Pubdate: Tue, 21 Nov 2017 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2017 Postmedia Network Contact: http://www.calgaryherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Reid Southwick Page: A7 POT INVESTORS WARNED OF U.S. COMPLICATIONS A Vancouver cannabis firm with holdings in Alberta and a greenhouse under construction in California expects to debut its shares on a Canadian stock exchange in the coming weeks - with big warnings to investors. Sunniva Inc. will be the first pot stock to hold an initial public offering after securities regulators set out new rules for companies with assets in the United States, where cannabis remains federally illegal. While several U.S. states have liberalized cannabis laws, securities watchdogs in Canada say there are risks with investing in cannabis stocks that have American assets, including that the companies face potential asset seizures and prosecution by federal U.S. authorities. Last month, the Canadian Securities Administrators, the umbrella group for provincial and territorial securities watchdogs, issued a notice outlining the warnings that publicly traded pot companies with American holdings must make to investors. Sunniva, which has received conditional approval to list its shares on the Canadian Securities Exchange, said Monday it is confident it has jumped through all the various hoops to satisfy concerns from the regulators. Leith Pedersen, the firm's Calgary-born president, said investors and big lenders financing construction of its production facilities in Canada and the U.S. don't appear to be fazed by any risks of operating in a legal grey area. "Follow the big money," Pedersen said. "They seem to be comfortable financing these facilities for us." Still, due to the risks south of the border, publicly traded cannabis firms with operations in the U.S. generally trade at a discount to their Canadian competitors, said Vahan Ajamian, analyst at Beacon Securities. Sunniva is building a 325,000-square-foot greenhouse in Cathedral City, Calif., that will produce 80,000 kilograms of medical marijuana per year once it's operational next spring. The company expects to break ground early next year on a 400,000-square-foot greenhouse in the southern British Columbia town of Oliver, also exclusively serving the medicinal market. Sunniva already owns a vaporizer manufacturer and Calgarybased Natural Health Services, which runs eight medical clinics offering advice to patients in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Ontario. Like other cannabis players, Sunniva is backed by executives with varied backgrounds, including Pedersen, a former investment banker, and chief executive Dr. Anthony Holler, who led the vaccine maker ID Biomedical Corp., which sold to a British pharmaceutical giant in 2005 for $1.7 billion. "What Tony did back then was build out very large-scale, lowcost, high-quality, scalable flu vaccine manufacturing plants," Pedersen said. "That's exactly what we're trying to do today in the cannabis space. It's from flu vaccines to cannabis," he added. In its filings with securities regulators, Sunniva says cannabis companies operating in states with approved medical and recreational use currently enjoy some protections from federal prosecution. But the documents warn these protections may not last forever, noting Attorney General Jeff Sessions' opposition to legalization. The filings say that because pot remains federally illegal in the U.S., banks and other lenders involved with the industry risk violating anti-money laundering laws. The company may also face difficulties enforcing contracts. The filings say the U.S. cannabis market may "become the subject of heightened scrutiny by regulators, stock exchanges, clearing agencies and other authorities in Canada." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt