3 Reasons to Avoid Canopy Growth Corp.

Canopy Growth Corp. (TSX:CGC) is a great growth story, but its fundamentals currently don’t support the price level–it’s trading at 448 times 2018 forward earnings. Here are three sound reasons to reconsider jumping on the Canopy bandwagon.

| More on:

Canopy Growth Corp. (TSX:CGC) shares surged this week, gaining over 73% in value in just the past five trading days. Investors are clamouring for a story like Canopy Growth, but some are keen to take a very cautious look at the fundamentals supporting the business to assess if a wait-and-see approach may be more sound than catching the tail end of the upward momentum swing in the stock price.

Here are three reasons why prospective investors should be very careful with Canopy Growth.

Reason #1: Tremendous, fast growth in customers and revenue, but long-term growth may be constrained

Any long-term investor in a company like Canopy Growth needs to see sustained growth over long periods of time, and Canopy Growth’s track record is simply too narrow. The fact is, the industry is in its infancy right now with few existing competitors. There’s a slew of customers who have yet to be marketed to by Canopy Growth or other potential entrants, who are slower to getting in the game.

Future cash flows from operations may be delayed to the extent that new entrants have time to figure out how to get into this business, eating up Canopy Growth’s market share of before it can truly go national with its product.

Questions of future market share, market penetration, and whether or not a first-mover advantage exists in this space are not trivial.

Reason #2: The political environment remains very uncertain, domestically and globally

Significant uncertainty remains as to whether the current political environment in Canada and around the world will remain favourable to companies like Canopy Growth. In Canada, political promises have been made, but legislation is still pending and slow to be enacted federally.

The speed of getting legislation passed in Canada is largely a function of how the country plans to get around the fact that legalizing marijuana is in contravention of three international treaties Canada has signed. These treaties specifically criminalize marijuana and essentially make it impossible in the current political environment for marijuana to be traded internationally any time soon.

Even if pot could be traded internationally, only four countries of the G20 have officially legalized marijuana, meaning the market is sufficiently small so as not to be a significant fundamental factor in the stock price.

Reason #3: Canopy Growth’s stock price factors in a market much bigger than what currently exists

The domestic Canadian economy will not be big enough to support the growth that investors are pricing into the stock. The current price levels Canopy Growth is trading at imply that investors assume some probability that the U.S. market (Federally) or other global markets may legalize marijuana to the same extent as Canada. This is a dangerous assumption, especially in the short term.

The stock is currently trading at a 2018 forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 448–a staggering number.

If, and this remains a big if, the U.S. government were to legalize marijuana and allow it to be traded as a commodity, similar to oil or gold, the possibilities for Canopy Growth are massive. The current political landscape in the U.S. suggests such an idea to be more unlikely now that president-elect Donald Trump is at the helm.

A war on drugs would not provide the ideal “growing conditions” for Canopy Growth Corp.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Chris MacDonald has no position in any stocks mentioned.

More on Investing

Investing

5 Stocks You Can Confidently Invest $500 in Right Now

Investors can confidently invest $500 in these Canadian stocks for substantial capital gains.

Read more »

Growth from coins
Dividend Stocks

1 Dividend Stock Down 36% to Buy Right Now

Get in on high returns with a high dividend yield from this one dividend stock finally seeing its shares rise…

Read more »

data analyze research
Dividend Stocks

3 Magnificent Dividend Stocks to Buy With $500 Today

Do you want value, growth, and income? These dividend stocks offer monthly dividend payments with more growth coming!

Read more »

analyze data
Stocks for Beginners

All-Time Highs, Next-Level Gains: 2 Top TSX Growth Stocks to Watch

Here are two of the best TSX growth stocks you may want to add to your watchlist now as the…

Read more »

Cannabis grows at a commercial farm.
Cannabis Stocks

Why Canopy Growth Stock Rallied 80% in April

Canopy Growth (TSX:WEED) stock has seen shares surge by 80% on the back of the potential for reclassification in the…

Read more »

Choice of fashion clothes of different colors on wooden hangers
Investing

2 Apparel Stocks That Have Gone Out of Style—Time to Buy?

Aritzia (TSX:ATZ) and another fashionable retailer may be worth checking out right here.

Read more »

protect, safe, trust
Dividend Stocks

How to Build a Bulletproof Monthly Passive-Income Portfolio in 2024 With Just $20,000

Here's how investing in monthly paying dividend ETFs can help you generate a stable stream of recurring income in 2024.

Read more »

Canadian Dollars
Stocks for Beginners

Where to Invest $10,000 in May 2024

Are you wondering what top stocks to buy in May 2024? These four high-quality stocks could provide strong returns for…

Read more »