CA: Marijuana Money Lending Is Still Risky

Katelyn Baker

Well-Known Member
Los Angeles – Viewed optimistically, it looks like Kyle Kazan's investment fund got an unbelievable deal when it loaned $2 million to Bud and Bloom.

Terms call for the recently opened Los Angeles-area marijuana dispensary to pay a hefty 10 percent annual interest rate and, once Kazan and his investors feel more comfortable, turn over a 50 percent ownership stake to the fund – for just $1.

Now, count the ways Kazan could lose all that cash.

For starters, Bud and Bloom could, like many small businesses, simply fail. The local city council could ban pot shops. State regulators could fine or shutter the business if it sells pot to minors or breaks other rules.

Oh, and one more thing: Federal authorities could raid the shop, close it down and seize its assets, as selling marijuana remains a federal crime.

"We think we got a very good deal," said Kazan, 49, managing member of AP Investment Fund, one of a handful of firms making loans to marijuana businesses. "But we're also taking quite a risk."

Which is why Bud and Bloom agreed to the onerous terms to begin with. A bank loan just wasn't an option.

"It's a very, very risky business," said Aaron Herzberg, one of Bud and Bloom's owners.

"You don't know how things are going to go."

Despite California voters' approval last month of Proposition 64, which legalized recreational marijuana, and coming ground rules for pot businesses set to take effect in 2018, it remains difficult and expensive for companies that want to grow, process or sell marijuana to borrow money.

Most banks won't even open checking accounts for marijuana businesses, much less lend to them. And with no change in federal law in sight, that's not likely to change, said David Dinenberg, chief executive of Kind Financial, a Los Angeles company that set out to offer loans to cannabis businesses but that instead makes marijuana tracking and compliance software.

"If everything stays the same as it is today, I don't see the typical bank lending for some time. Access to capital is not one of the easier things in this industry," Dinenberg said.

Neil Zick is chief executive of a bank in Washington state, where voters in 2012 legalized recreational marijuana use. Zick's Twin City Bank is willing to open accounts for state-licensed marijuana businesses but hasn't made any loans and doesn't plan on it, mostly because of the threat of federal action.

The Obama administration has generally taken a hands-off approach to marijuana in states where the drug is legal, but cannabis entrepreneurs and investors fear the incoming administration will take a dramatically different tack. President-elect Donald Trump's choice for attorney general is Sen. Jeff Sessions, an Alabama Republican who has fiercely opposed marijuana legalization.

"The federal government might step in and seize the property," Zick said. "Most banks are still not comfortable with what might happen."

With traditional lenders out of the picture, marijuana companies looking for cash must turn to investors willing to stomach more risk in exchange for higher returns.

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Photo Credit: Herbert Fuego
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