BAT looks beyond tobacco to Canadian marijuana

Lucky Strike cigarette maker buys into Moncton's Organigram

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: March 11, 2021

,

(Solidcolours/iStock/Getty Images)

Reuters — British American Tobacco (BAT) said Thursday it will buy a nearly 20 per cent stake in New Brunswick-based cannabis producer Organigram for about 126 million pounds (C$221.3 million) as it seeks to expand beyond its main tobacco business.

Organigram, headquartered at Moncton, grows cannabis and makes cannabis-derived products in the Canadian market, where marijuana was legalized in 2018.

Big tobacco and liquor companies in North America have already made large investments in the nascent industry, with cannabis seen as a less harmful alternative to cigarettes.

Read Also

Photo: JHVEPhoto/Getty Images Plus

U.S. grains: Corn sets contract lows on expectations for big US crop

Chicago Board of Trade corn futures set contract lows and soybean futures sagged on Friday on expectations that beneficial weather for U.S. crops will lead to bumper harvests, analysts said.

With top Democratic lawmakers in the United States also promising to decriminalize marijuana use, analysts and experts predict record investment in the industry this year.

The deal will give BAT access to R+D technologies, product innovation and cannabis expertise, it said in a statement, with an initial focus on natural remedy cannabidiol (CBD).

“This move takes us into a new space and we are not ruling out any product innovation,” David O’Reilly, director of scientific research at BAT, told Reuters.

Organigram CEO Greg Engel said the companies will jointly develop new products for cannabis delivery, both oral and vapour based, and will be able to commercialize any products developed under their own brands.

Both BAT and Organigram will contribute scientists, researchers and product developers, BAT said. It will become Organigram’s largest shareholder and can appoint two directors to its board.

Natural fit

“We view this move as a strong positive. Cannabis overall provides a natural fit for tobacco and a big incremental growth opportunity,” Jefferies analyst Owen Bennett wrote in an note.

BAT has expertise in operating in a regulated environment and experience of growing a crop similar to hemp CBD, Bennett said, adding that the timing of the deal before Organigram’s possible entry into the United States is also a big positive.

Bennett estimates U.S. CBD market sales of over US$16 billion by 2025.

Organigram’s U.S.-listed shares surged around 30 per cent to US$3.75 in morning trading on the Nasdaq. BAT’s London-listed shares were up slightly.

BAT’s investment comes two days after the Lucky Strike and Pall Mall cigarette maker laid out environmental, social and governance (ESG) targets, including switching more people to less harmful products.

The group aims to achieve at least five billion pounds in revenue from sales of e-cigarettes, tobacco heating and oral nicotine products in 2025.

Elsewhere in the industry, Marlboro maker Altria has invested in pot producer Cronos Group, while Corona beer-maker Constellation Brands has a stake in Canopy Growth, the largest cannabis company globally by market value.

— Reporting for Reuters by Tanishaa Nadkar, Aby Jose Koilparambil, Shariq Khan and Siddharth Cavale in Bangalore.

explore

Stories from our other publications