Jay-Z Enters The Weed Game, Debuts High-End Cannabis Brand
ByAmy Lamareon December 19, 2020inArticles›Billionaire News
We live in glorious times, people. We can pull up a website, pick out our cannabis products, check out, and have them delivered to our front door within about an hour. We can walk into dispensaries and walk out with weed. We can pay for our marijuana with a card instead of cash. With the legalization of marijuana becoming more and more widespread, some major players are getting into the industry. The latest to do so is billionaire rapper and mogul Jay-Z . Mr. Beyonce is launching a high-end cannabis brand called Monogram. The line debuts in California. Its flagship product is the “OG Handroll,” a 1.5-gram joint that retails for $50, which is more than twice what a typical joint sells for. What makes it worth $50? According to Monogram, the “OG Handroll” is made with a small-batch flower and burns like a high-end cigar. Reportedly, the company took a year to develop a new technique for growing and rolling marijuana into joints.
Jay-Z’s weed brand is hitting the market with four different strains called No. 88, No. 70, No. 96, and No. 01. They offer three strengths – light, medium, and heavy. The strains were developed by DeAndre Watson, a veteran in the marijuana business.
Ari Perilstein/Getty Images
Jay-Z signed on to develop and promote his weed brand with popular California cannabis brand Caliva in 2019. Caliva has its own house brands, dispensaries, and delivery services. Caliva owns Monogram. Jay-Z isn’t just a brand ambassador or the face of the brand, he’s an executive with the company. Officially, Jay-Z is the chief brand strategist for Caliva. Caliva and Monogram were acquired by Subversive Capital Acquisition Corp. in November 2020. Subversive also owns celebrity cannabis brands including Carlos Santana’s Mirayo. The cannabis companies are organized under a new parent company called “The Parent Co.,” which raised $575 million when it went public on Canada’s stock exchange NEO in the summer of 2020.
The deal is an all-stock one that will acquire Jay-Z’s 50% stake in Monogram when it closes. He reportedly will receive five million shares in The Parent Co. and the right to acquire one million more. The Parent Co. also has an exclusive agreement to be Roc Nation’s cannabis brand partner. Jay-Z’s Roc Nation will get $25 million in stock and $7.5 million annually in exchange for The Parent Co. having rights to Roc Nation’s list of athletes and artists. It is expected that those artists and athletes will play a part in the development of future cannabis brands. Jay-Z is also leading the social justice program for the company. The Parent Co. is giving 2% of its net income annually to invest in Black and other minority-owned cannabis businesses.
Celebrity cannabis brands are big business. Snoop Dogg has Leafs, Cyprus Hills B-Real has the brand and dispensary Dr. Greenthumb in Los Angeles, the Wu Tang Klan’s Raekwon has Citizen Grown, Bella Thorne has Glass House Farms, System of a Down’s Shavo Odadjian has 22Red, Tommy Chong has Tommy Chong’s Cannabis, NBA legend Al Harrington has Viola by Al Harrington, Marley Natural comes from the late Bob Marley , Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart has Mind Your Head, Rick Ross , Run the Jewels, and Gary Payton have collaborated on Cookies Collaborations; and finally, Mike Tyson has Tyson Ranch.
Legalizing marijuana has been good for the bottom lines of the states that have approved the use of recreational marijuana. Over the last several years, Colorado and Washington reported better than expected sales of cannabis. Colorado took in more than $302 million in taxes and fees on marijuana in 2019. Sales in the state that year were more than $1.7 billion. In California, cannabis sales have generated $411.3 million in excise tax, $98.9 million in cultivation tax, and $335.1 million in sales tax since January 2018. In November 2019, Massachusetts reported that its first year of legal marijuana produced $393.7 million in sales. Overall in the U.S., $1.2 billion worth of sales were reported in 2019. That’s expected to grow to more than $30 billion by 2024.
In the most recent election, New Jersey, South Dakota, Montana, and Arizona joined Washington, California, Nevada, Colorado, Alaska, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Oregon, and Vermont in legalizing the recreational use of marijuana.
There’s no doubt about it: marijuana is big business.
- These 9 Celebrities Are Cashing In On The Marijuana Green Rush
- Legal Marijuana Sales Skyrocketed To Record Levels On 4/20 This Year
- The Marijuana Billionaire Who Accurately Predicts Where It Will Be Legalized Next
- Canadian Weed Legalization Has Made A Number Of Entrepreneurs Millionaires And Billionaires
- Damian Marley Invests In ‘High Times’ Magazine
- Damian Marley Is Converting A Former Prison Into A Marijuana Grow Space
The Marijuana Billionaire Who Accurately Predicts Where It Will Be Legalized Next
ByAmy Lamareon March 7, 2019inArticles›Billionaire News
Brendan Kennedy has been on the go since his company, Tilray, went public in July 2018. In fact, he has boarded more than 135 flights, 23% more than he did the year before. His company is in one of the hottest industries to hit the market in eons – marijuana. Tilray sells cannabis for medical marijuana and the growing recreational marijuana markets. The IPO of Tilray not only made Kennedy a billionaire, but also the richest man in the legal marijuana business.
