The biggest pot distributor in California has collapsed

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CANNABIS

The biggest pot distributor in California has collapsed​

By Lester BlackUpdated Nov 20, 2023 2:10 p.m.

FILE: Cannabis plant thrives by the sun.
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Liudi Hara/Getty Images/iStockphoto

This spring, rumors were swirling that HERBL, one of California’s largest cannabis distribution companies, was on the verge of collapse. So Mike Beaudry, the company’s CEO, sent out an email on May 18 declaring that “these rumors are categorically not true. HERBL continues to be fully operational.”

Less than a month later, HERBL had completely collapsed.



HERBL’s failure left a trail of damage that hurt small pot brands and shorted the state some $17 million in unpaid taxes. HERBL is only the latest high-flying California pot startup to crumble, following companies like Flow Kana, which raised $175 million in capital only to collapse, and MedMen, the California startup that earned a billion-dollar valuation calling itself the Apple Store of Weed only to find itself this year on the brink of financial ruin.

California state law requires distributor companies to work as middlemen between pot producers and retailers. HERBL’s demise has become a giant flashing red warning sign because of the vital role distributors play in California’s market; if a company as large and entrenched as HERBL can go under, experts say, then there are deep problems in the industry that will only lead to more company failures.

“I do feel like we’re going to see a significant and material number of closures, up and down the supply chain,” Wesley Hein, the president of the Cannabis Distribution Association, told SFGATE.

Observers in the industry say that HERBL’s demise shows how cannabis companies in California are forced to abide by a more difficult set of rules than other industries. They also argue that if HERBL were a different type of company, the state government would have stepped in to save it.


“Sickening”​

Tyler Kearns, the founder and CEO of Seven Leaves, a Sacramento-based cannabis company, said it felt “sickening” in the moment in June when he learned that HERBL had finally bit the dust. Kearns said HERBL owed Seven Leaves $880,000, so when he found out in June that the company had started laying off delivery drivers he realized it was going to be almost impossible to get that money back.

“I knew this was going to be the biggest failure in U.S. cannabis history,” Kearns told SFGATE.

HERBL wasn’t always arousing such fear. Founded in 2016 by veteran executives from the food distribution industry, it quickly grew to be a major player in California’s newly legal pot market. By 2022, the company was delivering to over 1,000 stores and reportedly sold $700 million’s worth of cannabis in 2022 alone, making it a massive pillar of California’s $5 billion legal pot market. From 2018 to 2022, it was the largest distributor in the state.

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FILE: Marijuana grower checks ripeness of buds.
Aaron McCoy/Getty Images

HERBL’s rapid rise was driven largely by two factors: its exclusive distribution contracts with some of the biggest brands in the state, which made HERBL attractive for retailers and even smaller pot brands; and its tranche of investment cash, which allowed HERBL to keep paying its bills even as the rest of the state’s industry sunk into a debt crisis.

Both of those factors started to unravel in the past two years. In January 2022, HERBL lost its contract with Raw Garden, one of the biggest producers of cannabis in California. The distributor quickly filed a lawsuit, alleging that Raw Garden had breached its contract, but the lawsuit has yet to be resolved, leaving the distributor without one of its top-selling products.

Without a big name like Raw Garden, California’s debt problems started to drag down the company. HERBL had become known as the “bank of cannabis” in California because it kept buying more cannabis from suppliers, even after retailers stopped paying for goods they had purchased from HERBL. That meant HERBL was effectively holding debt for the entire industry. As unpaid bills piled up across California’s weed market — a 2022 report estimated that the industry was sitting on over $600 million in debt — it eventually became too much for HERBL to handle. Rumors started spreading that the distribution company, which had a reputation for paying producers no matter what, was no longer doing so. The panic led even more brands to leave the platform.

Beaudry, HERBL’s CEO, tried to stem the tide that was crashing against his company by writing his May 18 letter. He admitted that HERBL had missed payments to some of its suppliers, but assured customers that “we fully expect the current situation to be temporary.”

