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Wall Street on a ganja high..no way down

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  • Wall Street on a ganja high..no way down

    Marijuana-Related Stocks Are on the Rise. So Should You Invest?

    [FONT='Times New Roman', Times, serif]by Winston Ross [/FONT]Jun 26, 2013 4:45 AM EDT

    It’s not a stoner-utopia vision of the future—you can buy weed-related stock right now. Winston Ross reports on the risks (possible prosecution) and potential rewards (the next Google?).





    Psst. You wanna buy some weed ... stocks?

    We’ve got Growlife, Inc. Or maybe you’d rather puff on some Cannabis Science? Oh, that stuff’s not strong enough? Check out Privateer Holdings, a venture-capital firm based in Seattle that is about to close on $7 million in funding.

    A medical-marijuana plant is shown at Seattle’s Northwest Patient Resource Center medical-marijuana dispensary in November 2012. (Ted S. Warren/AP)
    If that all sounds like some stoner-utopia vision of the future, it isn’t. It’s right here and now, man. With 19 U.S. states plus D.C. puffing legal medical marijuana andWashington and Colorado’s initiatives last November that legalized pot for everyone,marijuana-related stock trading was a when, not an if, thing. Right after the last election, some medical marijuana–related stocks boomed. A former Microsoft manager is promising he’s going to create the “Starbucks of Pot,” once he raises $10 million in startup money.

    So are these investments a good idea? Sure, most of the weed-related companies now publicly trading on the stock market don’t do illegal business, unless of course you count marijuana still being an illegal substance under federal law and the feds being known to raid and seize the assets of medical-pot dispensaries over the past couple of years, despite their owners’ belief that they were legit.

    But that’s the problem with the rise of pot stocks, several experts tell The Daily Beast. The federal government’s response to Colorado and Washington’s legalization measures remains hazy, which means shareholders who invest in a company that dances on a dim line between locally legal and federally illegal might find themselves not only broke but locked up.

    “Your risk assessment includes federal prosecution and asset foreclosure,” at least as it concerns any business involved in growing or selling marijuana, said Hilary Bricken, a Seattle attorney with the Canna Law Group, which features a pot leaf on its homepage. And even for companies on the up and up, “these stocks are extremely speculative, and most of them are located in the pinks [penny stocks] anyway,” she said.

    There have been some pretty dramatic examples of just how volatile stocks based on the wacky weed can be. In November, a company that builds a machine called MedBox that medical-marijuana dispensaries use to store weed saw its shares leapafter the legalization measures in Colorado and Washington, from $6 to $205 in the span of a week, before dropping back to $20 the next day.
    “The glam means there’ll be a lot of money chasing a few opportunities. Can you say dot-com? Somebody’s going to be Google. A lot of people are going to be Pets.com.”
    “This story is funny, but it’s no joke,” wrote financial blogger Bruce Krasting of the “absurd” rout. “I’m thinking pot smokers shouldn’t trade stocks.”

    Thing is, you don’t have to be a pot smoker to trade stocks. You just have to realize you’re wading into a pretty volatile market, with plenty of unknowns.

    It’s a sector ripe for scams.

    “It’s very easy for me to see how somebody could go public with an acquisition, change the company’s name to Marijuana Inc., and pump and dump,” said Mark Kleiman, a professor of public policy at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the official consultant for the state of Washington as it figures out how to implement the new law. “If somebody offers you the chance to invest in an ancillary business, investigate carefully. If it’s any activity that winds up delivering marijuana to consumers, run like hell. You can go to jail for this ****.”

    The trouble with investing in anything marijuana-related is how sexy it is, really. Conventional wisdom has it that as this black-market trade inches closer and closer to legitimacy, truckloads of money will be in the offing. But it might be too early to get your retirement savings involved.

    “The glam means there’ll be a lot of money chasing a few opportunities,” Kleiman said. “Can you say dot-com? Somebody’s going to be Google. A lot of people are going to be Pets.com.”

    Count Michael Blue in the bullish camp. He’s chief financial officer of Privateer Holdings, a private-equity group (with no pot leaves on its homepage) he founded with a fellow graduate of Yale School of Management, Brendan Kennedy, who is CEO. Privateer is about to close on a $7 million round of funding to spend on investments that “strictly adhere to state, federal and local laws” but are all aimed at the cannabis industry.

    Privateer’s flagship is a website called Leafly.com, billed as the Yelp or Consumer Reports of medical marijuana, with tens of thousands of user reviews of more than 500 strains of cannabis. The site generates $100,000 in ad revenue monthly.

    Blue told The Daily Beast that Privateer is in negotiations to acquire several other “web-based information companies,” vetted by attorneys from three firms, though he said with so few players in the game right now, to be more specific would out the parties prematurely. Blue said Privateer’s goal is to help the industry feel “professional,” he said.

    “Most of the other brands in this industry, you wouldn’t be comfortable sending a family member there,” he said.

    November’s election resulted in a significant boost of capital for Privateer, Blue said, but it didn’t change anything about the company’s investment strategy because the federal government still hasn’t indicated whether it’s going to let the state laws go unchallenged.

    “It’s incredibly important that everything we do complies with federal, state, and local laws,” Blue said. Now, though, “investors are starting to see the inevitability of the end of prohibition, and they can see that legalization is going to happen—probably sooner than they initially thought.”