Tilray’s headquarters are in Nanaimo on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, a short flight from Kennedy’s home in Seattle. Tilray quickly became one of the largest employers on the island of 92,000 people. Tilray’s 65,000 square foot cannabis lab and grow facility produces thousands of pot plants that are shipped to tens of thousands of patients, pharmacies, and dispensaries in 12 of the countries where medical or recreational weed is currently legal.
Marijuana is now legal for either medical or recreational use in some 36 countries and 33 U.S. states plus the District of Columbia. There is still a federal ban on marijuana, but the recently passed Farm Bill exempted the hemp plant and its derivative cannabidiol, or CBD, from the federal ban, clearing the way for explosive growth. Legal pot sales are expected to more than double from $10.5 billion in 2018 to $22.2 billion in 2022 in the U.S. alone. Worldwide, that figure is expected to be $31.6 billion. By then, Kennedy expects that the U.S. will have legalized the drug in all 50 states.
ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty Images
Kennedy grew up in San Francisco as the sixth of seven children. He was never a pot smoker. He was born with a cleft lip that required surgery to repair. He attended an all boys Jesuit prep school called St. Ignatius – where his dad taught science. He studied architecture at UC Berkeley and worked construction during school. Kennedy started and sold two dotcom-era software companies and then went and got his MBA from Yale. In 2006, after business school, he got a job working as an internal analyst at Silicon Valley Bank. His job was to help venture capitalists and their portfolio companies value their private stock. During the spring of 2010, Kennedy kept coming across data that placed significant value in the cannabis industry.
California was putting a ballot question on legalization before voters that fall. He pulled Gallup poll charts on American attitudes about controversial issues like gay marriage and the legalization of marijuana and found a trend – support for both was growing equally and state laws were following suit. The only doubts Kennedy had about the cannabis industry were his own ambivalence toward the product. He struggled to balance the enthusiasm he heard from cancer patients and military vets with the attitude of his own anti-drug upbringing. Nancy Reagan’s old slogan about staying away from drugs haunted him. How could the thing she railed against actually be good for you? However, at the same time, Kennedy didn’t think the law’s failure to distinguish marijuana from other narcotics like heroin made any sense either.
In the spring of 2011, Kennedy officially quit his job. A few months later, armed with a PowerPoint presentation, he went to the home of the former president of SVB Analytics, his old boss, Jim Anderson. The presentation was the idea for Privateer Holdings, a private equity firm with the mission to acquire and create cannabis companies and brands. His presentation was data driven. He laid out what he expected to happen in the cannabis industry over the next decade. Anderson invested in the first round of funding—that investment has given him a return of more than 100x since Tilray went public. Privateer owns 73% of Tilray. Everything that Kennedy predicted back in 2011 has come to pass.
At times, Kennedy has wondered if he entered the marijuana market too early. In late 2011, he and his co-founders spent their pooled savings on the marijuana and dispensary review site Leafly. The site publishes ratings on cannabis strains – sold legally or on the street – from users all over the world. The lack of data on the cannabis industry terrified the data driven Kennedy. Leafly would give him the data he needed. Monetizing Leafly was another problem. The Yelp of cannabis could not attract investors or advertisers and it was not long before Kennedy had depleted his savings, his 401k, maxed out his credit cards, and borrowed money from family to develop Leafly. At one point, he even emptied the jug of change next to his washing machine for a grand total of $196. There was a night where he didn’t even have enough money to order a pizza. Not even Dominos. Not even with a coupon. He didn’t mind being broke as much as he worried about what his career prospects would be if he failed. Would he forever be known as the failed pot guy?
Then, in 2012, Washington and Colorado legalized pot. Investors and advertisers wanted a piece of Leafly. In 2013, Canada started its legalization process. Nevada, California, and other states followed. To stay ahead of the competition—which is growing stronger—Kennedy spends a lot of time trying to predict which country will legalize marijuana next. He got a leg up on South Korea as his data predicted that country would be next. They were and the November news that they had legalized medical cannabis shocked everyone except Kennedy.
On July 19, 2018, Tilray became the first cannabis company to have an IPO on the U.S. stock exchange. The IPO raised $153 million with shares at $17. At the peak of the stock price in September, Tilray had risen 1,159% in just two months. It was worth more than Snapchat. Since then stock has fallen off about 50 percent but it is still trading at about 50 times estimated sales.
Even Kennedy, who is a valuation expert, finds it hard to pin down a number for how big Tilray could be. His priority for the foreseeable future is growth—not profit. Street sales of marijuana are still way more common than legal ones across the globe, making it impossible to predict the true demand for cannabis.
Still, Kennedy is absolutely convinced that the end is near for the federal ban on cannabis is the United States. In fact, he predicts that the U.S. will legalize cannabis in 2021. If the U.S. doesn’t follow his prediction, it isn’t the end for Tilray. He expects more than 70 countries to have legalized medical marijuana by 2021.
- Canadian Weed Legalization Has Made A Number Of Entrepreneurs Millionaires And Billionaires
- Jay-Z Enters The Weed Game, Debuts High-End Cannabis Brand
- Legal Marijuana Sales Skyrocketed To Record Levels On 4/20 This Year
- Boy, Sheldon Adelson Really, Really, Hates Pot
- Billionaire Winners And Losers In The Marijuana Legalization Battle
- Damian Marley Is Converting A Former Prison Into A Marijuana Grow Space