A Monday Morning Musing from
Mickey the Mercenary Geologist
Contact@MercenaryGeologist.com
April 7, 2014
Found my way upstairs and had a
smoke
And somebody spoke and I went
into a dream
Ah
Lennon and McCartney, from Sgt.
Pepper�s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1966).
It�s deja vu all over again and it was kick-started a couple of
trading days before PDAC. That�s when a Vancouver-based shell that was
once a junior �miner� but never mined anything except the stock
market announced a change of business.
This sort of thing happens all the time in a bear market. What was unusual
in this particular instance was the nature of the business change: The
company announced it was morphing into a medical marijuana merchant bank.
Upon receipt of the press release before market open one day in late
February, I actually thought the �news� was a joke and the
company�s website had been hacked. But with a little due diligence, I
found it indeed was true.
As an aside, I commend this well-known, old-school Vancouver promoter for
being first into the venue, as that is usually an advantage in the junior
venture capital markets.
In the span of five weeks, many other juniors have gotten off on the same
rush. The business of bud bubbled over for me a week ago when I received an
interview request from an international news organization (Mercenary Interview, March 27, 2014). At that
juncture however, there were only a dozen juniors signed up for the magic
carpet ride; as of yesterday, there were 30 who have announced intentions.
The Canadian juniors trying to cash in on North America�s biggest
cash crop generally have these common characteristics: Promoters with a
history of failure, metal exploration projects with no merit, a recent or
proposed rollback of shares, and nearly-depleted treasuries or negative
working capital.
The catalyst for these new endeavors comes from that country�s
medical welfare system, Health Care Canada. This unwieldy, sin tax-funded
bureaucracy has imposed new laws to commercialize Vancouver�s infamous
�B.C. Bud�.
Previously, 40,000 licensed individuals in Canada were allowed to grow
their own mota. But on April Fool�s Day, home-grown medicine
became illegal. Under the new law, the legion of prescription potheads either
has to smoke up the personal stash or show the government they have destroyed
it. Going forward, they got to get their ganja from a licensed dealer or
incur the wrath of the RCMP.
Luckily for the cadre of Canadian chronics, a Vancouver judge in the case
of Allard et al. versus Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada
realized the folly of this draconian measure. On March 18, he issued an
injunction delaying its implementation pending trial.
I am curious how the ever-so-progressive Canucks will propose to enforce
an obviously unenforceable law. May I suggest a newly-commissioned force
called the RCMPP (Royal Canadian Mounted Pot Pigs)?
I also wonder about the impact on the many Vancouver street people who
make a living selling part of their generous monthly medicinal marijuana allotments
in the neighborhoods fringing that fine city�s high-rise financial and
residential districts.
But I digress. Let�s inject a little reality into an ephemeral high.
For those readers with short-term memory loss, I recently pointed out the
dot.com bubble that was blown-up on the Vancouver Stock Exchange in late 1999
and burst in early 2000 (Mercenary Musing, March 31, 2014). This
occurred in the middle of a six-year bear market for a moribund junior
resource sector.
Here�s a five-year chart from 1997-2002 that spans the Bre-X scandal
in April 1997, thejunior resource crash, an extended range-bound period of
very low market valuations, the parabolic dot.com bubble, and another
range-bound but significantly higher base established afterward:
Let�s consider only the first three years on the chart above. Note
the similar trading pattern to a current chart since this bear market began
at PDAC in 2011:
There is no doubt the on-going bear market for resource juniors has
speculators primed and ready for anything that will give them a humongous
hit.
But will a passel of failed exploration juniors� movement into a
Canadian version of the highly-regulated medical marijuana industry duplicate
the exponential rise and fall of the Vancouver Index during the dot.com
bubble?
To glean a logical answer, let�s examine other junior bubbles
promulgated during the bull market run from 2003-2011, including uranium,
lithium, rare earth elements, Colombia, the Yukon, and graphite. In each
case, scores or even hundreds of companies got off by chasing �the next
big thing�.
But look at the results:
�No bubble lasted for even two years. In the case of graphite, it was all
over within six months.
�For both uranium and lithium, the number of success stories where a
company was taken over or a profitable mine was built are very few and very
far between.
�In REE space there was one significant takeover but no new mines or hard
dollar off-take contracts. In the graphite sector, there is one small mine
with near-term production pending and not much else that looks economic and
can be financed in the short- to mid-term. The province- and country-wide
area plays surrounding new discoveries in Colombia and the Yukon soon went up
in smoke.
Therefore, my answer to the question posed above is an unequivocal �no�.
In my opinion the marijuana business will attract a relatively small
number of failing public companies and the overwhelming majority of those
will rapidly come down and crash again. It won�t be because they lied
and said they didn�t inhale. It will happen because that�s the
nature of our business; all junior bubbles attract very few contenders and
numerous pretenders.
That said, there is a chance a couple of these flavor-of-the -month
juniors with their cannabinoid-induced green dreams may grow viable
enterprises, generate revenue, and distribute the goods to shareholders.
Signs that a bear market is coming to its end often include a horde of
Howe Street snakes, sharks, shysters and charlatans abandoning the sectors
they know and scurrying off to find the end of a new rainbow.
My prediction is no one will stay high for very long on this bag of seeds
and stems. Rest assured that in this case, I will choose to bogart my
hard-earned discretionary dollars.
Ciao for now,
Mickey Fulp
Mercenary Geologist
The Mercenary
Geologist Michael S. �Mickey� Fulp is a Certified
Professional Geologist
with a B.Sc. Earth Sciences with honor from the University of Tulsa, and
M.Sc. Geology from the University of New Mexico. Mickey has 35 years
experience as an exploration geologist and analyst searching for economic
deposits of base and precious metals, industrial minerals, uranium, coal, oil
and gas, and water in North and South America, Europe, and Asia.
Mickey worked for junior explorers, major mining companies, private
companies, and investors as a consulting economic geologist for over 20
years, specializing in geological mapping, property evaluation, and business
development.In addition to Mickey�s professional credentials and
experience, he is high-altitude proficient, and is bilingual in English and
Spanish. From 2003 to 2006, he made four outcrop ore discoveries in Peru,
Nevada, Chile, and British Columbia.
Mickey is well-known and highly respected throughout the mining and
exploration community due to his ongoing work as an analyst, writer, and
speaker.
Contact: Contact@MercenaryGeologist.com
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