The 3 Most Overhyped Marijuana Trends

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What goes up must come down, right? Well, not if you're invested in the marijuana industry. Since the year began, the Horizons Marijuana Life Sciences ETF, which holds around four dozen pot stocks in various weightings, has risen by 63%, through March 5. Since April 2017, when this cannabis-focused exchanged-traded fund debuted, it's up nearly 110%.

It's no secret that investors and Wall Street are expecting big things from the legal pot industry. Cowen Group has aggressively called for $75 billion in global sales by 2030, with investment bank Jefferies projecting the industry could one day hit $130 billion in annual sales. But not every stock or every marijuana trend is necessarily going to be a success.

As I peruse the cannabis industry, I see three trends for 2019 that look to be overhyped. Should one or more of these trends fall flat, a period of reckoning could await pot stock investors.

A cannabis leaf floating on carbonation in a glass, with other cannabis leaves to the right of the glass.
A cannabis leaf floating on carbonation in a glass, with other cannabis leaves to the right of the glass.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. CBD beverages

I'm not sure there's been a trend more overhyped since last summer than the expectation that cannabidiol (CBD)-based beverages were going to take off. CBD is the nonpsychoactive cannabinoid best known for its perceived medical benefits.

The hype really began when Molson Coors Brewing (NYSE: TAP) announced a 57.5%-42.5% joint venture with Quebec-based cannabis grower HEXO (NYSEMKT: HEXO) on Aug. 1. Till this point, HEXO was a relative no-name that had snagged a huge supply deal with its home province, but was otherwise off the radar. Meanwhile, Molson Coors had seen years of declining North American alcohol sales, as well as a precipitous loss of beer market share in Canada. The duo will be researching and developing a line of cannabis-infused nonalcoholic beverages under the Truss brand, with an expected launch during the fourth quarter of 2019.

Soon after Molson Coors and HEXO tied up, we witnessed a major equity investment from Modelo and Corona beer maker Constellation Brands into Canopy Growth (NYSE: CGC), and in December saw Tilray and Anheuser-Busch InBev form a $100 million joint venture for infused beverage research and development.

Here's the problem: Infused beverages aren't yet legal in Canada. Regulatory agency Health Canada has outlined plans to legalize new consumption options by no later than the one-year anniversary of when recreational weed went on sale (Oct. 17), meaning by then we could see a slew of competitors champing at the bit to nab their piece of the pie.

Aside from just Molson Coors, Constellation Brands, and AB InBev, The Green Organic Dutchman is devoting about 20% of its peak annual output to edibles and infused beverages, and Heineken has been testing infused beverages in select California locations. The market for CBD beverages is going to be far more cramped than investors realize, and it simply may not be the needle mover that Wall Street and investors are expecting.