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"Canada is rapidly turning the corner on cannabis policy. Within a year it will likely have one of the most progressive cannabis systems in the world, and the U.S. would do well not to lag too far behind."
http://abovethelaw.com/2015/11/beyond-b-c-bud-canadas-marijuana-policies-are-getting-better/
" Journalists report plane crashes, not planes that take off."
CGC has been quietly plugging away at success within the MMPR, reporting far and few in between, yet significant milestones. As an investor, I have every confidence in their ability to continue executing the stated objectives over the near and long term, barring the unforeseen.
The only difficulty I have with this investment is the limited amount of Capital available to invest more, and additional demands made on invested capital over time. Other wise,
" idiocy is not removed by reason"
There is a majority Government in Canada, with ministers mandated to develope a regulatory framework within the present term to Legalize and make Cannabis available to every Adult in the country....
Here's to future Growth!
" the best is yet to come". - ideas
"Lift is opening its own resource centres! More details soon. In the meantime, we'd love to get your thoughts and feedback on what's important to you when visiting a cannabis-focused clinic. "
Lift is very supportive to the MMPR in helping patient and LP's connect. I imagine these centres are positioning for the reform anticipated, and in the meantime will serve the community like Better By Tweed, without being LP specific.
They too, in the meantime will have no Cannabis onsite, and will be focused on a person to person approach helping people connect to Doctors.
It was mentioned in the licence renewal press release, so I'm sure it will be brought up in this Thursday's "holistic" press conference. Dundee or Jacobs will bring it up for sure.
Bruce had already mentioned they noticed a slight seasonality, summer months being the slowest due to dr vacationing. So #'s might show a tapering of growth
I think what were ironing here is Tweed Farms sale licence? Which I didn't think they needed being wholly owned by CGC. Also , I did not know production limits were self imposed. Smith falls alone has a 15000 kg production capacity.
They also need a production licence. There approved for 3500kg. So although the tweed farms facility is approved to grow, they need a production approval also, which won't come without demonstration of demand.. I.e relaxed MedMJ rules or legalization
Your right. But since you've so thoroughly researched this, you understand this is a regulation that ALL LP's must comply with, not just Tweed and Bedrocan.
Does that put CGC at fault for ensuring their complying with the rules? Do you think it would be wiser for them to skirt the rules and make whatever potency they want and £$@# the law?
Has it ever happened to you that your going the the speed limit on a highway and a nice shiny car passes you like your not moving? And you think to yourself, if he's getting away with it, why can't I? And ten km down the road you see the same car pulled over for speeding?
That's what MMPR is. Compliance to maintain your Licence means you keep the privilege to drive, or sell Cannabis and Oil extracts through the mail in Canada.
The road to the top is long and winding. A foolish dog barks at a flying bird. Everything in this regulatory scheme has its space and time.
Actually you are. The article lacks any real information.
No Dr's allowed to be employed by and diagnose or issue prescriptions for the same pharmaceutical company.
Wasn't it the same MMAR folks complaining that LP's were only online with no people approach! Now there's locations to talk to people about medical decisions and this Motley fool is complaining about the magic of a person.
B.S article.
B.S review.
Like I said, traffic seems to be low, because of MMPR restrictions. Not Tweeds outreach.
Looks like everyone is moving the goal post to gain a victory.
Alot of that growing will be shifting over to Tweed Farms when it gets cleared to grow ten fold. Thats where the light savings are. And Indoor Harvest is developing a commercially efficient platform with Tweed as we speak. Somewhere around 80% more efficient If I remember correct, but that number may not be right.
So I dont think Investors $ has been wasted. CGC is the industry leader, and the rest are following or copying. The Board is fully aware of the excessive costs to grow indoors, hence the steps being taken right now to correct that. Thats where investors $ is.
Every agricultural product has a different value from seed to sale, increasing or decreasing at stages. So it's important there is an accountable difference between a seed that's worth a penny and the 70 grams it will yield several weeks later.
I think your very right on the additional burn. Theirs been expenses for Better By Tweed, Critical Extraction Machines, Extraction Technicians, and additional staff for customer service.
The company has grow a lot q2 July - September, and maybe revenues are still behind.
I see CGC kind of like Field of Dreams . Haha .
"If you build it, They will come. "
And that's what we've always seen so far. The platform and services has attracted and keeps attracting customers to CGC. The DR/Patient bottleneck , which everyone loathes, including Dr's will eventually change. The flood gates will open. The Liberals won a majority, and EVERY Canadian adult will have open access to the Vault and Pantry. This is a Growth industry still, so we dont want the Pantry to be bare when that does happen.
