SPRWF

Supreme Pharmaceuticals

Stocks

Stocks to Sell Now: Unload This Popular Icon Right Away

This is still one of the most popular pot stocks out there; it consistently shows up on lists of the hottest stocks on Robinhood.

The problem is… it’s no good.

These shares peaked years ago, and fresh highs aren’t on the menu anytime soon.

This is a controversial sell recommendation, for sure, but investors should sell right away.

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Marijuana industry

The "Smart Money" Is Flooding into This Cannabis Stock

The market finally caught on to the cannabis revolution, but many are still treating the industry like a fad. With one cannabis stock in the news doubling in price intraday and giving up all those gains two days later, it's no wonder the media likens pot stocks to other bubbles.

But they fail to realize that there is real science behind cannabis for wellness and health.

And this marijuana stock is perfectly positioned to skyrocket this October...

Trading Strategies

Cash Runs to Quality in This Growing $1.5 Billion Cannabis Niche

Every investor should understand how the market for cannabis is developing – now and over the coming weeks, months, and years.

Choosing the companies best positioned to profit in the emerging market helps you gain an edge over those who simply "throw darts at a list of stocks" and pick cannabis companies without regard to industry realities.

But as legalization becomes more widespread throughout the United States and across the whole of Canada, investors still face questions about what the realities of a mature cannabis market might be.

For some answers, we can look at Colorado – the first U.S. state to make recreational cannabis easily available.

That made some realities evident.

We know, for example, that in places where vaporizing (aka "vaping") cannabis concentrate is legal, that form quickly takes over a significant part of the market.

Vaporizable concentrates are a value-added product, but they're also fairly commoditized, meaning customers shop by product attributes, such as how rigorously it's been tested, say, or the ratio of THC to CBD, as opposed to shopping by brand.

The traditional marijuana bud, or "flower," market, which in Canada is worth about $1.5 billion today, is still fragmented. Customers there are still experimenting with different strains, different growers and brands, and different cannabinoids and THC to CBD ratios. In other words, there are a lot of questions.

One big question facing the market – both in Colorado and worldwide – is whether consumers are willing to pay up for "super-premium" cannabis. That is, cannabis that is more expensive to produce… but that generates a better smoking experience.

There are many producers claiming to grow such cannabis – that's why it's such a big question. After all, no one is going to advertise that they make the lowest-end cannabis on the market any more than Busch admits that its beer is lower-end than a craft brewer's.

So how can an investor tell when a company is really producing super-premium cannabis… or merely claiming to grow it?

That's a very important question because, naturally, the investment case for the genuine super-premium product tends to be much stronger than it might be for the pretenders.

One company last week gave us the answer, loud and clear...