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The beer giant behind Corona paid $191 million for a stake in the largest legal marijuana producer in the world

Oct 30, 2017, 22:06 IST

Andrew Szeto/Tweed, Inc.

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  • Constellation Brands - the maker of Corona and the third-largest beer company in the US - paid $191 million for a stake in cannabis company Canopy Growth.
  • Constellation's CEO says that he believes it is "highly likely" that marijuana will be legalized nationally in the US.
  • Beer sales have slumped in recent years - and weed could be the solution.

A beer industry giant is betting big on legalized weed.

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On Monday, Constellation Brands - the owners of Corona and Modelo and the third-largest beer company in the US - announced it had acquired a 9.9% stake in cannabis holding company Canopy Growth. The beer giant paid $191 million for its stake in the largest legal marijuana producer in the world.

Canopy Growth is one of the biggest names in the legal weed industry, supplying nearly half of Canada's medical marijuana patient base. As of Monday, the company's market cap is $1.93 billion US dollars.

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Director of Quality Assurance Thomas Shipley prunes dry marijuana buds before they are processed for shipping at Tweed Marijuana Inc in Smith's Falls, Ontario, April 22, 2014.Blair Gable/Reuters

"Our company's success is the result of our focus on identifying early stage consumer trends, and this is another step in that direction," Constellation Brands CEO Rob Sands said in a statement.

Sands told the Wall Street Journal that he believes it is "highly likely" that marijuana will be legalized nationally in the US in the coming years.

"We're obviously trying to get first-mover advantage," Sands said.

Canopy was founded in 2014. Just two years later, it became the first company in the marijuana industry to achieve elusive "unicorn" status, blowing past a $2 billion valuation.

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"We didn't try to pursue the lowest common denominator concept of 'Let's assume everybody's stoned and not paying attention,'" Bruce Linton, founder and CEO of Canopy Growth, told Business Insider earlier this year. "We took the approach of 'Let's assume everybody's paying attention and maybe marijuana is something they're interested in.'"

While some beer industry insiders worry that legalized marijuana could cannibalize beer sales, the category could use a boost from new products.

Iconic brands, such as Budweiser, have fallen out of fashion in the US. Overall beer penetration fell 1% from 2016 to 2017 in the US market, while both wine and spirits were unmoved, according to Nielsen ratings.

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