1/03/2020

EUROPEAN -CANNABIS FIRMS- EUREKA-2020


LONDON :  WAVE of  European Cannabis firms list in 2020. Up to five companies active in the cannabis industry could go public in 2020 in Europe, a content whose stock markets have largely missed out on the North American ''pot stocks'' frenzy, a leading industry analyst said.

The legalisation of cannabis including for recreational use in Canada and a number of US states, fuelled a speculative ''green rush'' on Toronto and New York stock markets in early 2019, but this has faltered due to oversupply fears and uncertainties on US regulations.

Shares in the sector are down more than 50% from their March highs, according to the alternative harvest ETF fund, which tracks cannabis-related stocks.

''I think there will be 4 or 5 companies quoted in twelve months time'', Nokolass Faes, an analyst for  Bryan Garnier told Reuters on the sidelines of a cannabis industry conference.

Bryan Garnier and its competitor Canaccord Genuity are among the few investment houses actively seeking to become key players in the fast growing industry and win mandates to advise on mergers and acquisitions or rights issues.

There has been speculation that London-based medicinal cannabis company Emmac could go public.

In 2019, Emmac took over  GreenLeaf, a French hempbased Cannabis healthcare company and Swiss cannabis-based health company Blossom.

A spokesman for Emmac said an IPO remained an option but no longer for the current calendar year. Listings of Cannabis firms in Europe are very rare and currently limited to the small capitalisation segment.

Public offerings are made difficult due to patchwork of regulations and policies regarding the medical and recreational use of cannabis, including CBD, a derivative of the plant reputed to ease anxiety without the high associated with THC, the main psychoactive agent in marijuana.

Faes argues that London's lightly regulated AIM is a market place of choice for such listings. ''I think that AIM is doing great efforts to attract some of those companies,'' he said.

AIM declined to comment. [Reuters]

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