The
deal to take Weedmaps public, which values the company at around
$1.5 billion, is a rare example of a business focused on the
cannabis sector listing on a U.S. stock exchange.
Companies are unable to list shares in the United States if
their business involves selling marijuana or is "plant
touching," which Weedmaps is not.
"When you look at what we're offering (to investors), there's
really not too much else like it," WMH Chief Executive Chris
Beals said in an interview.
Irvine, California-based Weedmaps was founded in 2008 by Doug
Francis and Justin Hartfield, and sells a cloud-based operating
system for cannabis retailers as well as hosting a review and
ratings platform for sellers.
Weedmaps expects to receive gross proceeds of up to $575 million
from the deal, in part from proceeds Silver Spike had raised and
also through $325 million in a private investment in public
equity, or PIPE, transaction. Investors in the PIPE include
funds from the Federated Hermes Kaufmann Funds, Senvest
Management LLC and AFV Partners
Silver Spike shares were indicated up 8.8% at $11.41 in
premarket trading. Reuters first reported news of the deal on
Wednesday.
The merger agreement comes less than a week after the U.S. House
of Representatives voted to decriminalize marijuana at the
federal level, the first time either chamber of Congress has
voted to end the federal ban on marijuana since the drug was
listed as a "controlled substance" in 1970.
The legislation is not expected to advance further as long as
the Senate remains in Republican hands. Nevertheless, 15 U.S.
states and the District of Columbia have legalized recreational
use of marijuana, and over 30 states allow some form of the drug
for medicinal purposes.
Weedmaps is on track to deliver $160 million in revenue and has
been profitable for its entire 12-year history, Beals said.
Silver Spike is a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC),
which raise funds in an initial public offering (IPO) with the
aim of buying a private company. The acquired company then
becomes public as a result of the merger and is an alternative
to the traditional IPO process.
SPACs have emerged as an increasingly popular route to the stock
market for private companies given that they can be completed
more quickly than an IPO and there is greater certainty over the
funds a company will raise.
Silver Spike, led by cannabis industry executive Scott Gordon,
raised $250 million in an August, 2019 IPO on Nasdaq with a
focus on buying a company in the cannabis sector.
"There was no better opportunity and no more dynamic company and
story for us to consider a transaction with than with WMH,"
Gordon said in an interview.
(Reporting by Joshua Franklin in Miami; Editing by Stephen
Coates)
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