3 Top Marijuana Stock Picks - YouTube

Channel: The Motley Fool

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Shannon Jones: The moment you all have been waiting for, I get the chance to pick the
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brains of our marijuana gurus and experts. I want to hear about your top picks.
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Sean, how about you kick us off? Sean Williams: Alright, why not?
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I'm weird. I like small-cap stocks. That's me! That's always been me!
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Todd Campbell: [laughs] Lean right into it.
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Williams: I'm weird! I have two companies, we'll call them a 1A and a 1B.
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I can't pick between which one I like more. There are two. The first is OrganiGram Holdings.
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It's a pretty small company, under $1 billion market cap.
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The interesting thing about OrganiGram is, people forget about it. It's Atlantic-based.
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There are no Atlantic-based growers that are big. They're the small-time players.
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But here's OrganiGram, kicking out an expected hundred 113,000 kilograms a year.
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That's going to put it in the top 10, I believe. And everyone's forgetting about it.
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All the growers are in British Columbia, they're in Ontario, they're in Quebec.
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There are no Atlantic growers. That gives it a geographic advantage over everyone else.
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What I really like about OrganiGram, other than the fact that CEO Greg Engel was nice
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enough to give me an interview -- Keith Speights: Good interview!
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Williams: Good interview! Thank you, Greg Engel, if you're listening!
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It鈥檚 the fact that they're really maximizing their grow space.
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They have a 480,000 square foot grow space up in Moncton, New Brunswick, I believe, across two facilities.
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Most growers have a million, maybe more than a million, square feet of growing space,
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and they're kicking out about 100,000 kilograms a year.
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OrganiGram is kicking out 113,000 kilograms on 480,000 square feet because they have a three-tier grow system.
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They're focused on those high-margin cannabis oils. They really have a good patient focus.
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They really want to move into the alternatives once they come out.
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It sounds like they're really excited about that. At least, that's the impression I got from Greg Engel.
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That's OrganiGram. I'm really excited about it.
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A little sketchy on the valuation because that's what all marijuana stocks are right now.
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But that's probably the 1A. If there's a 1B, it's CannTrust, based in Ontario.
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The interesting thing about CannTrust, they're growing through hydroponics.
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Rather than growing plants in soil, they're growing them in a nutrient-rich water solvent.
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Along with their containerized bench system, which is supposed to help with harvesting,
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they should have less lumpy harvesting.
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Normally, you'd plant the crop, X amount of time later, you harvest the crop.
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This will be a lot faster, a lot more continuous, and hopefully should help with long-term supply deals.
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It doesn't hurt that they've been profitable, too.
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Campbell: Very interesting. One of the things I was thinking matter when we were asked to pick out names,
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you could say, "Tilray! Aurora!" Don't.
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So, I think it's kind of cool to hear about something that's under the radar like that.
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I think it's something that's valuable to our listeners to recognize, there are other companies out there.
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Of course, those companies also present some pretty extreme risks, too, that everybody
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should be thinking about.
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When I was trying to settle in on what I would pick, I decided that I wanted to try and see
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if I could focus on finding a company that maybe was getting a little bit forgotten but wasn't quite a small.
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I settled on Aphria. I think Aphria is going to be the third biggest player in Canada.
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They're on pace for about 255,000 kilograms of production early next year.
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What's really interesting to me about them is that 250,000 kilograms of their production
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is being done in greenhouses.
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The reason that that's important is that greenhouse production is cheaper than indoor production by a lot.
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That gives them a competitive advantage where maybe, maybe, if you're going out and it becomes
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an issue of, most marijuana demand ends up being for ingredient rather than dried flower,
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then the low-cost provider could have a valuable edge over some of these other companies.
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I think that's something that really attracted me to it.
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I also like that they're not, I'm not going to say promotional, but they haven't been
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as aggressive, they haven't been as out in front of everybody, as these other companies.
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It makes me feel like maybe they're just putting their head down getting their work done and
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establishing themselves in this business. So, I kind of like that.
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One of the reasons that I like that is because its valuation, I don't think, is nearly as
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stretched as some of these other ones.
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I looked earlier today, I think we're about $3 billion market cap.
