Cannabis oversupply in Washington State drives prices to threatening lows
Regulatory nuances have established hot spots in the state as a record harvest hits the market and farmers could be forced to accept as little as US$1 per gramme of legal flower
By Kinsey Grant
The US state of Washington has a cannabis problem.
But it’s not addiction or even the black market. It’s that they’ve got too much weed and not enough places to legally sell it.
According to cannabis-focused research firm Straight Line Analytics founder Dr. Jim MacRae, the October 2017 outdoor harvest was the state’s biggest to date and will mean a 60 per cent larger supply from a year earlier.
Oversupply from that bumper crop would generate sufficient concern on its own. But in Washington, it’s paired with a significant shortage of retail outlets for farmers to legally sell their wholesale flower.
As of September there were just under 400 stores operating with more than US$1,000 in business per year, MacRae told TheStreet.