Join today and have your say! It’s FREE!

Become a member today, It's free!

We will not release or resell your information to third parties without your permission.
Please Try Again
{{ error }}
By providing my email, I consent to receiving investment related electronic messages from Stockhouse.

or

Sign In

Please Try Again
{{ error }}
Password Hint : {{passwordHint}}
Forgot Password?

or

Please Try Again {{ error }}

Send my password

SUCCESS
An email was sent with password retrieval instructions. Please go to the link in the email message to retrieve your password.

Become a member today, It's free!

We will not release or resell your information to third parties without your permission.
Quote  |  Bullboard  |  News  |  Opinion  |  Profile  |  Peers  |  Filings  |  Financials  |  Options  |  Price History  |  Ratios  |  Ownership  |  Insiders  |  Valuation

Tilray Brands, Inc. TLRY

Alternate Symbol(s):  T.TLRY

Tilray Brands, Inc. is a global cannabis-lifestyle and consumer packaged goods company. The Company operates through four segments: Cannabis business, Distribution business, Beverage alcohol business and Wellness business. The Cannabis business segment is engaged in the production, distribution, sale, co-manufacturing, and advisory services of both medical and adult-use cannabis. The Distribution business segment is focused on the purchase and resale of pharmaceutical products to customers. The Beverage alcohol business segment is engaged in the production, marketing and sale of beverage and beverage alcohol products. The Wellness business segment includes hemp foods and hemp-based cannabidiol (CBD) consumer products. The Company offers a portfolio of adult-use brands and products and expands its portfolio to include new cannabis products and formats. Its brands include Good Supply, RIFF, Broken Coast, Solei, Canaca, HEXO, Redecan, Original Stash, Bake Sale, XMG, Mollo, and others.


NDAQ:TLRY - Post by User

Post by Keeleron Mar 16, 2024 2:54pm
611 Views
Post# 35936669

Seeking Alpha Article

Seeking Alpha Article

Ministry of Tilray members may not want to read - article contains facts and reality.


 

Tilray: Beverages Headache

Summary

  • Tilray Brands, Inc.'s growth is driven by acquisitions, not organic growth in the cannabis business.
  • The company's focus has shifted towards beverages, with recent acquisitions from Anheuser-Busch.
  • Tilray Brands stock offers limited value, with Tilray needing to hit aggressive adjusted EBITDA targets before investors will gain any confidence the business can be managed.
  • I am Mark Holder (aka Stone Fox Capital), a CPA with degrees in Accounting and Finance. I lead the investing group Outfox The Street, where I attempt to uncover potential multibaggers while managing portfolio risk via diversification.

 

Variety of Beer glasses

 

Jack Andersen/DigitalVision via Getty Images

 

Tilray Brands, Inc. (NASDAQ:TLRY) reported another quarter where growth was all about acquisitions and not actually growing the cannabis business. The company has long struggled to report any consistent growth and the business is now virtually a non-cannabis operation with the new focus on beverages. My investment thesis remains Neutral on the stock following the fiscal FQ2 results, with Tilray shares dipping back below $2.

 

Finviz Chart

Source: Finviz

 

Another Confusing Quarter

One of the biggest problems with the Canadian cannabis companies has been the constant flow of acquisitions leading to the company going nowhere. In fact, a company like Tilray has always appeared to struggle managing a far-flung business with cannabis operations in Canada, a wellness business in the U.S., and global cannabis operations, with none of them providing an anchor.

During the just reported quarter, Tilray acquired multiple craft beer brands from Anheuser-Busch (BUD), including Shock Top and Breckenridge Brewery. The deals were predicted to add $250 million in pro-forma sales annually, and the quarter ended November 30 should include roughly 2 months' worth of sales from the new beverage alcohol businesses.

Tilray reported FQ2'24 revenues of $194 million, up 34% from last FQ2, as follows:

 

News feed

Source: Seeking Alpha

 

The reported numbers look impressive, but Tilray acquired HEXO and Truss last year. In addition, the FQ4 '23 revenues were $184 million before dipping to $177 million the prior quarter.

While the segment revenues how solid YoY growth in all categories, the numbers actually didn't increase from the August quarter. Cannabis revenue dipped from $71 million in FQ1 to $67 million in the last quarter and Wellness revenues were down $0.5 million sequentially, while the Beverage alcohol business grew from $24 million to $47 million.

 

Segment table

Source: Tilray Brands FQ2'24 earnings release

 

In essence, the Beverage alcohol business grew by slightly above $22 million in the quarter while Tilray revenues were up just $18 million. The total revenues were only $12 million above the FQ4 numbers suggesting the non-beverage segments have lost $10 million in quarterly sales in the last 6 months.

The new Beverage alcohol business needs a lot of work when Tilray should be focusing on improving the prime cannabis business. This beverage business saw the adjusted gross margin dip to 38% from a prior level of 52% suggesting the acquired craft beer business is struggling.

In addition, the revenue boost doesn't appear to approximate anywhere close to the $62.5 million in quarterly pro-forma sales forecast when the deal closed with nearly 2 months of craft beer sales only boosting the Beverage alcohol business by $22 million. The amount should've topped $40 million, or more, but Tilray suggests high seasonality in the craft beer segment. Besides, the Beverage alcohol revenue boost included organic growth plus the Montauk deal last November.

No Value

Tilray kept guidance for FY24 adjusted EBITDA of $68 to $78 million while the company only produced $10 million in FQ2. The company has reached just $21 million in adjusted EBITDA YTD requiring over $47 million in adjusted EBITDA in the 2H of the year despite a past inability to grow and a much larger business to manage in 2024 with 8 new craft beer brands on an already diverse business.

The stock is only worth $1.4 billion here, and Tilray has net debt of ~$184 million. If Tilray was to hit the EBITDA target, the stocks trades at nearly 20x adjusted EBITDA.

The adjusted EBITDA targets appear far too aggressive, with Tilray unable to grow the bottom line over the years and the quarterly amounts have to at least double starting with FQ3.

Takeaway

The key investor takeaway is that Tilray Brands, Inc. is no longer excessively expensive, but investors have no reason to pile into the stock at $2. The company now gets as much revenues from beverages and wellness products as cannabis, while the distribution business continues to inflate revenues. Management needs to refocus the business and prove synergies exist from these far-flung segments before Tilray will ever become a viable investment.


<< Previous
Bullboard Posts
Next >>