Times Colonist

$1-billion marijuana deal pressure for competitor­s

- ARMINA LIGAYA

Aurora Cannabis Inc.’s friendly billion-dollar deal to buy rival licensed producer CanniMed Therapeuti­cs Inc. marks the biggest acquisitio­n the marijuana sector has seen and puts pressure on their competitor­s to up their expansion antes.

The agreement, valued at almost $1.1 billion Cdn, comes after an acrimoniou­s takeover battle that included a public war of words and a lawsuit filed by CanniMed against its suitor.

But after spending long days at the negotiatin­g table since late last week, the adversarie­s agreed on a transactio­n that now includes both shares and cash — a sweeter deal than the earlier all-stock transactio­n offered in November.

“It probably creates an expectatio­n that there will be more consolidat­ion in the sector,” said Aurora chief corporate officer Cam Battley.

The CanniMed transactio­n marks the largest acquisitio­n in this sector by far, said Russell Stanley, special situations analyst at Echelon Wealth Partners.

There is now increased pressure for the sector’s bigger players — which have all raised money amid soaring share prices recently — to scale up either organicall­y or via acquisitio­ns, Stanley said. “They’ve got the currency, they’ve got the ammunition, and the market’s going to expect people to use it.”

The transactio­n, which is subject to customary closing conditions, is the latest in a wave of consolidat­ion in the sector ahead of legalizati­on for recreation­al use this summer.

Rival producer Aphria Inc. this month announced a deal to buy Ladysmith-based Broken Coast Cannabis Inc., a transactio­n valued at $230 million in cash and stock. Prior to the Aurora-CanniMed deal, the largest deal had been Canopy Growth’s 2016 friendly all-stock deal to acquire Mettrum Health Corp. valued at $430 million.

Based on an implied Aurora share price of $12.65 and an exchange ratio that would see CanniMed shareholde­rs receive 3.4 Aurora shares or a combinatio­n of cash and shares for each CanniMed share, the companies said the new offer would amount to $43 per share, or $1.1 billion.

However, Aurora shares closed at $14.79 on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Tuesday and CanniMed shares closed at $37.51, making the offer worth currently worth about $50 per share by the time it was announced Wednesday. The value could bounce around significan­tly before the deal closes due to volatility in the marijuana sector.

CanniMed had argued that Aurora’s earlier all-stock offer valued at up to $24 per share for the company was too low, given the wild upward swing in marijuana stocks in recent months.

The deal gives Aurora the cannabis producer with the longest track record in the industry. CanniMed’s predecesso­r was the sole supplier to Health Canada before the current medical marijuana licensing regime was implemente­d.

CanniMed has also demonstrat­ed success in developing and monetizing value-added products, Stanley added, noting that 57 per cent of the latest quarter’s sales came from oils rather than dried flower. These capabiliti­es could help Aurora as cannabis companies race to develop pillform cannabis amid growing interest in the drug’s use for medical applicatio­ns.

CanniMed has 200 employees, while Aurora has more than 450, said Battley. Aurora does not expect to cut jobs, but rather ramp up hiring, he added.

The deal also means CanniMed will abandon its plans to acquire the Tragically Hipbacked Newstrike Resources Ltd., whose shareholde­rs had already voted in favour of a takeover by CanniMed.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Cannabis seedlings at a new Aurora Cannabis facility in Montreal.
RYAN REMIORZ, THE CANADIAN PRESS Cannabis seedlings at a new Aurora Cannabis facility in Montreal.

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