Here are 5 charts you need to seeš§µ
$VRNO $TRUL $CURA $CCHW $AYR $CL $GTII
Current Ratio: Measures if they can pay current liabilities if due today. Below 1 is bad.
If you exclude inventories which can't all be sold at once only 3 of 7 can pay current liabilities.
All companies getting up there on debt levels. If we take off tax payments which they have been paying even with operating "losses" not a lot of borrowing room left except for the bottom 4.
EBITDA = cash available to pay debt
This chart shows if they can afford interest on debt. Below 1 means you can't afford your interest from internally generated cashflow. 2x is probably the bare minimum I would want to see, 6 out of 7 look ok.
This chart looks at the cost of interest to the business (Gross Margin). $CCHW loses 25% of every $1 they make to interest before they even think of paying employees, marketing etc..
Borrowing as a cannabis business isn't cheap
And the last chart: 1 year change in gross margin (underlying business profitability).
Everyone saw a 7%-30% fall in gross margins over the last year.
Only $VRNO increased margins
Bottom Line: #potstocks are facing borrowing and profit headwinds. They need to cut costs as prices fall to maintain profitability.
With most debt not due until 2024/2025 bankruptcy is unlikely for now, but without legal change, its hard to see things getting better soon.
If you liked this thread, you can find my latest research on the cannabis industry here: grizzleresearch.substack.com
Also you may be wondering why Canadian stocks aren't in this analysis? Its because none of the big canadian potstocks are profitable. š
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I spent a week diving deep and I have some news...š§µ
LNG certainly looks like it is going to take gas demand and prices to a whole new level.
In this thread I'll take you through all the moving parts, my big conclusion and some stocks I think are positioned to win.
1) LNG Demand: According to Cheniere and others, demand will grow 120mtpa by 2026. Based on LNG under construction, North America will capture 40% of that, equal to 50mtpa or 6.6bcf/d of gas.
If the Tilray $TLRY merger goes through Aphria investors get $38
A 55% return is up for grabs, but it doesn't come for free.
Time for a thread on "merger arbitrage"
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(2)Merger arbitrage is simply betting a merger between two companies will close when other investors think it won't.
This bet takes the form of a spread between the deal price and the current stock price of the company being bought.
(3)Company A is buying company B for shares of stock. Company B trades for $10 but company B shareholders will get $12 worth of company A stock if deal closes.
So there is 20% upside for owners of company B stock
*IF the deal closes and
*IF company A's stock price doesn't fall