Alberta to allow pot shops to sell cannabis at adult-only trade shows, festivals
Alberta will begin allowing licensed cannabis retailers to operate temporary sales locations at adult-only events come Jan. 31.
ADVERTISEMENT
Alberta will begin allowing licensed cannabis retailers to operate temporary sales locations at adult-only events come Jan. 31.
Canopy Growth Corp. says it has sold its This Works skin care and wellness brand to a U.K. investment firm.
Canopy Growth Corp. says the aggregate gross proceeds from selling off its sports drink business total $30.4 million.
Canopy Growth Corp. says an Ontario court has approved the sale of its BioSteel sports drink business in a pair of deals.
Tilray Brands is banking on its diversification away from cannabis and into craft beer as the company edges closer to profitability.
The cannabis company Tilray expanded its position in the craft brew industry, completing the acquisition of eight beer brands from Anheuser-Busch that it had announced over the summer.
With cannabis regulations potentially set to ease in the U.S., Canopy Growth CEO David Klein sees the tides turning on cannabis legalization in international markets.
The progress of proposed cannabis banking reforms in the United States represents another step toward widespread acceptance of the industry, according to one analyst.
TerrAscend Corp. says its common shares will begin trading on the exchange under the TSND ticker on July 4.
A Senate committee says the current cannabis market and legislation has kept Indigenous Peoples from sharing in the economic opportunities that the legalization of recreational pot created.
Quebec's provincially-owned cannabis retailer says its growth has plateaued for the first time despite an increasing number of pot shops because some two dozen stores have been affected by strikes.
The head of Ontario's cannabis distributor says the "race to the bottom" happening with pot prices risks hurting the market's future.
The head of Ontario’s Crown-owned cannabis business still sees a growing and competitive legal pot market operating in the province despite the closure of roughly 100 retail stores over the past year.
Canopy Growth Corp. will hold its prices as licensed pot producers weigh whether to pass along to consumers the savings from the Ontario Cannabis Store's forthcoming margin decrease.
Ontario’s cannabis business said Thursday it will reduce margins on the legal marijuana products it sells to the province’s retailers later this year in a move aimed at competing more forcefully with the still-thriving illicit market.
Village Farms' cannabis subsidiary Pure Sunfarms has catapulted to the top of Canada’s marijuana market share rankings, supplanting Tilray following a recalculation of how province’s sales figures, according to a Bay Street analyst.