Topic: Cannabis Investing

Investor perceptions change when a cannabis grower achieves ‘success’

Read Next Article →

Investment Outlook

Once a marijuana company begins showing small profits—and a positive p/e—the “handcuffs” go on.


FREE REPORT

As developments come thick and fast with marijuana stocks, reliable research and recommendations are more important than ever.

Sign up for your Free Report today and get our straightforward advice.

Right now, eight months or so after legalization in Canada on October 17, 2018, most cannabis producers are still losing money on a day-to-day operating basis. Some have reported a profit in one or more quarters, but that’s generally due to one-time inventory write-ups or other accounting adjustments.

With recreational cannabis now legal in Canada, at some point, these producers will start showing small profits—and a positive price/earnings ratio (P/E).

(Typically, you calculate P/E’s  using a stock’s  current price as the ‘P’, and its earnings for the previous 12 months as the ‘E’. The general rule is that the lower a stock’s P/E, the better. A low P/E implies more profit for every dollar you invest.)

Of course, profits are better than losses. But when a former money-loser finally starts making money, the “handcuffs” go on. Suddenly it has a P/E, probably one that is sky-high (since it probably starts out making only a little “E”). Inevitably the killjoys (like us) then start calculating how fast it needs to grow to justify its current stock price, let alone go higher.

Meanwhile, the company’s management has to increasingly look at dull, non-uplifting matters like production, costs and deliveries, rather than ramble on about how wonderful things will be in a few years. Then too, once a company becomes profitable, it faces a new risk: the unexpected earnings downturn.

Of course, we do sometimes recommend stocks that have not yet begun making money—or are just turning profitable and have lofty P/E’s. But you need to keep risky stocks—like marijuana producers—to only a small part of your stock portfolio.

Overall, most successful investors find that they take on less risk and make higher profits by investing mainly in the middle of the P/E spectrum. Today, we’d say that would include P/E’s between—very roughly—10.0 and 25.0. You need to be cautious about buying stocks with P/E’s below 10.0 or above 25.0.

In stocks with unusually low or high P/E’s, surprises tend to be unpleasant.

Comments

Tell Us What YOU Think

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Please be respectful with your comments and help us keep this an area that everyone can enjoy. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Terms of Use, please click here to report it to the administrator.