In late June, while waiting on its dried marijuana sales license, Supreme made its first sale of six genetic
strains of its production. That’s an encouraging indication that the firm has a sharp sales team and that its
product is stirring interest in the market.
If you can access the Canadian Securities Exchange, the Canada-based stock market where Supreme
trades, you may be better off buying shares there since the stock is far more liquid there than it is in the U.S.
If you have to buy OTC, don’t worry. This is a long-term hold, so once you get in you can hang on until
the stock gets big enough for financial players to start buying in, raising the volume... and the price.