The letter did little to assuage concerns. Yet more brands left the company, and some called on retailers to stop paying HERBL and instead pay the cannabis brands directly. The final blow came on June 20, when MJBiz Daily reported that the company’s “main lender” East West Bank had canceled HERBL’s line of credit, effectively turning off the company’s flow of cash and plunging California’s biggest pot distributor into receivership.

That’s left cannabis brands looking for money they may never receive.

Ali Jamalian, owner of San Francisco cannabis company Sunset Connect, said he is owed $180,000 by HERBL. Like Kearns, he said he has little hope of getting it back. Jamalian said he “felt used” by HERBL because he launched with the company in January of this year — just as, in hindsight, it appears the company was crumbling — but said the distributor obscured its poor financial position by repeatedly assuring Jamalian that the company was on firm financial footing.

“Mike [Beaudry, HERBL’s CEO] and his team did a really good job of hiding that fact from their own brands… that’s how they kept getting our products,” Jamalian told SFGATE.

Jamalian sued Beaudry and other executives at HERBL in June, accusing them of fraud and of entering into contracts with Sunset Connect even though the distributor had “no intention of ever paying.”

Beaudry and HERBL did not respond to multiple SFGATE requests for comment.


A ‘remarkable’ debt crisis​

HERBL currently owes at least $2.2 million to various pot brands and is owed $1.9 million by various retailers who failed to pay the distributor, according to an overview of the company’s assets that was posted online by its receiver and viewed by SFGATE but later taken down. The company’s assets were auctioned off to the highest bidder in September. In a move that reflects the bleak legal cannabis economy in California, HERBL’s most valuable single asset was the rights to its lawsuit against Raw Garden, which its receiver estimated is worth between $20 million and $40 million.

Adam Cavanaugh, the president of Cannabiz Credit Association, a group that tracks debt and provides credit ratings for cannabis companies, agreed that the lack of bankruptcy protections make it harder for pot companies to get paid after another company fails.

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FILE: A cannabis worker prunes marijuana flowers.
Roman Budnyi/Getty Images

“This lack of access to traditional bankruptcy protections indeed presents more risk for companies doing business with cannabis-related entities, as they may find it more challenging to recover their outstanding debts,” Cavanaugh wrote to SFGATE in an email.

Cavanaugh said his group has already tracked $20 million in debt in California’s weed industry this year, a “remarkable” 27% increase from 2022.

Hein, of the Cannabis Distribution Association, said that HERBL’s failure was partially caused by poor business decisions, particularly its continued reliance on the traditional distribution model despite the clear pattern of California retailers being unable to pay their bills. But, he said, the collapse also exposes systemic issues in California’s pot industry that will doom other businesses. He pointed to overtaxation, competition from unlicensed pot businesses that undercut legal operators and “very excessive and overly burdensome regulations,” and compared the collapse of HERBL to the 2008 failure of the Lehman Brothers Bank.

“Lehman Brothers was a century-old firm with 99 profitable years, you would think somebody in all of that would go, ‘Let’s bail them out, let’s put money in.’ But when they looked like they were too risky to invest in, that really signaled something,” Hein said.

Hein said he hopes lawmakers in California are paying attention to HERBL and learning the right lessons.

“This is a story about HERBL, but it’s also a story about every distributor, so there’s still time to fix the system,” Hein said. “There’s always time to start trying to improve and correct things.”

Nov 19, 2023|Updated Nov 20, 2023 2:10 p.m.
 

Lucky_Lefty

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weed legalization is a fail in Cali
the weed was better a decade ago
How’s that the states fault?

But (a slight) majority of folks in legal states still get their shyt from their dealers and not dispensaries. Some folks just want regular bud and not all this experimental, cross pollination stuff they flood the market with
 

Professor Emeritus

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Cali has the best economy in the USA bro. @Cloutius Maximus

It was @absolute who actually said it.


California is.....

#1 in the nation in hardware
#1 in the nation in software
#1 in the nation in biotech
#1 in the nation in aerospace
#1 in the nation in advanced manufacturing
#1 in the nation in media
#1 in the nation in hospitality industry
#1 in the nation in agriculture
#1 in the nation in higher education
#2 in the nation in chemical production
#3 in the nation in oil production

California's $3.6 trillion economy is larger than the entire economies of France, United Kingdom, or Brazil, and only slightly smaller than Germany and Japan. California by itself has a bigger economy than the entire nations of Russia and South Korea combined. If California were its own country, it would be neck-and-neck with India for the 5th largest economy in the world.

