want to ban it (which we should not be paying to enforce). The most expensive dispensary in Downtown Dever starts at about twice the price of another within a mile, and you wait in line only at the expensive one. No one is going out of their way to find cheaper pot....much less black market pot.
It is...and when we wrote liability insurance on grow ops (in the early years), we preferred they not have cameras showing employees handling the product because it would be a potential employers liability issue the employee were criminally charged (entrances, exits, and public waiting areas, however...)Maybe it's done differently in Colorado,
This still is a thing. You can use coupons to buy eighths and get a punch card towards a $1 pre-roll...no shit.Prior to that, cannabis happy-hour was a thing, especially among the medical folks.
If you are suggesting that WA and OR grown product be shipped/transported across state lines, that would be known as diversion which is THE focus of law enforcement even as it is legal otherwise. From seed to flower, in all the states that have implemented some type of legalization - all weight is tracked and under high scrutiny to the gram.
If you are suggesting financing a grow op, good luck with that. The industry is already displacing Mom and Pop's once outside investment money came in. Now instead of modeling the industry around a boutique family wine model, it's moving more toward walmart weed and a similar reduction in living wage.
Most likely ALL the warehouse spaces that can scale have already been locked down.
For a good pulse on the developing markets:
https://mjbizdaily.com/
btw
Walmart weed can never match a sun-grown sativa grown by an old skool head. The shift in consciousness is as close to a psychedelic experience as one can get without actually taking any. (from what I've heard![]()
Same reason you may wish to say....transact to purchase an equity security with someone in another county. Or soybeans with someone in another country. Market liquidity. You need only read up one post for a telling anecdote of why this is a good thing.I would see no purpose of transporting plants across even a county line,
2-3 years ago, I was asked to prepare a sub-fund for cannabis -- an article had come out extolling the new industry to be, and named several tickers that (then) jumped in price. They were:
BUDZ 3.38
GWPH 128 -- now $146
HEMP 0.0380
MJMN 0.1155
PHOT 0.0122
PNPL 2.52
Those tickers were 50% about 6 months later. Right now, they've nearly all recovered to those prices. (So closely, it's weird.)
There was also
IIPR 16.50 as I recall it, more a real-estate ETF that specialized in totally legal grow-farm properties -- so, reusable, should the federal cannabis regime not be changed. It's now $44.50
In January, 2017, I added
ACBFF 1.71 -- which sits at $6.77 today.
STZ took an interest last month and popped to $202 -- it's $209 today.
TLRY hit the news at $27, and is $64 today.
CGC hit the news at $30, and is at $46 today.
So, there's 5 that, today, I would very much consider getting into, today.
I am pleased that after a tumultuous 18+ months, no cannabis-oriented legal regression seems in the wind -- instead, a steady drumbeat of tax-dollars and defunding of criminal networks. I think that bodes well for issue-free investment, although we're not there yet.
(And we all know that, even though it's the noon hour as I type this, we could have a new federal AG before this day is out.)
Really? I thought there were U.S. based tracking funds that are weed-centric. I gotta think if CGC is NYSE listed, funds can buy it. You better double check that.big boys can't play them since Cannabis is not legal and its categorized as a scheduled 1 drug.