Canopy, Aurora Cannabis, Tilray: Are Any Of These Pot Stocks Bargains?

 | Mar 26, 2019 02:56

After the massive gains some of the top marijuana stocks delivered over the past year, how much more upside can these companies offer? Investors are asking this question after the top marijuana players announced mixed results for their fourth-quarter, which was the first full period after Canada legalized the recreational use of marijuana in October, becoming the first developed nation to do so.

Realistically, there's no right way to value pot stocks for a very simple reason: these companies don’t have enough history to give analysts a starting point on which to base their forecasts for the future. Their rich valuations are predicated on the estimated market sizes, future sales assumption, and the global legalization hype for both recreational and medical consumption of cannabis. These scenarios may or may not materialize.

Let’s briefly discuss the fourth-quarter performance of the top three players and see how far they have gone in their growth journeys.

h2 1. Canopy Growth/h2

Canopy Growth Corp (NYSE:CGC) , the largest marijuana producer, beat analysts expectations on sales in Q4, but disappointed on gross margins. The company reported net revenue of C$83 million, up 282% from a year earlier. Its adjusted loss before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization widened to C$75.1 million, versus the C$45 million loss analysts had expected.

Adjusted gross margins fell to 22% from 55% from the same period a year ago as the producer faced higher costs related to cultivation subsidiaries that aren’t fully commissioned, the development of edible and beverage products, and lower average prices for recreational pot versus medical pot.

Chief Financial Officer Tim Saunders told analysts in a conference call that the company believes gross margins will improve in the coming quarters when all of its cultivation facilities reach full utilization.