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For comparison, Canopy is still over $10 billion, and Aurora is much larger. Now, they're bigger companies.
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Canopy is going to crank out, what, 500,000 kilograms, Sean?
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Williams: Something around there. Campbell: And Aurora is aiming for 550,000.
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Williams: 570,000, but that doesn't even count ICC Labs.
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Campbell: Yeah. So, it's not going to be as big as they are, but it may have an edge in pricing and profitability.
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If you look at, over the last 12 months, their ability to translate more money down after
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all their expenses, it's pretty impressive.
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It's really hard right now when we try and talk valuation with marijuana stocks,
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because they don't make money, and there are so many one-off expenses that are screwing up the
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net income for these companies. You've got stock-based compensation, all these other things.
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So, I'm looking at gross margin right now when I look at these companies.
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And by far, of all the biggies, Aphria has the highest gross margin.
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If you're comparing Aphria to Canopy, it's by a lot.
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So, I think that would be the name that, if I was a new investor coming in and considering
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these, maybe I would look at Aphria as one of the first ones I would consider.
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Speights: I would actually agree with both of you guys. I like both of the picks that you've mentioned.
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I'm going to throw in a real twist: Liberty Health Sciences. It's even smaller than OrganiGram.
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What I like about Liberty, they're actually based in Canada, but their operations are
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nearly exclusively in Florida.
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Now, you might not realize, Florida is projected to be the third-biggest marijuana market in the U.S.
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By 2022, the projections I've seen, I've seen on the low end, $1.7 billion, upwards of $1.8 billion.
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And it's only medical marijuana legalized in that state.
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They will rank only behind, of course, California No. 1, Colorado No. 2.
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Florida is projected to be the third biggest marijuana state in the U.S. So, that's a big market.
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Here's the cool thing. The state has very limited licenses for production. They've only awarded 14 licenses.
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Liberty has one of those.
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The licensing they give gives the company the ability not only to grow, but to have up to 30 retail dispensaries.
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Liberty Health Sciences is positioned in the Florida market.
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They're rapidly cranking out more retail locations.
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They also do home delivery throughout the state, medical marijuana.
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I talked to their CEO, George Scorsis, a couple of weeks ago.
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He said their estimate right now is, they have about a 15% market share in Florida.
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But by early next year, they're going to be the biggest producer, because like a lot of
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the Canadian companies, they're really ramping up their capacity.
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He thinks there's going to be a lot of product shortages very soon in the state.
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As they ramp up that production capacity, he really projects they're going to have a 25% market share.
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So, I thought, "Well, that's the CEO. He's going to really play this up."
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Campbell: He's probably not going to say that it's ...
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Speights: Yeah. But if you do the math -- think about this. Let's say $1.8 billion.
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That seems to be a consensus-type projection for Florida. $1.8 billion.
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Even if they don't increase their market share, even if they only have 15% -- I won't do the
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math in my head here -- the market cap is only around $360 million right now.
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This company has some real room to run. Let's say 20%. That's $360 million a year at 20% of the market.
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Liberty Health Sciences is a company that really has some real opportunity.
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We talk about some of these absolutely outrageous valuations -- Tilray.
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Williams: No name-dropping.
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Speights: I mean, honestly, I look at a Liberty Health Sciences flying under the radar --
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kind of like OrganiGram, flying under the radar -- but it's a legitimate business and has
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some really great business prospects. So, I like the stock right now.
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Campbell: It's so hard, right, Shannon, with some of these U.S. marijuana plays.
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We hear all of these people who say, "You have to be worried about marijuana in the U.S.,"
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because we don't necessarily have an administration in Washington right now that's a big fan.
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The change because of Epidiolex, that did not do anything to marijuana. It's still a schedule one drug.
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There's all sorts of banking restrictions. There's these things, and maybe, Keith, that's why.
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Speights: I'm sure. That's exactly why.
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The companies that operate primarily in the U.S., they're still under that dark cloud
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of marijuana being illegal at the federal level.
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We could place bets on whether or not the bill that's being pushed through right now
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might pass, that at least the federal laws could change where the government will not
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get in the way of states. But I don't think we're going to see a crackdown. That's my opinion.