This is where the industry is going in the very near future. The game pieces are already in play.
"We now look forward, subject to regulatory approval, to achieving our next key license milestones, including full licensing of Tweed Farms' 350,000 square foot greenhouse, and a license to sell cannabis oils," said Mr. Linton.
[
Here's to (another year of) Future Growth.
Canopy Growth Fiscal 2016 Q2 Results Analyst Call
An analyst call is scheduled for 8:30 am ET, Thursday, November 26, 2015. Bruce Linton, Chairman and CEO of Canopy Growth Corporation, and Tim Saunders, CFO of the Company will provide a financial and operational update covering Fiscal 2016 Q2.
Dial in: (888) 231-8191
Conference ID: 82631795
My quirk with Marc's position is he is implying that legalization should have happened on October 20th. I think he very well knows better that changes in legislation take time. Especially on new and controversial fronts. Canada is not Vancouver, and all though most would like to see it happen over night, I'd hardly think that practical. The article came across as whining and preaching to the converted, and he runs amiss on some very key points. Not acknowledging the fact that the cannabis trade is intertwined with other criminal organization and activity for one. Completely ignoring the fact that although cannabis is great in 100% thc doses for him and many others, some people are susceptible to mental health issues at that potency. That is why the liberals campaigned on a regulate and public health approach. I would have expected a more balanced perspective from him. He openly endorsed the liberal platform!
We'd all like to see something happen on legalization pronto. But even at super sonic speed, it has to be debated. Legislation bills have to be written and re written, amended and presented again. It has to be something the majority can agree on, in parliaments, in society, in the House of Commons, on the provincial levels and Municipalities. And clearly that may be the most difficult part. The longer it takes, the more time investors here will have to load up.
His stance is that in the meantime people are still being Criminalized, and he's right. He would have made a better use of 500 words presenting how in his infinite wisdom, the federation could legalize cannabis overnight without opening up the social can of worms. But that may just be it, that he doesn't see the potential harms, while others do. that is what is called a one sided, biased perspective.
This seems very odd. The Liberals Campaigned on a Legalize and Regulate platform, and Marc Endorsed the party during the campaign. Now he's publicly decrying the platform he voted for? There was another option that is right in line with his view. The NDP decriminalization.
Pot Gods , Princes, Queens and Kings need to realize it's not just about you. Every part of society will be affected by this, so every part of society will have a say.
http://www.cpac.ca/en/digital-archives/?search=is%20it%20time%20to%20legalize%20&orderby=relevance
Scroll down to the link: "Is it time to legalize marijuana ?" for the video
February 2015. On the panel is Dr Mark Ware, leader of the 10 year MCGuil University Cannabis research project sponsored by CGC and two other LP's.
Also on the panel are health, law enforcement and social policy professionals.
The forum is a good sample of the types of discussions that will be held at the regulatory policy levels in Canada and what type of (industry) system investors can expect. Also note this forum took place before many thought there was any real possibility of a Majority Liberal Government after the fall Elections.
I believe the fruit of Cannabis Legalization will not fall far from the MMPR/ LP Cannabis Tree
Hey Mr B. Thanks for the article. Every real and rational observation of the direction this industry is going has regulation and accountability that is ultimately designed to ensure its success. I know there's a lot of noise out there in social media from lax regulation campaigners thinking there will be pot plants for sale at local greenhouses and that local governments are not going to shut down illegal distribution shops, But the evidence just doesn't point to that yet.
Their making a lot of noise, and I know the saying goes " the squeaky wheel gets the grease." But sometimes, as I've just recently done, the squeaky wheel just gets outright replaced.
In whatever type of regulatory system is developed, investors can be certain that CGC will be well adjusted to fully comply with that framework, because that's what investors are... Invested in. These other illegal ventures that believe they will survive outside of it are being extremely naive.
Did you get a chance to C the CPAC forum with Dr ware?
Re: Wo Post# 16528
Is it time to Legalize Marijuana?
http://www.cpac.ca/en/digital-archives/?search=is%20it%20time%20to%20legalize%20&orderby=relevance
Scroll down to the title " Is it time to Legalize Marijuana?"
