Los Angeles Times

LA pot retailer MedMen has 12 shops, a $1.6-billion valuation and, coming soon, Canadian stock

They used to be drug dealers. Then they became dispensaries. Now we have cannabis retailers that "seek to replicate the Apple store model" and give customers "a comfortable, informative and nonthreatening environment."

That's how Culver City firm MedMen describes its pot shops in documents submitted as part of the company's most audacious plan yet: to become the nation's most valuable public cannabis company, worth more than $1 billion.

It's a move that, perhaps even more than MedMen's sleek stores on Santa Monica Boulevard and New York's Fifth Avenue, illustrates how quickly cannabis is entering the mainstream - and how the nascent industry has captured investors' attention even as it remains relegated to the fringes of the financial world.

MedMen, which has yet to post a profit, is not staging a traditional initial public offering. Instead, it's acquiring and taking over an existing public shell. What's more, the company's shares, when they begin trading in the coming days, won't be listed on the Nasdaq

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times9 min read
Fast-growing Asparagus Once Flourished On California Farms. Why Is It Disappearing?
FIREBAUGH, Calif. — It was a late March morning and dozens of women and men descended on a San Joaquin Valley asparagus farm — one of the last in the state. The workers walked along the furrows, cutting the newly sprouted spears at precisely nine inc
Los Angeles Times5 min read
Jewish Voices Struggle To Find Words Of Reconciliation In Face Of Campus Violence
LOS ANGELES — Standing at a cloth-draped table where the Torah is read, Rabbi Sharon Brous delivered her Saturday sermon, recounting her experience at a recent UCLA protest. Demonstrators draped in Israeli flags screamed at students in keffiyehs. The
Los Angeles Times7 min read
A Young Actress, An Obsessed Stalker And A Hollywood Murder That Changed America
The prosecutor was studying the killer's confession, trying to understand what was wrong with it. In her first few viewings of the videotape, Marcia Clark had the gnawing sense that he was lying. She took careful notes. She watched to the end, rewoun

Related Books & Audiobooks