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How to Buy Cannabis Stocks

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Investing in marijuana companies has gone from niche to mainstream over the past decade as more Americans gain legal access. As of January 2026, recreational marijuana is legal in 24 states (plus Washington, DC and Guam) and medical use is legal in 42 states. The US market is expected to reach about 47 billion dollars by 2026, and big money has followed the opportunity – but the cannabis sector is still complex and dangerous. This guide breaks down what you need to know before buying marijuana stocks, how the industry is structured, investment strategies, and practical steps to get started.

The cannabis industry is divided into US Multi-State Operators (MSOs) and Canadian licensed producers (LPs); MSOs earn the most money but often trade in the OTC markets, while many Canadian LPs trade on the NASDAQ/NYSE but may not have direct access to the US retail market.

  • Executive Order 14370 (late 2025) reclassified marijuana to Schedule III, which may improve profitability by removing the punitive 280E tax treatment — but banking, custody and exchange issues still make investing difficult.

  • You can invest in individual stocks (high risk, high leverage) or ETFs (broad exposure, low risk of a single company).

  • US OTC operators can be difficult to access from other brokerages and have wide spreads and low liquidity; Canadian names and ETFs are generally easier to buy.

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The marijuana industry at a glance

Publicly traded cannabis firms are smaller and smaller than those in many other industries. Because Canada legalized the use of entertainment across the country in October 2018, many large public companies are located in Canada. Broadly, cannabis companies fall into three groups:

Farmers/Workers

  • US MSOs: Directly integrated firms grow, process and sell to dispensaries in all states (examples: Green Thumb, Trulieve). These companies are usually the highest-grossing players in the US market but—because marijuana remains regulated by the government—they often trade in Over-The-Counter (OTC) markets.
  • Canadian LPs: Licensed Producers operating in Canada (examples: Tilray, Canopy Growth) typically trade on a major US exchange (NASDAQ/NYSE) but do not have direct access to the US retail market.

Industry players

Companies that provide specialized services or goods to the cannabis ecosystem (for example, pharmaceutical companies, packaging firms or real estate investment trusts such as Innovative Industrial Properties (IIPR)).

Supporting companies

Firms that operate outside of the main cannabis business but sell products or services to growers or dispensaries (technology, hydroponics, compliance software, etc.).

Risk profile: the closer the company gets to farming and retailing, the worse it gets. Some major cannabis stocks have been twice as volatile as the S&P 500 in recent years, and many public cannabis companies still have small market caps, which can increase price volatility.

Why marijuana stocks are dangerous (and what has changed)

  • Small, speculative companies. Many public cannabis companies are still building scale and good cash flow.
  • Regulatory and legal uncertainty. State laws vary; changes in approvals or licensing may affect revenue.
  • Federal restrictions and trade conflicts. Until reorganization, federal law prohibited many common banking and exchange operations. Executive Order 14370 (late 2025) reclassified marijuana to Schedule III, which is expected to remove the punitive 280E tax burden and could increase margins for US users – but implementation is taking time and storage/banking restrictions remain.
  • Liquidity & market structure. US MSOs typically trade OTC, which means a wider bid-ask spread, less capital, and sometimes limited access to trading systems. Many major banks and trading apps (including Robinhood) limit or ban OTC marijuana stocks.
  • Abatement and capital requirements. Small companies often issue equity to finance operations, diluting existing shareholders.

Ways to invest in marijuana stocks

There are two main ways to invest: Buy shares of a cannabis-related company or invest in a fund that tracks this industry.

Individual stocks

Buying shares of a single cannabis company can bring big profits – or big losses. Do the same homework you would on any stock: read quarterly/annual financials, check the balance sheet, understand the business model and know the company’s competitive position.

Things to look for when evaluating cannabis companies:

  • Revenue growth and profitability trends (gross margin, EBITDA)
  • Capital flight and access to capital
  • Store and facility location (for MSOs), revenue per store
  • State regulatory exposure and licensing stability
  • Management experience, internal ownership and previous strategic execution
  • Debt burden and capital structure
  • Place of listing (OTC vs NASDAQ/NYSE) and average daily volume (liquidity)

2026 market leaders

  • Curaleaf Holdings (CURLF) – US MSO
  • Green Thumb Industries (GTBIF) – US MSO
  • Trulieve Cannabis (TCNNF) – US MSO
  • Verano Holdings (VRNOF) – US MSO
  • Tilray Brands (TLRY) — Canadian LP (NASDAQ)
  • Innovative Industrial Properties (IIPR) — REIT (NYSE)
  • Cronos Group (CRON) – Canadian LP (NASDAQ)
  • Cresco Labs (CRLBF) – US MSO
  • Glass House Brands (GLASF) – US grower
  • Canopy Growth (CGC) – Canadian LP (NASDAQ)

(The cannabis landscape is changing rapidly; use these terms as starting points, not as a shopping list.)

Marijuana ETFs

ETFs are an easy way to get diversified exposure to a sector and reduce the risk of a single stock. ETF market consolidated after several closes in 2023–2024; Major surviving funds include:

  • AdvisorShares Pure US Cannabis ETF (MSOS) – Largest ETF focused exclusively on US operators
  • Amplipfy Alternative Harvest ETF (MJ) – global exposure, heavily weighted towards Canadian LPs and tobacco/pharma interactions
  • AdvisorShares Pure Cannabis ETF (YOLO) – an actively managed mix of US and global stocks
  • Amplipfy Seymour Cannabis ETF (CNBS) – fully managed
  • Roundhill Cannabis ETF (WEED) – Weighted index of US MSOs
  • Cambria Cannabis ETF (TOKE) – focuses on relevance and quality throughout the cannabis ecosystem
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How marijuana stocks fit into your portfolio

Cannabis is always more dangerous than most common strains. If you choose to invest:

  • Treat marijuana/ETFs like projection sleeve of your portfolio and size positions accordingly (many advisors suggest a low single-digit percentage of your overall portfolio in highly speculative sectors, although the right amount depends on your risk tolerance and time horizon).
  • Choose ETFs if you don’t want to pick single winners or put up with the volatility of individual stocks.
  • Keep in mind that some index funds and small holding ETFs may include marijuana companies, so check your current holdings before adding exposure.

How to buy marijuana stocks

  1. Decide how you want to be portrayed. Individual stocks for potential returns, ETFs for broad exposure, or a combination of the two.
  2. Choose a brokerage which supports the desired market. US MSOs typically trade OTC, so you’ll need a broker that allows OTC trading (many brokerages like Fidelity and Charles Schwab support OTCs). Popular trading apps can block OTC marijuana stocks; check with your dealer. Canadian LPs and ETFs traded on the NASDAQ/NYSE are widely accessible on multiple platforms.
  3. Do some research. Read earnings reports, investor presentations and analyst coverage; examine financial metrics (revenues, margins, cash, debt), MSOs’ store statistics, and risks related to state regulations.
  4. Mental market structure and order type. For OTC names and low-yield stocks, use limit orders (not market orders) to avoid paying wide spreads. Verify quotes and average volume for the day.
  5. Separate and size positions. Don’t put a large portion of your portfolio in one cannabis stock. Consider spreading exposure across MSOs, LPs, and supporting businesses or using an ETF.
  6. Watch for regulatory catalysts. The implementation of federal laws after reorganization, state legislative votes, and tax changes (such as 280E changes) can move prices quickly.
  7. Monitor tax and compliance outcomes. OTC activity and trading in small stocks may have special tax/reporting considerations; consult a tax professional for specifics. Maintain tax reporting records and consider tax losses in variable years.
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