( a post from feb 2015 before anyone thought a liberal majority government pro legalization was even possible. The debate here can offer investors some perspective as to what health, law enforcement, economic and social conversations are going to be happening over the next term)
Im re-posting this Link because this is a public forum debate with Dr. Marc Ware, who is the leader of the new 10 year research initiative sponsored by Tweed (Now CGC) and two other LP's. A room filled with intelligent and rational thinkers. Very refreshing.
Debating Marijuana Legalization The Canadian Bar Association holds a panel on issues relating to the legalization of Marijuana. Participants on the panel are Rebecca Jesseman (Research & Policy Analyst, Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse), Eugene Oscapella (Department of Criminology, University of Ottawa), Marc Ware (McGill University Health Centre), Ian Culbert (Executive Director, Canadian Public Health Association) (February 22, 2015)
I have Zero Loyalty to bad business practice, and illegal trade is bad business. We only buy illegal cannabis because we have to. Much like people needing cannabis for medicine did so illegally because they had too.
Once there is a legal option, I will take that, and I certainly believe it's in the best interest of both consumer and retailer to follow suit. Why should I or another dealer have to continue risking my personal rights and freedoms when their is absolutely no reason to? I'd much rather the dealer put his entrepreneurial skills to work and take all those loyal custies to a legit head shop or lounge than continue to operate in the shade for no reason at all.
Isn't that the Point of Legalization anyways?
Ya, patients and medicine is a bit more complicated. But even then, can a dentist without a licence to practice continue to do so on Main Street Ottawa just cause he's offering free for all and miracle smile?
With a new health minister, I hope to see the extract product line expanded a lot more. We'll see. But even reform has its appropriate channels. Even broken and unjust laws have to be challenged and righted in a court of law. Wether I or Dispensaries agree with that or not, it's just reality
With a pro cannabis regulation friendly government, how long do you see them and law enforcement tolerating businesses that want to operate openly without the relevant licences? How long can a bar or restaurant or a busker even sit on a street corner singing tunes before some law enforcement will come along and say hey, there a right and wrong way to go about this, and right now, your in the wrong?
Seems delusional to me. Take Uber for example. Not long til every municipality will come around to enforcing simple regulations like license and insurances that every other business in its service devision has to follow.
Ok, instead of speculating what millions will do, let's be personal for this one.
I have never in my life purchased a legal gram of cannabis, and have purchase pounds of illegal cannabis. There have been great buds and awful ones.
When there is a legal option, for me, that tide will turn 180'. I will not purchase another gram of illegal cannabis. And there will probably continue to be great buds and awful bud. Again , compared to alcohol, I've tried home brew good and bad. I've bought some beer called T n T and nearly puked. Never bought it again. That didn't turn me away from buying going back and buying proven quality Belvanie Scotch.
I get people approaching me in parking lots all the time, " hey man, you want a home stereo system, $500! 61" tv $300!" And my answer is always no, cause I have a better option, that comes with a little known thing called accountability.
No pain buddy, just healthy reasoning and convo. Cheers
Will you continue to purchase Illegal product when there is a legal option?
Thanks for that. If I were to make any assumptions, I would start with the obvious: The individuals tasked with designing a regulatory framework for REcMJ are in departments of Health, Justice, and Economy.
Their will be a definite balance in the results. I had posted a link from CPAC about Ten Months ago where a panel of professional and intellectual individuals we're discussing MJ reform, long before anyone believed a Lib majority was even possible. When I get a chance I will repost.
The Industry will not just serve the purpose of getting people high, in the same way Alcohol doesn't just serve people getting drunk.
CAMH will have a similar role as MADD has, for example. I just get annoyed at tone deaf individuals who still think their will some sort of Unregulated floodgate opening for Cannabis. Oh contrair. More like using a fire hydrant to open a steady drip for a litmus test. Slow and steady ahead goes the 300 car freight train, and the 1000 ft cruise ship until it gathers a controlled and REGULATED speed.
Logic to me says, the public will pay for what it's worth plus tax to have a legal regulated product. Legal is value added and so is quality. What would an average person who doesn't want to approach the neighbourhood pusher pay for a legal product? Put any Bootleg product against a legit product... Cigarettes even, that can be bought untaxed for over 50% discount. The majority of people still prefer a legal option, even though their paying out the wazoo.
I can't predict what the price structure will be, but I'm leaning away from the idea that legal rec will have to compete with illegal, which sells for $10/g anyway. 15/g is some u.s states and $25/in northern Canadian territories.