    Like The Daily Beast on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for updates all day long.

    Winston Ross is a national correspondent for Newsweek & The Daily Beast, based in the Pacific Northwest.

    For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.

    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

  • #2
    "....On the Rise"?

    Soon they might not be able to “rise” (as in you know what….)

    Sperm goes up in smoke - Pollutants, marijuana linked to low fertility
    published: Wednesday | January 2, 2008

    Gareth Manning, Gleaner Reporter

    THE INCREASED use of herbicides and steroids in food and meat production, as well as the smoking of marijuana are being linked to increasing low fertility in Jamaican men, health officials have revealed.

    According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), the man is responsible in about 60 per cent of infertile couples. In Jamaica, doctors think the statistics are similar, with the male factor responsible in about 50 per cent of cases. Worldwide, it is believed that the male sperm count has decreased by 50 per cent over the past 50 years.

    "It (marijuana) definitely has an effect. There are no studies to confirm it but it is associated," says professor of reproductive medicine at the University of the West Indies, Joseph Frederick.

    Findings in the US

    Professor Frederick's thoughts are backed by other findings in the United States. The American Society for Reproductive Medicine notes that while studies on how marijuana affects male fertility are inconclusive, smoking does in fact lower sperm count and reduces motility. It also increases abnormalities in sperm shape and function that can lower fertility.

    Burn out

    A 2003 study by researchers at the University of Buffalo in the United States also found that frequent marijuana smokers produced less seminal fluid, a lower total sperm count and their sperm behaved abnormally. According to the study led by Dr. Lani Burkman, the active compound in marijuana, tertahydrocannabinol (THC), causes sperm to swim too fast too early therefore causing it to burn out before it could attach itself to an egg.

    Link: http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/2...ead/lead1.html

    Comment


    • #3
      LOL. On a purely anecdotal level all the weed smokers have way too many children. Ganja smoking probably a good thing then can you imagine the amount of children they would have if they STOPPED smoking. Bob and the rest of them would be right up there with Ghangis Khan.
      I suspect the increase in Jamaicans consumption of pesticides and other chemicals in their food has more to do with it. In the western world low sperm count amongst caucasian males is almost epidemic.

      Comment


      • #4
        Should be'' all the weed smokers I know.

        Comment


        • #5
          Lol! Point taken

          Originally posted by Rudi View Post
          Should be'' all the weed smokers I know.
          Thanks for the anecdote, Rudi, it provided me with my first laugh for the day (lol). I love it!

          On the matter of the pesticides and other chemicals, though, do people in Jamaica consume more than other nationalities in the Americas? While your point about chemicals make a great deal of sense, if the answer to my question above is no, shouldn’t the consequences (problems) not be similar throughout the region?

          Comment


          • #6
            I am not familiar with the numbers for the rest of the region. Jamaica consumes a lot of imported foodstuff especially meat. With all it's poverty people are now complaining about obesity in Jamaica both in children and adults. Truly an odd place.

            Comment


            • #7
              Soy products also have something to do with it!

              Comment


              • #8
                Excessive carb consumption causes obesity.

                http://cambridgemedscience.org/landmarks.html

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                • #9
                  and diabetes n presuure in kids , wi have a north america problem

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Jerk Pork or Pot Pork?

                    Flavor experiment: Wash. farmer feeds pot to pigs

                    Manuel Valdes, Associated Press 54 minutes ago

                    SNOHOMISH, Wash. (AP) -- The white van with tinted windows pulled up to the driveway with its cargo - cardboard boxes full of marijuana. And the customers eagerly awaited it, grunting and snorting.

                    The deal was going down for three hungry Berkshire pigs from a Washington state farm, and a German television crew was there to film it.

                    Part flavor experiment, part green recycling, part promotion and bolstered by the legalization of recreational marijuana in Washington state, pot excess has been fed to the hogs by their owners, pig farmer Jeremy Gross and Seattle butcher William von Schneidau, since earlier this year.

                    Gross and von Schneidau now sell their "pot pig" cuts at von Schneidau's butcher shop in Seattle's Pike Place Market at a premium price — bacon is $17 a pound while chops go for $16.90 a pound.
                    http://news.yahoo.com/flavor-experim...141519326.html

                    Whether the flavor actually is good or not is almost irrelevant. The point is that people are experimenting with weed in ways that they could not before legally and we are totally being left on the wayside to watch.
                    "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      The Social Cost?

                      Originally posted by Islandman View Post
                      Jerk Pork or Pot Pork?[/url]

                      Whether the flavor actually is good or not is almost irrelevant. The point is that people are experimenting with weed in ways that they could not before legally and we are totally being left on the wayside to watch.
                      I’man, maybe I’ve seen too much of the social cost that Jamaica has apparently paid for this obsession with the weed, including ranting and raving men who weren’t always ranting and raving men…..

                      Y’know what, maybe I’ve been around too long….

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        What social cost have we paid for our obsession with rum & craven A?

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          We have paid a social cost for weed use as we have with any other psychoactive substance from coffee to crack, but I would argue that the social cost of weed being illegal is higher than the social cost of legal weed.
                          "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Social cost of smoking weed.. ?

                            Why yuh tink dem allow weed smoking in the Supreme Court holding areas ?

                            If yuh want to see social cost... remove di tranquilizer from di monstah dem and si what happen !!

                            Comment

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