With Canadian cannabis retailers closing their stores, ship-only sales policies, and an unprecedented pop in demand over the past few days, the Canadian market is due to revisit its roots. As Canada expanded its legal-use laws, consumers rapidly shifted their preferences on how, when, and where they buy cannabis. This chapter may be a visit back to the early days of cannabis in Canada.
But over the first 12 months of legal adult-use, we witnessed a precipitous drop in online-sales, dropping from over 40% of all sales to under 7% share of sales. Dollars, similarly, dropped, but premiumization throughout the year likely mitigated losses to other channels.
As Ontario and British Columbia begin to come into their own with new infrastructure and capital expenditures, this new, perhaps temporary, paradigm could represent an opportunity for firms and governments to perfect direct-ship methods, perhaps permanently shifting consumer behavior.
We have seen large delivery channels opening this period, legally or illicitly within many mature U.S. states. This may represent the future of cannabis sales as a light-weight product with full menu details easily found on the latest app, lower barriers for small providers and firms, and greatly reduce capital requirements.
As the economy continues to respond to the effects of social distancing, we'll continue to watch how these recent supply changes impact the future of market demand and channel dynamics.
Last Updated: 3/18/2020
All graphs are sourced from Brightfield Group market data