Pot producer Canopy Growth sees profit in 2022

Costs cut, revenue increasing

By 
Reuters
Reading Time: 1 minute

Published: February 10, 2021

,

Signage on a Tweed retail outlet in Winnipeg. (Dave Bedard photo)

Reuters — Canopy Growth Corp., the world’s largest pot producer, said on Tuesday it expects to turn a profit in the second half of 2022 after aggressive cost-cutting and higher demand for cannabis products helped narrow third-quarter losses.

Canadian pot producers have been under pressure from investors seeking returns as profits remain elusive due to oversupply crimping sales in Canada and overseas expansion bets turning sour.

Canopy said it expects to start generating cash by fiscal 2024 and become operating cash flow positive a year before that, soothing market worries on profitability and sending the company’s shares up two per cent.

Read Also

Opponents of the Kansas bill distrust the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s assessment that glyphosate pesticides such as Bayer’s Roundup product are not likely to cause cancer, while proponents fear that the widely used pesticide will be made more expensive or pulled from the market. Photo: Fotokostic/Getty Images Plus

Bayer takes its multi-front battle on pesticide liability to Kansas

Kansas lawmakers were set to take up a bill on Tuesday backed by Bayer that would prevent people from suing pesticide manufacturers for not warning them that their products could cause cancer or other illnesses.

Since early last year, Canopy and rivals such as Aphria and Aurora Cannabis have been slashing expenses by shuttering plants, scaling down indoor cultivation and laying off hundreds of employees.

Canopy — whose retail chains include Tweed and Tokyo Smoke, and whose products include the Martha Stewart line of CBD-based goods — is also pinning its hopes on the large U.S. market that is likely to open up, thanks to the Joe Biden administration’s favourable view on the cannabis industry.

Meanwhile, market conditions too have improved. As the pandemic shuttered several businesses and economies contracted, demand for cannabis products such as gummy bears, brownies and drinks, known for their links to relaxation, surged.

Canopy, which sells a range of products from dried flowers to chocolates and drinks mixed with weed, said its net revenue rose 23 per cent in the quarter to $152.5 million.

Its adjusted loss shrank to $68.4 million from $97 million in the third quarter, although asset impairments and one-time restructuring costs led the company to post a net loss of more than $900 million.

Expenses dropped by 15 per cent, to $144.1 million.

— Reporting for Reuters by Arunima Kumar and Shariq Khan in Bangalore.

explore

Stories from our other publications