Marijuana stocks have cost traders betting against them nearly $200 million in February

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Marijuana stocks have cost traders betting against them nearly $200 million in February

marijuana

Courtesy of CannTrust

CannTrust

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  • Short sellers betting against weed stocks have lost nearly $200 million in February, according to data from S3 Partners, a financial-analytics firm.
  • On Tuesday, several major marijuana producers including Cronos Group, Aphria, Aurora Cannabis gained more than 6% - one day Jefferies initiated coverage of stocks in the space.
  • That rally pummeled marijuana short-sellers with $213 million of mark-to-market losses in a single day, which more than offset their month's gain of $21 million.
  • Short interest of the top-10 most-shorted cannabis stocks declined in February as those with less conviction cut some of their exposure, the firm says.

Betting against marijuana stocks has been a money-losing game in February.

Short sellers of weed stocks, or those investors betting against these names, have seen $192 million of mark-to-market losses this month through Tuesday, according to data from S3 Partners, a financial-analytics firm.

On Tuesday, several major marijuana producers including Cronos Group, Aphria, and Aurora Cannabis gained more than 6% - one day Jefferies officially initiated coverage of cannabis stocks. That rally pummeled marijuana short sellers with $213 million of mark-to-market losses in a single day, which more than offset their monthly gain of $21 million, by S3 Partners' calculation.

Marijuana short sellers are focused on 10 stocks out of 150 cannabis-related securities, according to S3 Partners. In February, total shares shorted of these top-10 cannabis stocks declined by 4.2 million shares as those with less conviction cut some of their exposure, the firm says.

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Marijuana short interest

S3 Partners

"If losses for cannabis short sellers continue to mount we should see continued short covering and added upward price pressure boosting the profits of a growing community of long shareholders," Ihor Dusaniwsky, managing director at the firm said in a note out Tuesday.

"With an average stock borrowing fee of 15%, short sellers will find it very expensive to hold onto short positions that are not adding positive numbers to their bottom line when the S&P and Nasdaq are up over 11% and 13% respectively. Eventually, there may be a short squeeze in several of these more shorted cannabis stocks."

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