Will the government attempt price controls through taxation? Possibly. But why bother unless their are serious abuse issues. Let the price fall and tax what the market is willing to pay, a fair price for regulations and enforcement.
I say let the market decide. 400 million grams sold at $1 is still 400 million dollars. No pain in that unless it costs more than $1 to produce a gram. The business will go on, investors just decide if they like the margins or not, and if the pps is worth their investment.
Airline profit margins have been on avg 2-3% of tens of billions of dollars. And investors still like those numbers and people still buy those tickets. Air Canada $11, West jet $22.
I'm not really worried about it all. The market will decide and boards of directors will adjust. The industry will go on
The author of the article wrote with Bat Goggles on.
First off, NO PRESCRIPTION DRUG PRODUCER IN CANADA IS ALLOWED TO HAVE DOCTORS IN THEIR SHOPS DIAGNOSING AILMENTS and WRITING SCRIPS. It's illegal because it's a direct conflict of interest. It's against Health Canada and College of Physician rules.
If he had taken a few minutes to listen to the conversation the rep was having with him, he would have gotten that key piece of info. I asked the same question and lo and behold, I got an answer.
Second: this social media savvy marijuana millionaire might be able to click away at a pdf from his home office, but, need I say obviously, not everyone can or will. The main point he makes about its downfall... The Person... Is the Major Asset. Some people still want to talk to a person, face to face in this Jetson World, and as time goes by we will see just how many.
I think the Name Motley FOOL suited the author Better.
APH was on Windsor CBC radio days after the federal election talking about economic growth coming to Windsor. The Rep mentioned wanting to hire 100 people, 20 for 5 new ~1acre Greenhouses to grow more Cannabis in anticipation of RecMJ and better MedMJ access. Greenhouses apparently do really well in south western Ontario. That was less than a month ago. It is good to see all LP's thrive because when they do well, the whole industry is boueyed.
If CGC were to ever expand growing capacity, I'm nearly 100% certain it would be via Greenhouse. The yield numbers are just too good to ignore.
Please , can you PM or re post the Motley Cool/ Better by Tweed review, I'm having difficulty finding it
They Exists, that's the key word. As far as I know, CGC through Tweed is the ONLY LP with bricks and Mortar Customer care locations. Tweed, as usual, is a first mover pioneer on this front. The other LP's could be taking a look and see approach to watch Tweed iron out any flaws in the idea.
All LP production locations are secure sites, so very inaccessible to the general public and patients. The better Centers allow a people first approach, and remove nearly all the stigma from approaching an LP about the service.
The Better Centers are specifically focused on connecting people with "Cannabis Consulting Doctors ". Even without a Dr referral or support from a family physician, which is exactly my case. CGC recognized this hurdle and Better is there for that reason.
The best surprise is the No Referal, No Fee consultation services now provided by Body Stream bodystream.ca , who Better By Tweed referred me to.
They've recently dropped their xhundred $ fee to $0. All you need are your relevant medical documents to your condition and schedule an appointment for consultation. These are Cannabis Friendly People so I'm sure an open conversation is their foundation to prescription. The ONLY take off is they don't diagnose conditions.
If you have a treatable condition, and prefer N alternative medical approach, give them a call.
Please delete the previous incomplete response with the same heading. I accidentally hit submit.
I had a scheduled weekend appointment , and honestly I went with the intention to have an investors perspective observation, but just being there and learning about registration took up my focus. One and a half hr on a weekend and I didn't see another person walk in. Like I said, I'm not quite sold on its ability as yet to bring in the droves. Some references could be drawn from next weeks fins in terms of daily averages.
I visited Better by Tweed Etobicoke
I have a mixed opinions. The location is easily accessible, right next to major transit hubs and 400 series highways. Yet no visible presence yet (no signage). Was told that is being worked on right away.
Second floor of a Medical Building. If you don't know it's there, you won't see it. Discretion could be an asset or a flaw, depending on your own opinion to the business model. It is not Vancouver Pot Shop Dispensary design and store front, and for a medical program, I like that. Doctors office the very next door , pharmacy on the first floor and other medical practitioners/ specialists leased in the same facility. Good company for any LP.
Better By Tweed has a glass front door 10 steps out of the second floor elevator ~ roughly 800sq ft open concept , welcome, come on in, walk around sit down feel. The Recetionists desk is as far away from the front door as possible, so there's no intimidation at all, if someone were to be weary of entering.
Product packaging and yield guide displays in the first 20 ft. Vaporizers and inhaler displays after 30ft, both on single shelves bolted to the wall. Very Tweed design and texturing. Couches and centre table for a good sit down.
