3 Hidden Risks That Could Steal Back Marijuana Stock Profits

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Since 2016 began, marijuana stocks have been virtually unstoppable. Though pot stocks haven't delivered the once-in-a-lifetime gains cryptocurrency investors partook in during the fourth quarter of last year, they've still been of the three-digit or four-digit percentage variety. Popular investments like Canopy Growth Corp. (NYSE: CGC), Aurora Cannabis (NASDAQOTH: ACBFF), and Aphria (NASDAQOTH: APHQF) are up about 3,400%, 1,400%, and 1,700%, respectively, since the beginning of 2016.

With Canada set to begin legally selling recreational marijuana in less than four weeks, investors anticipate that these pot stocks can continue rolling higher. After all, various estimates suggest that legalizing adult-use weed could add $5 billion a year in sales to the Canadian pot industry.

A hundred dollar bill on fire on a stove's gas burner.
A hundred dollar bill on fire on a stove's gas burner.

Image source: Getty Images.

Is it time to kiss those marijuana profits goodbye?

However, it's far from a guarantee that marijuana stocks can build on their gains, let alone maintain their substantially enlarged valuations. With no shortage of concerns on the table, here are three hidden risks that could be the undoing of marijuana stocks.

1. A resilient black market

Yes, Canada is set to become the first industrialized country in the world to legalize recreational weed, and yes, 30 U.S. states have given the thumbs-up to medical marijuana by passing broad-based legislation. But despite all of this, the illicit black market for cannabis remains intact.

You see, the underground pot market isn't bound by the same rules that legal channels are. A legally operating business has to purchase a cultivation license or sales permit (or at least go through the arduous process to obtain a sales permit), as well as pay rent, electricity costs, and employee wages, and cover excise taxes, along with corporate income tax on any profits. In some markets, such as California, all of these taxes can add up to around 45%, which makes it impossible for legally grown weed to compete with illicit pot.

A suspicious-looking man in a blue hoodie holding a potted cannabis plant.
A suspicious-looking man in a blue hoodie holding a potted cannabis plant.

Image source: Getty Images.

Of course, Canada is approaching taxation a bit differently. It's instituting just a 10% excise tax in an effort to compete with black market cannabis and, when commoditization hits and drives down dried cannabis pricing, pushes the illicit market out for good (or perhaps into legal channels). Still, even at 10%, and when coupled with corporate income tax rates, the illicit market has legal channels beat on price -- and price is usually what matters most to the consumer.

This is a worry for all marijuana stocks, but especially those that have been bestowed with aggressive valuations, like Canopy Growth. Ultimately, Canopy expects to have 5.6 million square feet of licensed capacity, which would likely yield around 500,000 kilograms of cannabis a year. But if consumer demand fails to hit lofty expectations due to the persistent presence of the black market, companies like Canopy Growth could struggle to find a home for all of its weed, hurting the price of dried cannabis and weighing on its margins.