OrganiGram Completes $7.5 million Financing and Commences trading August 25th under the symbol OGI

MaryMaryMary

Well-Known Member
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/medical-marijuana-producer-organigram-set-to-go-public-monday/article20180442/

Canadian medical marijuana producer OrganiGram Inc. is set to go public on Monday, its chief executive said, the second such firm to list on the venture exchange next week, highlighting investor appetite for a high-growth industry.

OrganiGram and Bedrocan Cannabis Corp. both plan to list on Aug. 25. The two firms, via reverse takeovers, will join Tweed Marijuana Inc. on the TSX Venture Exchange giving investors in public markets three licensed producers to choose from. Tweed went public in April and is valued at $100.8-million.

Canada appeals to U.S. and global investors because of its federally regulated program and contrasts with the United States, where medical marijuana is illegal at the national level. Regulator Health Canada estimates that the market will grow to $1.3-billion over the next decade.

“The investment community is seeing Canada as a safe place to invest due to the regulatory framework,” said Chief Executive Denis Arsenault, noting the firm had seen “tremendous” interest from U.S. and Canadian funds.

Moncton, New Brunswick-based OrganiGram wants to capture the Eastern Canadian and French-speaking markets. It has started to establish a sales force in Quebec.

The company, which received its licence in March, began production later in the month and will start shipping the product next week. It has more than 1,000 patients on the waiting list to receive the drug.

OrganiGram has raised $10.6-million so far, and its latest financing this month was oversubscribed by four times, Arsenault said. The company was valued at $36-million based on the recent round.

OrganiGram will list under the ticker symbol “OGI.”

Jacob Securities and Jordan Capital Markets are providing investment banking services for the company, while McMillan and Tripp Business Law are giving legal advice.

Reverse takeovers, a method used by smaller firms to access public markets, are carried out using a shell company already listed on an exchange. They are typically faster and cheaper than traditional initial public offerings.
 

heckler73

Well-Known Member
It's good to see the commercial infrastructure being so enthusiastically developed. This is the kind of message our current political circus will understand.
At the same time, it is equally shitty to see the cost of this activity at the personal level. So that they* can feel comfortable in controlling the legal aspect, we must give up the ability to do it for ourselves under threat of prosecution.
3 steps forward, 2 steps back. Slowly but surely, the path creeps forward to liberation.




* they -- Harper's Gang
.
 

OKLP

Well-Known Member
SCAM SCAM SCAM, if I had $10 mil, I could grow as much meds as I chose to, and would never further dilute my shares. They're just going public, because that's the FAST way to bring in money.

How aree they going to pay dividends to all those hungry investors, or will they just SCREW them all?!?
 

bigmanc

Well-Known Member
Because they dont know whats going to happen come february, its a faster way of getting 100% value out of the company before it could be worth nothing. It easier to sell a company to thousands of little people then the whole company to 1 entity.
 

heckler73

Well-Known Member
SCAM SCAM SCAM, if I had $10 mil, I could grow as much meds as I chose to, and would never further dilute my shares. They're just going public, because that's the FAST way to bring in money.

How aree they going to pay dividends to all those hungry investors, or will they just SCREW them all?!?
What dividends?
These little "pot shops" are not multi-billion dollar corps. The reward of early investment (or subscription in private placements) is the increase in share price. Not divies.
 
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