By Shariq Khan
(Reuters) – The U.S. cannabis business has a very particular cashflow problem — too much of it.
Marijuana can be sold legally in 36 U.S. states and the District of Columbia (D.C.) for medical use and in 15 of them and in D.C. for recreational purposes. But it’s still illegal on a federal level, meaning most banks won’t service the industry in case they fall afoul of money laundering laws.
With the COVID-19 pandemic and increasing legalisation driving a surge in cannabis use, the sector’s producers, manufacturers and retailers are awash in cash, adding risk and costs to the most basic business transactions from paying employees and filing taxes to finding somewhere to store their income.
“All this cash flowing around is just a recipe for disaster,” said Smoke Wallin, chief executive of hemp health products maker Vertical Wellness Inc. “How do you account for it? Where do you keep it? How do you move it? Even in a safe, it’s a security risk for employees.”
Ryan Hale, a U.S. Navy veteran and co-founder of cash management firm Operational Security Solutions, had to persuade a weed farmer in California to stop hiding cash in a tree. On another occasion, Hale had to help a bewildered cannabis retailer who had lost count of the dollar bills overflowing from his store’s lockers.
Legal U.S. cannabis sales grew 30% to $22 billion last year, more than the $17.5 billion Americans spent on wine, according to data from Euromonitor. Sales are expected to jump more than 20% this year.
(Graphic: U.S. cannabis consumers growth: https://graphics.reuters.com/CANNABIS-CASH/rlgpdybdovo/chart.png)
The sales boom could have left cannabis companies with a cash pile of more than $10 billion to deal with last year, according to research firms Headset.io and New Frontier Research.
Big players can afford unmarked armoured vans and heavily armed guards to transport money but smaller operators have to rely on themselves.
One weed producer in Los Angeles, who declined to be identified, said he had to carry $120,000 in a bag and drive for six hours from Los Angeles to Oakland to pay a supplier instead of taking a flight and put himself at greater risk of being robbed or the money being confiscated by airport security.
During the last weekend of May 2020, when protests erupted across the United States against police brutality and racism after the murder of George Floyd, there were at least 43 attacks on weed dispensaries along the West Coast, according to Cannabis media site Leafly’s review of police reports and business owners’ statements.
One of the stores attacked was Cookies Melrose in Hollywood, owned by rapper Gilbert Milam Jr, known by his stage name ‘Berner’.
It suffered damages in the “high six figures” when around a hundred people attacked the store on May 29, a company spokesperson said.
A DIFFERENT BALL GAME
As legalisation of cannabis gathers steam across states — New York and New Mexico will allow marijuana for recreational purposes in the next few years — politicians are looking at ways to make it easier for the sector to access banking services.
(Graphic: Marijuana Legalization by State Marijuana Legalization by State: https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-CANNABIS/jznvnnwwqvl/chart.png)
The House of Representatives passed a bill in April that would allow cannabis firms to have bank accounts, get loans and accept credit card payments but it may not make it to the Senate because Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer wants to work instead towards lifting the federal ban on cannabis.
A full federal green light is the industry’s ultimate goal but it isn’t counting on Schumer’s pledge to make it happen by next year.
Shares of U.S. cannabis companies, listed in Canada because they are barred from U.S. exchanges, are up just 9% so far this year according to the AdvisorShare Pure U.S. Cannabis ETF and off nearly 29% from a February peak.
In the meantime, marijuana businesses have to hunt for friendly banks.
Only 515 of the more than 8,200 federally registered banks and one in 30 credit unions in the United States worked with marijuana businesses at the end of 2020, according to data compiled by government agencies.
(Graphic: Cannabis banking in the U.S: https://graphics.reuters.com/CANNABIS-CASH/jznpnrowkpl/chart.png)
The service comes at a premium as the federal illegality increases the amount of paperwork needed by banks.
Chris Driessen, chief executive of pot producer SLANG Worldwide Inc, said it cost his firm $40,000 to avail of banking services in Colorado, just one of 12 states in which the company operates. Normally, a business checking account will cost less than $100 to open.
“Standard banking for companies is often 95% cheaper than the cost to bank cannabis companies,” Driessen said.
Maps Credit Union is one of the longest-serving financial institutions working with the cannabis industry. It has taken in more than $1.79 billion in cash deposits from the sector in Oregon since January 2017 but that has entailed filing tens of thousands of reports required under financial crimes watchdog FinCEN’s guidance for cannabis banking.
“Serving these businesses is not cheap. It’s a completely different ball game,” said Rachel Pross, Maps’ operations chief, pointing to its use of costly anti-money laundering software, external auditors and legal counsel.
As demand for pot grows, investors have poured more than $2.5 billion into cannabis tech startups since 2018 and special purpose acquisition companies or SPACs that target the broader cannabis industry, have raised $3.9 billion to date, according to Viridian.
Within the industry, however, some cannabis executives can’t get loans and struggle to even retain personal accounts.
Cookies store chain owner Berner said many banks had declined to be associated with him since he got into the cannabis line in 2015.
“My clothing business did $32 million last year, but multiple banks have asked us to leave,” he said. “You’d like to go into a normal banking establishment and just be treated like a normal human being.”
(Reporting by Shariq Khan in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur and Carmel Crimmins)