CannTrust Holdings (TSX:TRST) Took a Risky Gamble: Buy the Dip or Sell?

News on Monday is that Canadian cannabis producer CannTrust Holdings (TSX:TRST)(NYSE:CTST) employees actually did the unthinkable: it was growing product in some unlicensed rooms and providing falsehoods to the regulator, Health Canada. The stock opened nearly 22% lower. Will the share price recover?

What happened?

According to a company news release on Monday, CannTrust staff members authorized themselves to grow cannabis in five completed but yet-to-be-licensed grow rooms at its Pelham greenhouse facility for about six months between October 2018 and March this year.

Although the grow rooms had been constructed and completed to expected regulatory standards, Health Canada was yet to license them for production, and this was subsequently done in April 2019.

The regulator has placed an inventory hold on 5,200 kilograms of product that was harvested from the affected rooms, and the company has placed a voluntary hold on about 7,500 kilograms of cannabis and dried product equivalents at its manufacturing facility as quality checks are made, so some customers may experience a temporary supply shortage.

The regulator’s quality results are expected in 10-12 days from July 8.

Should investors be concerned?

The cannabis market is a highly regulated industry, and there’s good reason for that to be so.

Aphria was in great pains for months, as it had to endure long delays in the licensing of its key grow facilities, and the company’s financials took a hit, but it was necessary for management to wait for a regulatory licence.

Actually, many other licensed producers had to endure licensing delays since last year. It hurt, but they still had to respect the law.

CannTrust has breached a significant code of trust with not only its industry regulator, but its customers too, and this can be a significant issue on the company’s image and its future operations, including potential customer lawsuits.

That said, the financial impact on the company from this scandal is unknown. The regulator could hold the product for longer or order that the held inventory be destroyed, and there could be fines levied.

However, considering that the company produced product from facilities that were unlicensed but technically up to regulatory standards, and that the regulator subsequently licensed the affected grow rooms, there’s minimal risk to the held inventory.

Further, the impact of potential customer lawsuits, if any, could still be limited since the sold product passed quality control tests in Health Canada-certified labs.

The company reportedly took corrective measures after the scandal, and management is looking at alternative inventory sources to temporarily close the sudden supply gap. Given the increasing inventory availability in the industry, wholesale product can be easily sourced.

The financial impact from this scandal could still be minimal from an operating perspective, but there’s the risk of regulatory fines and penalties.

Dump the stock or buy the dip?

Breaches of trust can easily dent stakeholder relationships, including investor goodwill. However, the cannabis investor seems very forgiving, as exhibited recently on Aphria stock after short-seller revelations of management shenanigans in LatAm acquisitions.

CannTrust shares may trade lower as the market awaits updates on regulatory action going forward, but this is not the best time to offload a position. Unless one is expecting the worst to happen, doing nothing is the ideal action.

The fact that the company’s production facilities remain licensed, cultivation is unaffected, and sales activities are still going on is reassuring. The dust may settle sooner than the market thinks.

Actually, contrarian investors may find this the best time to scoop cheap, beaten-down shares. The price is tempting.

You might be missing out on one of the biggest opportunities in Canadian investing history…

Marijuana was legalized across Canada on October 17th, and a little-known Canadian company just unlocked what some experts think could be the key to profiting off the coming marijuana boom.

Besides making key partnerships with Facebook and Amazon, they’ve just made a game-changing deal with the Ontario government.

One grassroots Canadian company has already begun introducing this technology to the market – which is why legendary Canadian investor Iain Butler thinks they have a leg up on Amazon in this once-in-a-generation tech race.

This is the company we think you should strongly consider having in your portfolio if you want to position yourself wisely for the coming marijuana boom.

Learn More About This TSX Stock Now

More reading

Fool contributor Brian Paradza has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.

Source: The Fool
CannTrust Holdings (TSX:TRST) Took a Risky Gamble: Buy the Dip or Sell?
The Fool

The Motley Fool
Contributor for investorsnews.ca
The Motley Fool is dedicated to helping the world invest — better. Founded in 1993 by brothers Tom and David Gardner, The Motley Fool helps millions of people attain financial freedom through our website, podcasts, books, newspaper column, radio show, mutual funds, and premium investing services.

In all we do, we take a different approach.

We believe – and have proven over decades – that the individual investor can beat the market.

We believe that anyone can do it, even if they don’t have a lot of time or money to devote to investing.

We believe in a long-term outlook, helping people build wealth over time.

We believe that the person best positioned to take care of your financial future is you.

And we work tirelessly on behalf of our hundreds of thousands of members who are enjoying the opportunities that come with having enough money to do the things that matter to them.

While we are headquartered in Alexandria, Va., The Motley Fool advocates for the individual investor around the globe with offices in the UK, Australia, Canada, Singapore, and Germany.

Related posts