Towards the back third wall, 4 or five bar stools and appropriate height desks, each with an iPad for online registration or surfing. I went with my family and while I spoke with the receptionist, my son surfed the web. So what I'm saying is, for a "Marijuana Shop", it's very unassuming and inviting. Nowhere in comparison to your neighbourhood head shop where the counter sales person always portrays Cannabis God Guru Ego Omnipotency. I've been using Canabbis for more than two decades and have never felt so comfortable going into a Cannabis associated business location.
Continued. One reception desk. One laptop, one phone, one receptionist. I asked questions about how to get registered, about doctors, yadda yadda yah. An hr and a half later and I left registered and feeling as if I knew more about the process than when I walked in... And I never mentioned my investment or that I've been following the corporation since inception. I only asked questions I wanted to know. The receptionist there is on point. 10/10. A person knowing nothing about MMPR would leave there feeling confident about making a decision wether to continue along.
My main take away is this: I really hope the Rec MJ market for CGC stays very close to this line of customer relations. Please stay away from the Head Shop Model! It's over bearing. Not everyone uses cannabis because the love tye dye and vice versa. For example: ever walk into a beer store for your favourite brew, but the beer store stinks of old bottles? That's what walking into head shops or cannabis bombardment dispensaries would be like to unassuming visitors. Better By Tweed is clean, sanitary, welcoming and the service is very helpful.
As an investor... I'm not quite sold on its ability to bring in the droves. The MMPR is still hurdle ridden and the location may be too unknown. How many first visits, how many revisits?
Note: I wonder if the new government will maintain mail delivery in the rec market or not, only because the robberies of dispensaries is still a real issue, and it would be awful to put any employee between a gun and CGC product.
Was going through my notes over the weekend and read my very first note on TWD IPO. I had followed the company before the reverse takeover that produced the IPO, and read as much as possible into the business plan and directors. The one major difference between my perspective of an Mmpr LP then and now , is simply the patient numbers and the new government.
The restricted patient numbers have stunted the MMPR, causing significantly lower than expected revenues. Yet CGC has not only kept ahead of competition in business growth, also patient numbers. The q2 will reveal more. The patient numbers alone have been the greatest speculative risk for this corporation. A slower than expected growth rate could be a significant reason for an investor to not have stayed invested in MMPR LP's.
With Legalization on the distant horizon, those numbers no longer matter, because one can assume easier access for recreational will also relax access for medical. BUT... There remains a risk of time. How long will the Canadian Government take to develop a recreational program and the first sale is made.
Ultra Conservative says is it doesn't happen because of unforeseen events [* whatever ones imagination can muster*. My guess would be some sort of NATO/ISIS-L war that occupies public attention]. Semi conservative guess says 1-4 years. For long investors, having x$ waiting for that first sale is a short wait. In the mean time, CGC must continue to grow the patient numbers and hit CF+. I certainly hope that with all or most of the cap ex out of the way, that CF+ is at best 1-2 quarters away. That way CGC can stand strong financially until the Canopy can once again expand, perhaps 100x into recreational.
With the way government bills and regulations can, at time be bogged down, the MMPR needs to stand alone.
My liberal guess says First RecMj sale in 1-2 years. Not to compare the new Liberal Majority Government culture to the previous Harper Conservatives, But with the way bill C-51 was rushed and pushed through the last parliament, with total disregard for opposition amendments and public sentiment, I can imagine that with such great public support for RecMJ and a Majority Government, this government really should not have any great resistance to reforming the CDSA. It's all up to how much will they have to get it done, and what timeline.
For long investing, I once heard " Don't fearfully uproot the seeds you so faithfully planted." That's what I saw reading my notes from 2014. For Day and Swing Trading , this industry is very easy to read. News , volume, public information are always in the forefront of every emerging industry.
"Where there's a will, there's always a way." - Robert Nesta Marley. 'Zion Train'
You've got the big picture here. It's all coming together in a very structured and diplomatic way. And soon, hopefully very soon, the headlines will read, " Canada's Majority Liberal Government set to table a bill TOMORROW that will legalize and regulate recreational Cannabis for Adults."
That day will come??
Maybe the next fins can address up listing to TSX. It will happen I believe in due time. CGC shareholders all need a scrip in the meantime for hyper anxiety disorder. Soo anxious
Soo, I'm guessing that because the "Legalize and Regulate Cannabis" federal Canadian government has been in office a whole 30hrs and it hasn't been done yet! ... Then that means it won't happen and CGC has 500k sq feet of grow space for nothing? Hmmm.?
