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Is Marijuana Stock KushCo Holdings' Bad News Good News?

Marijuana stock KushCo Holdings (NASDAQOTH: KSHB) is one of the planet's premier vendors of highly regulated marijuana packaging. Supplying marijuana companies with solutions that keep regulators happy is fueling tremendous growth but the company's experiencing growing pains. On April 9, management admitted an accounting mishap that requires it to restate its 2017 and 2018 financials.

Gaffes like this don't install investor confidence, but there may be a silver lining. Last year, KushCo hired a new chief financial officer (CFO) to get the company's financials into compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley, and this restatement suggests the company's financials will no longer be an impediment to listing shares on a major market exchange someday.

Carving out a niche

KushCo is best known for marketing bottles used by growers and dispensaries to package marijuana for retail sale but it also makes packaging for single-roll products, vapes, and edibles.

A man in a suit covering his eyes. On a wall behind him are drawings of light bulbs.
A man in a suit covering his eyes. On a wall behind him are drawings of light bulbs.

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

Kushco is one of the largest suppliers of packaging that meets regulatory requirements, so demand for its products has skyrocketed following legalization of recreational marijuana use in key markets, including California and Canada. The company works with over 5,000 marijuana companies and, as a result, no one company accounts for over 10% of its top line.

KushCo's revenue jumped 177%, to $52 million in fiscal 2018, and in fiscal Q1 2019, revenue increased 186% year over year, to $25 million. Management thinks revenue will double again in fiscal 2019.

Its growth isn't all from packaging, either. KushCo went on a spending spree last year, acquiring businesses that provide marketing solutions and products used to extract chemical cannabinoids, including cannabidiol (CBD), from marijuana and hemp. As a result, the company's becoming an increasingly diversified and important vendor.

Growing pains

Its rapid growth hasn't come without hiccups. Kushco was once a profitable company, but increasing demand has outstripped inventory and production, causing supply shortages that have boosted expenses.

To fulfill surging demand, KushCo had to invest in new facilities and in some cases, use expensive shipping methods to make sure products reached its customers on time. Because of these costs, KushCo's gross profit margin fell to 12.8% in fiscal Q1 from 34.8% one year ago, resulting in a net loss of $8.1 million. For comparison, it posted a profit of $95,000 on $8.8 million in revenue in the same quarter last year.

It turns out supply problems weren't its only growing pains, though. In the past, KushCo's CFO duties were handled by the company's chief operating officer (COO), and that may have contributed to an accounting misstep following its acquisitions.