3 Marijuana Stocks to Absolutely Not Buy Right Now

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Green rush fever is back, once again. Following a roughly six-month lull, investors can't seem to get enough of marijuana stocks, as evidenced by the more than tripling in the North American Marijuana Index over the trailing year.

The reason for this bullishness is most clearly related to the imminent legalization of recreational marijuana in Canada, which is set to occur on Oct. 17, 2018. Adults being able to purchase cannabis recreationally should result in billions of dollars flowing into the Canadian cannabis industry, once it's operating at full capacity. And as you can surmise from the four-digit percentage moves higher in many popular pot stocks since 2016 began, it's expected to result in significant long-term profits.

But as we often witness with the "next-greatest thing" on Wall Street, investors' emotions and expectations tend to get well ahead of themselves. This could very well be the case with a handful of marijuana stocks. Here are three pot stocks that I would strongly suggest marijuana stock investors keep their distance from, for the time being.

Two rows of cannabis buds lying atop hundred dollar bills.
Two rows of cannabis buds lying atop hundred dollar bills.

Image source: Getty Images.

Tilray

The Tilray (NASDAQ: TLRY) roller-coaster ride has been well documented, and my suspicion is that it won't end well.

Having priced its initial public offering at $17 per share on July 18, shares of Tilray wound up hitting $300 on the nose during this past Wednesday's trading session. That's a better than 1,600% return from its offering price in two months' time. Not too shabby, and almost cryptocurrency-like.

Mind you, there are tangible factors that make Tilray a business that investors can grow to like and appreciate. As one of the first growers to receive a cultivation license from Health Canada, Tilray has some history and branding power that many of its competitors lack. It's also a trendsetter, becoming the first pot stock to be allowed to export both dried cannabis and cannabis oils into Germany, and getting an OK to import medical weed into the U.S. to run a clinical study on essential tremor at the University of California, San Diego.

But not everything makes sense with Tilray, such as its valuation, which peaked at more than $26 billion. Even at full capacity, which would include close to 3.6 million square feet of growing space, it's unlikely that Tilray generates much more than 300,000 kilograms of pot per year. Meanwhile, Canopy Growth (NYSE: CGC), at less than half of Tilray's peak valuation, can produce more weed annually (around 500,000 kilograms) at peak capacity, and it has just as much branding power, if not more.