在2018年7月11日,2018年7月11日,Photo,Ben Kovler,CEO,Gen Kovler,Green Thumb Industries在芝加哥公司办公室姿势摆姿势。Green Thumb Industries拥有商业计划,专业知识和充足的野心,但无法获得足够的资金来发展其大麻业务。上个月,七个国家的锅商店的收入增加了2000万美元的收入转动了北方,并在加拿大公开,大麻即将在全国范围内广泛合法化。(AP照片/ Charles Rex Arbogast)
Green Thumb Industries拥有经营计划,专业知识和大量雄心壮志,以发展其大麻业务。基于芝加哥的公司没有进入足够的资金来实现这一切。
In recent months, prominent U.S. pot companies including MedMen, Liberty Health Care and Chalice Farms have listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange, raising capital and drawing attention from wealthy investors in Asia, Europe and Australia who want to make a play in the cannabis industry but are spooked by the U.S. federal prohibition.
在2018年7月11日,2018年7月11日,Photo,Ben Kovler,CEO,Gen Kovler,Green Thumb Industries在芝加哥公司办公室姿势摆姿势。Green Thumb Industries拥有商业计划,专业知识和充足的野心,但无法获得足够的资金来发展其大麻业务。上个月,七个国家的锅商店的收入增加了2000万美元的收入转动了北方,并在加拿大公开,大麻即将在全国范围内广泛合法化。(AP照片/ Charles Rex Arbogast)
In this Friday, Jan. 12, 2018 file photo, customers line up for recreational marijuana outside of MedMen a dispensary in West Hollywood, Calif. U.S.-based marijuana businesses are lining up to list on the Canadian Securities Exchange to tap into financing from institutional investors put off by the U.S. ban on pot. Bastions of America's marijuana industry like MedMen, Green Thumb Industries, Acreage Holdings and Canna-Hub—as well as dozens of smaller companies—have recently gone public in Canada or are planning to do so to get access to foreign markets and the money they need to grow. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel, File
"There's pent-up demand all over the world, and all over in the U.S., and it's all getting forced into Canada," said Troy Dayton, chief executive of The Arcview Group, an Oakland, California-based cannabis investment and market research firm. "Every large investor and every large company is salivating over this market now, but they're held back because of the uncertainty."
In this Friday, Jan. 12, 2018 file photo, customers line up for recreational marijuana outside of MedMen, a dispensary in West Hollywood, Calif. U.S.-based marijuana businesses are lining up to list on the Canadian Securities Exchange to tap into financing from institutional investors put off by the U.S. ban on pot. Bastions of America's marijuana industry like MedMen, Green Thumb Industries, Acreage Holdings and Canna-Hub, as well as dozens of smaller companies, have recently gone public in Canada or are planning to do so to get access to foreign markets and the money they need to grow. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel, File)
In this June 2, 2016 file photo, William Simpson, founder of Chalice Farms, holds a display of his company's cannabis-infused truffles, chocolates and gummy candies at the company headquarters in Portland, Ore. In recent months, prominent U.S. pot companies including MedMen, Liberty Health Care and Chalice Farms have listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange, raising capital and drawing attention from wealthy investors in Asia, Europe and Australia who want to make a play in the cannabis industry but are spooked by the U.S. federal prohibition. (AP Photos/Gillian Flaccus, File)
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