Or maybe this stock is just behaving like a "normal " stock with tremendous volume/liquidity, where day traders/short sellers and investors alike can make their own big boy/ girl pants decisions.
CGC is forward thinking nd every dollar invested is put toward growth. Ask yourself, is CGC aiming to grow shareholder value? And are they continuing to make the necessary moves to achieve that objective.
Y?
N?
April 2014, Mmpr projected to have 400k subscribers by 2020. Twd trades up past $4.20
October 2015, Canadian Government takes office with pledge to legalize and regulate Cannabis for every adult in Canada ~22 million people. CGC trades down to $3.15.
See where this is going. The market is irrational because it is made of people who make personal, and corporate decisions that do not always reflect the hard numbers.
Fair enough. Good Call on the specifics. It's all just speculation though. I'm trying to get at the idea of who the interesting leasing client for the portion of Hershey Drive could be. It seems to be another one of those secrets that turn into surprises.
Who would you guess / speculate that would be?
Do you think CGC would take a strategic approach to leasing Valuable Space at Canopy Headquarters?
There's A LOT of space at Hershey Drive. Enough for NHL, Tweed expansion for production and processing and Tourism. but! It's a secure site, and I suspect the Majority Liberal Government will want to keep it that way, to stay in the line of crime and harm reduction. So no tourism at Hershey Drive IMO.
It's all about Management Mr.Pact. There's a good possibility the CEO at NHL isn't able to take the wheel, and Bruce is. So you could be very right. There is a partnership, so the Board of Directors had to have seen something worth putting their names to. I would trust their discernible judgement on the current partnership. If not, well, the big S word. Right?
Disclaimer on Motley Cool
Everything on this site is made up. We're the silent, silent partner. He's the guilty one, your Honor. The man with the bank accounts. A phantom. An apparition. Second cousin to Harvey the Rabbit.
...
That's funny. Interesting read on CGC though.
Aphria as an acquisition? Sounds good, greenhouse savings and all. But not a great use of capital. CGC already has 90% greenhouse capacity , 320k square ft not in use. Another green house company at retail price? Nah.
Plus they're gonna need the cash to upgrade the 12 grow rooms at Hershey drive with the INQD commercial platforms. The scale is sufficient for now, way ahead in the Canadian Market. The only growing expansion that would fit is international that way they could ixnay the exportay importay hurdle for now until those regulations are straightened out across boarders.
As far as the other LP's , healthy competition for the lift cannabis awards.
So yah, NHL is my hypothesis for the lease.
Any other guesses?
Ha! That's "Cool" to see. I totally took that pick out of the waves being made.
I don't think another LP is the choice because with RecMj on the horizon, Price valuations for any LP are not going to be in CGC favor.
I think Nutritional high because the assets at Hershey Drive can produce a high potential return, that being space and value added production , in house. Especially since it all needs to fit under the Canopy tradition of compliance with regulations, ie. Security, cleanliness.
But hey, it's all speculation.
That would be a solid PR announcement.
Ok. Speculation : who is the secret leasing tenant at smith falls? I assume the company is industry related or Tweed wouldn't waste the time or space... So... I think Nutritional High! For obvious reasons. And to go further... Acquisition material.
Or not
Speculation over
I think your right on Calendar with that expectation. License renewal is in the November Month. CGC is big on compliance, so no worries there. The oil question is completely in the hands of Health Canada. CGC has tons of sugar leaves, qualified Iso extract process technicians , medical standard equipment, so I would assume the product is on point. Health Canada is in control of this one. Or CGC could always go the the dispensary route and start selling like the dispensaries, just for PR and A and B Trolls.
Patience. Just like the Sp. it will all happen in its due time. Heck, even legalization will happen is due time.!
Here's the funny scary of the day. Guess who's considering running for leadership of the official opposition party in the Canadian House of Commons?
Hint: Starts with Rona, ends with Ambrose.
Answer: Rona Ambrose.
Good God ! The blind reefer madness rhetoric just won't go away.
Any way, tomorrow is as great a day as Election Day for CGC. Next is the day Cannabis is Recreationally regulated for sales to the adult public population. Wait for it... Wait for it... Just like license renewals, oils, fins, cf+ , international expansion etcetera, etcetera, etcetera...!