Could Altria Group Invest In This Pot Stock?

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Rumors are swirling that big-cap consumer goods companies are interested in investing in marijuana stocks following Constellation Brands' (NYSE: STZ) decision to acquire over one-third of Canopy Growth (NYSE: CGC) earlier this year. Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) was reportedly considering an investment in Aurora Cannabis (NASDAQOTH: ACBFF) last month, and there are reports today that tobacco kingpin Altria Group (NYSE: MO) would like to partner with Aphria Inc. (NASDAQOTH: APHQF). Is big tobacco about to cozy up to cannabis?

Why Aphria could be in Altria's sights

With 255,000 kilograms of capacity next year, Aphria is the third-biggest Canadian marijuana stock by annual marijuana production behind Aurora Cannabis, which has 570,000 kilograms of funded capacity, and Canopy Growth, which is on track for over 500,000 kilograms of capacity in 2019.

A man in a dress shirt listens through a wall using a plastic cup.
A man in a dress shirt listens through a wall using a plastic cup.

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

Although it's not as big as Aurora and Canopy Growth, Aphria is carving out an important niche as Canada's leading low-cost producer. Broadacre cultivation is cheapest, but Canada's unforgiving climate makes growing outdoors less enticing. Instead, Aphria focuses on greenhouses, which are far less expensive to operate than indoor facilities. According to a 2016 study conducted by Deloitte for the Australian cannabis market, it can cost $888, $1,539, and $1,909 per kilogram of dried flower to produce marijuana using broadacre, greenhouse, and indoor cultivation, respectively.

In addition to being on track to have over 95% of its marijuana production in greenhouses, Aphria's also at the forefront of implementing cost-saving automation in its facilities to drive costs down even more. Labor can represent up to 50% of the expense of operating a greenhouse, so automating nutrients, cuttings, de-budding, trimming, and waste disposal is key to boosting margin. Furthermore, Aphria's installing a power co-generation plant to save on its electricity costs and its implementing a water recycling system to lower its water bill.

The cost-forward approach at Aphria is already translating into enviable gross margins. Its gross margin was 75.6% last fiscal year, excluding fair-value adjustments due to inventory changes, and that's nicely better than Aurora Cannabis' 65% gross margin last fiscal year and Canopy Growth's 43% gross margin last quarter. While Aurora is attempting to lower its per-gram production costs to $1 or below by building out its own high-tech greenhouses, Aphria is already there. Last quarter, its production costs minus packaging and amortization were $0.95 per gram.