Shares in major cannabis companies sell off sharply - Action News
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Shares in major cannabis companies sell off sharply

The biggest cannabis companies in Canada all sold off sharply on Monday as investors pulled money out of the sector.

Canadian pot-producing companies all lost more than 10% in Monday trading

Recreational cannabis became legal in Canada last week, but the reaction from investors to the news so far has been to sell companies that produce the drug. (Chris Wattie/Reuters)

The biggest cannabis companies in Canada all sold off sharply on Monday, as investors pulled money out of the sector.

Canopy Growth, Aurora Cannabis, Aphriaand Tilrayare the four biggest names in the sector, and all saw double-digit percentage declines.

Canopy Growth lost more than 11per cent to close at $54.46 on the TSX, whileAurora Cannabis fared even worse, down 12 per cent to $11.42 a share.

AphriaInc. was off by more than 13 per cent to $15.77 a share, while Nasdaq-listedTilrayfared worst of all, down more than 15 per cent to $122.60 a share.

All of the major pot companies sold off on Monday. (Joan Dymianiw/CBC)

Last Wednesday, recreational use of cannabis became legal in Canada, an event that investors had spent much of the past year anticipating by buying up shares in any cannabis-related companies.

But even before the big day arrived last Wednesday, most ofthe so-called "Big 4" pot stocks were showing signs of weakness, and their volatility has seemingly only picked up since then.

It likely hasn't helped the shares that the rollout of legalization has been met with shortages across the country and logistical problems keeping up with demand for the drug.

But at least one analyst thinks the weakness in the stocks on Monday isn't just a blip, but rather the natural result of an overhyped sector coming back down to earth.

Stuart Rolfe at Veritas Investment Research Corp. is the lone analystwho has a sell rating on the big names in the sector, and he said Monday's weakness didn't come for any particular reason.

"There might be nothing to pin the selling on," he said, but on the whole, he thinks the sector is overvalued to begin with.

"I learned awhile back that overvaluation is the meanest of catalysts," he said.

"It never sounds like much, but sometimes it drags down stocks like a crocodile with a death grip."