Cannabis entrepreneurs, celebrity investors light up as legalization
blooms
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[March 16, 2021]
By Paul Lienert and Jane Lanhee Lee
DETROIT/OAKLAND, Calf. (Reuters) - Driven
by a surge in cannabis use during the COVID-19 pandemic, industry
entrepreneurs and investors are gearing up for even greater growth as
legalization spreads and the economy reopens.
So far, 36 states and the District of Columbia have approved medical use
of marijuana, according to the National Conference of State
Legislatures. Of them,15 states and D.C. have approved recreational use
of pot.
Cannabis technology startups, including those enabling home delivery of
pot, got a big boost during the pandemic as more Americans partook,
igniting investor interest in companies that provide everything from
cultivation management tools to compliance and e-commerce software for
an industry that still operates in a legal gray zone at the federal
level.
Cannabis entrepreneurs say they have to move quickly and build their
brands before full U.S. legalization levels the playing field - a
process that many expect to gather steam this year.
“Why are you going to Weedmaps (for listings of cannabis retailers) if
you can go to Yelp? Why do you order through this or that system if you
can order through DoorDash or Uber Eats?” asks Steve Allan, chief
executive of The Parent Company, which has Jay-Z as chief visionary
officer and is looking to consolidate smaller players following its
January listing through a special purpose acquisition company.
TPCO has built its own e-commerce technology that can handle everything
from business management to retail sales, said Allan.
In one of the biggest venture capital deals in the sector to date,
Oregon-based e-commerce platform Dutchie on Tuesday announced it raised
$200 million in a funding round that values the company at $1.7 billion.
Dutchie’s investors include former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz, NBA
star Kevin Durant and DoorDash co-founder Stanley Tang. The company's
online marketplace connects cannabis dispensaries with consumers, who
can order home delivery.
Reuters has identified more than 90 private and public cannabis tech
companies in North America, with total private investment in the first
quarter at the highest level in 18 months, according to data compiled by
PitchBook and Crunchbase.
All told, investors have poured more than $2.5 billion into cannabis
tech startups since 2018.
Public investors are piling in too. Special purpose acquisition
companies, or SPACs, that target the broader cannabis industry raised at
least $4.3 billion through early 2021, with $1.7 billion of that still
waiting to be deployed, according to cannabis researcher BDSA.
That interest comes as shares of publicly traded cannabis companies -
many of which are listed in Canada because they are barred from U.S.
exchanges - have begun to rebound after a brutal sell-off in 2019.
“We’re still in the very early innings” of investing, said Harrison
Aaron, an investment analyst with Gotham Green Partners, a New
York-based private equity firm with a cannabis-centric portfolio.
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Sales associate Abigail Mationg counts cash during a transaction at
a Harborside dispensary in San Leandro, California, U.S.. February
26, 2021. Picture taken February 26, 2021. REUTERS/Nathan Frandino
U.S. legal cannabis sales for both medicinal and recreational use
last year jumped 45%, according to BDSA.
“We don’t necessarily want things to go (fully) legal today because
there’s a lot of value in our companies, and we want more time to
build,” said Lenore Kopko, managing partner at Gotham Green.
Others believe entry to the cannabis industry may not be quick or
easy for many of the big outside players.
“Cannabis legislation, regulations and supply chain flows create
complexity that is not built into software made for other
industries,” said David Hua, founder and CEO of Meadow, which sells
compliance and operating software for cannabis retailers.
CELEBRITIES GALORE
Cannabis startup funding in the sector has been led by a closely
knit network of investors that often co-invest with one another.
That network includes Liquid 2 Ventures, headed by former NFL
quarterback Joe Montana, and Casa Verde Capital, founded by
entertainer Snoop Dogg.
Another of those firms, Beverly Hills-based Arcadian Capital, has
invested in more than a dozen cannabis tech startups. Boca
Raton-based Phyto Partners has funded 10, many of them as a
co-investor with Arcadian.
The network occasionally is joined by other high-profile individual
investors. DoorDash’s Tang and Twitch co-founder Justin Kan were
among those backing Oakland-based Nabis, a cannabis online
marketplace for dispensaries that also has a warehouse, delivery
service and online financing for retailers.
There is another draw for investors beyond the immediate business
opportunity: data on a brand-new industry.
For Arcadian, the torrent of data that is being generated by
cannabis tech startups provides “a great mechanism to learn more
about the industry,” said Matthew Nordgren, the company’s founder
and managing partner.
Industry boosters say technology developed and incubated by the
cannabis industry could open new pathways for retail trade in other
sectors.
Socrates Rosenfeld, co-founder and CEO of Jane Technologies, the
Santa Cruz creator of an e-commerce platform that has been funded by
Arcadian and Gotham Green, called it "a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity for a tech company to work in partnership with the
operators in this space to build and redefine how tech and analog
retail work together.”
(Reporting by Paul Lienert and Jane Lanhee Lee; Editing by Jonathan
Weber and Dan Grebler)
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