Monday, September 13, 2021 7:15:39 PM
The class-action lawsuit, which was filed in a U.S. District Court in New Jersey on Tuesday, alleged that Aurora and its executives engineered a way to artificially inflate the company's fiscal 2019 fourth-quarter adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) by selling $21.7 million worth of dried cannabis to Radient Technologies Inc. in June 2019 in a deal that "lacked commercial substance". The filing further alleged that Aurora later repurchased that same amount of dried flower back from Radient, an Edmonton-based cannabis extraction firm in which Aurora has a 12 per cent ownership stake as well as control of one board seat.
While the class action has yet to be certified by a U.S. federal judge and the claims have not been tested in court, the allegations highlight the operational challenges that many Canadian cannabis producers undertook in the early days of Canada's recreational marijuana market, some of which ran afoul of regulations in order to meet the high consumer demand for those legal products and lofty investor expectations.
The plaintiffs allege that as the defendants continued to misrepresent the true condition of Aurora’s business, the company's stock was trading at "artificially inflated prices", which have subsequently plunged by more than 90 per cent since mid-2019. The plaintiffs for the lawsuit allege Aurora violated two counts of the U.S. Exchange Act and requested a trial by jury.
Other defendants named in the lawsuit include former chief executive officer Terry Booth, former president and board member Stephen Dobler, chief financial officer Glen Ibbott, former chief corporate officer Cam Battley, executive chairman Michael Singer, board member Jason Dyck and former chief operating officer Allan Cleiren, who also sat on Radient's board.
https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/cannabis-canada-weekly-aurora-faces-lawsuit-early-august-data-shows-market-remains-fragmented-1.1650616?fbclid=IwAR2JD-q67JbOPmgEcYJ0UwG_6IQXMs9dml8BRYfRJJZi4c_wsPr8rB5zXOQ
About Columbian exports, my speculation says I don't see the US, UK or Canada allowing for imports from other countries of any significant amount especially when LPs the market is destroying more cannabis then they are selling.
Canadian producers destroyed over 500 tons of cannabis since 2018
https://mjbizdaily.com/canadian-producers-destroyed-over-500-tons-of-cannabis-since-2018/
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