Hate on California's economy usually comes from right-wing talk show hosts.
 

Absolut

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It was @absolute who actually said it.


California is.....

#1 in the nation in hardware
#1 in the nation in software
#1 in the nation in biotech
#1 in the nation in aerospace
#1 in the nation in advanced manufacturing
#1 in the nation in media
#1 in the nation in hospitality industry
#1 in the nation in agriculture
#1 in the nation in higher education
#2 in the nation in chemical production
#3 in the nation in oil production

California's $3.6 trillion economy is larger than the entire economies of France, United Kingdom, or Brazil, and only slightly smaller than Germany and Japan. California by itself has a bigger economy than the entire nations of Russia and South Korea combined. If California were its own country, it would be neck-and-neck with India for the 5th largest economy in the world.

Hate on California's economy usually comes from right-wing talk show hosts.
Yet folks can’t wait to leave
 

Professor Emeritus

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Yet folks can’t wait to leave


#1 in population too. :umad:

People come from all over the country to live in California and yet you're obsessed with what bytchy little right-wingers say and do. :mjlol:


You claimed "Almost everything is a fail in Cali." That sounds like Arkansas, West Virginia, Missisippi....how the fukk would that describe objectively the most successful state by far in US history?

Your world would be unrecognizable if California had failed. Go look up where Apple, Google, Facebook, Intel, HP, Cisco, Adobe, Qualcomm, Broadcom, Intuit, Infinity, Salesforce, Applied Materials, Western Digital, Advanced Micro Devices, Disney, Warner Brothers, Sony Pictures, Universal Pictures, Paramount, Netflix, Lionsgate, Hulu, PayPal, and Uber are headquartered. Tesla and Oracle too until their right-wing leaders threw hissy fits at not being able to buy off politicians for cheap here like they can in Texas.

Not to mention that a huge % of the people behind that shyt were educated at Stanford, Berkeley, UCLA, CalTech, and on down the massive list of successful globally-recognized schools public and private. Best state in the world for public higher education and for private higher education.

Not to mention we feed the entire fukking country too. Grocery stores would be total wastelands without California milk, fruits, vegetables, and nuts. Even the fast food you eat (McDonalds, Taco Bell, Carl's Jr, Jack-in-the-Box, Panda Express, In-N-Out, Fatburger, Del Taco, Weinerschnitzl, Denny's, IHOP) more likely than not started in California.

And we haven't even gotten into aerospace and how we have a part in the design and manufacture of most of the planes you fly in. Or biotech and how we're the center of a lot of the medical advances in this country. Or the huge scientific research centers (The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, NASA Ames, Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, Sandia National Labs, SLAC National Accelerator, Scripps Research Institute) that house some of the most brilliant scientists.


Everything you do, everything you see, how the world has been shaped around you, is entirely a result of California's sucesses. The average person can't go an hour in modern society without relying on California.
 
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Professor Emeritus

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If you got money... cali is paradise...

if you middle class its coo

if you broke, it's hell

:yeshrug:


"Hell" only compared to other Californians, not compared to the poor in other states.


Negatives if you're poor are that housing is tough and it's not that easy to get work. Cost of living is high but wages are high too and they have mad kickbacks if you're low-income.

Positives are that the actual housing environment is better, education is decent - not the best but not the worst, health care is great, violence is lower than a lot of places, and benefits are really easy to get. Paradox is that California has one of the highest poverty rates in the country, but one of the lower food insecurity rates.

I'd rather live in a hood in California than in the projects in the northeast or some burned-out inner city in the rust belt, and you don't face the same level of overt racism and purposeful abandonment of your community from authorities that you see in the south. Look up Black life expectancy by state, and of the states that actually have black communities, California has one of the highest life expectancies for Black folk. "Hell" are places where you literally die earlier if you're poor, and that's not as true in Cali is it is in other places.

I wouldn't call California a great state to be poor in, but it's at least average cause they're trying. Which is more than you can say for some places.
 
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