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Should I Invest In Cannabis Stocks? - YouTube
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What do Snoop Dogg, Gwyneth Paltrow, and ex-Speaker
of the House John Boehner all have in common?
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Besides their Spotify Discover Weekly playlists.
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Theyâre all major investors in a budding
new industry - legalized cannabis production.
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Once a taboo topic, pot is going mainstream.
A 2018 Pew Research Poll found that 62% of
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Americans believe marijuana should be legalized
- the highest number in the last 50 years.
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With the recent law changes in Canada and
some U.S. states, the legal winds seem to
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be shifting for cannabis.
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And nothing helps fan the flames of change
like the prospect of making some serious green.
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A 2018 research study projected medical marijuana
sales to grow by 36% per year, making it a
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55 billion-dollar industry by 2024. And CBD, a derivative
of cannabis, was projected to grow
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by 700% between 2016 and 2020!
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The rapid explosion of the cannabis industry
is taking the investing world by storm. But
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can this high last forever, or will it soon
burn out?
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How did cannabis become illegal anyway? For
thousands of years, cannabis was considered
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a common, useful medicine to aid with a large
array of ailments and pains. But all that
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changed following the 1910 Mexican Revolution,
which resulted in a new wave of Mexicans immigrating
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to the U.S. to seek a better life.
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The suspicion and fear of these immigrants
extended to their tradition of smoking cannabis.
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American law enforcement demonized the drug
as a inciter of crime and violence and rebranded
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it under its scary, foreign-sounding name:
Marijuana.
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States quickly began regulating and outlawing
the use of âmarijuana,â and by 1970, the
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Federal Government passed a law making it
a schedule-1 drug, meaning, according to the
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DEA, itâs more dangerous than cocaine or
methamphetamines and has zero medical benefits.
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Our prisons are still crowded with inmates--disproportionately minorities--
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whose initial offenses were related to cannabis.
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For most of the 20th century, the majority
of Americans believed that marijuana should
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be outlawed. But today, popular and legal
sentiment has turned to favor cannabis once
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again. It might remind you of when, a hundred
years ago, another big swing happened to a
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popular recreational drug: alcohol.
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In 1933, the 21st Amendment repealed Prohibition
- the 13 year long period in our nationâs
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history when the production or sale of alcohol
was illegal. This was partly a reaction to
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popular sentiment, but itâs also because
the Feds were looking for an economic stimulant,
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and they saw the potential of harvesting the
taxes from legal alcohol sales. Their bet
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paid off - big time. Alcohol production exploded,
and within a year of repeal, the alcohol tax
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income added 9% to the entire Federal Budget!
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See, banning alcohol didnât stop people
from drinking. They just found creative work-arounds,
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and a black-market was created that benefited
organized crime. By legalizing alcohol, the
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government could spend less time chasing bootleggers
and more time collecting tax revenue. These
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same arguments are being made today for cannabis.
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There are a few key differences between legalized
marijuana and Prohibition. Cannabis production
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and possession has been criminalized for much
longer than alcohol ever was- none of us lived
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in a time when the drug was fully legal. And
while some states allow legal production,
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the federal government still doesnât. This
leaves cannabis in a legal haze -- The Federal
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government seems to defer to the states rights
and not enforce the standing law⊠for now.
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As money floods in to this blooming market,
cannabis companies are sprouting like weeds;
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Together, theyâve had an estimated economic
impact of 16 Billion dollars in 2017 alone,
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with total U.S. revenue approaching that of mega corporations like Netflix and McDonald's. And
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in 2017 the industry employed around 150,000
full time workers, which is roughly the same number of
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librarians or kindergarten teachers in the
country.
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And remember, these figures are from 2017, before California had even legalized cannabis for recreational
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use. They're probably much, much "higher" today.
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Now, before you buy in to this cushy new lifestyle,
some blunt truths: It might be an exciting
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new field, but all of the same rules of the
stock market still apply. Investing in single-company
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stocks inherently carries what experts call
âunsystematic riskâ. That means that even though
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a sector may grow over-all, individual companies
might be half-baked. Consider the dot-com
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boom of the early 2000âs. Though the internet
was clearly here to stay, countless start-ups
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with doobie-ous business plans failed and
their investorsâ dollars went up in smoke.
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The same can be said of any exciting new trend,
like 3D printing or cryptocurrency.
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You can avoid unsystematic risk by diversifying
your stash. For example, instead of selecting
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individual stocks, you might look into a cannabis-comprised mutual fund or ETF, which rolls up hundreds
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of different holdings into one entity. You
can reefer to our episode on mutual funds
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for a deeper dive, but the basic premise is
that you get the benefit of investing in a
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certain sector, while spreading your risk
across multiple companies.
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But buying a fund isnât a sure-fire bet
either. Since the industry is new, cannabis
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companies are primarily small-cap,
which means their risk of failure is especially
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high. So itâs not surprising that these
funds are subject to wild swings.
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Trail-blazing industries tend
to suffer from fits and starts, and this one
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is no different. A single court ruling or
new law might reshape the landscape overnight.
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Even a potential green-gold-mine like legalized
cannabis is subject to the laws of supply
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and demand. Take Oregon, which legalized cannabis
sales in 2014, where a flood of speculators
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eager to cash in has led to a massive over-supply.
According to the Associated Press, there are
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over a million pounds of dried cannabis in
the Oregon supply system with no way to profitably
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dispose of it. This has led to a collapse
of prices, with a drop of 50% in the price
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per ounce since 2015. Talk about a buzz-kill.
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It looks like legal cannabis is here to stay
for the foreseeable future. Before you place
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a big bet on these companies, itâs critical
you have a sound grasp of equity-investing
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fundamentals, like market size, P/E ratios,
volatility.
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If youâre unfamiliar with these concepts,
you should start by seeking the guidance of
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an investment advisor whoâs a legal fiduciary.
Together you can hash out a plan to realize
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your financial goals.
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As with any speculative investment, no matter
how exciting, never gamble more than youâre
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willing to lose if things go to pot..
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And thatâs our two cents!
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Have you invested in cannabis production or any other emerging industry?
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Tell us about it in the comments.
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