Canopy Growth Corp.’s proposed acquisition of MTL Cannabis could boost the pot producer’s bottom line, experts say, but the future remains hazy for the company and other players in the sector. Canopy, located in Smiths Falls, announced in December it had agreed to purchase Montreal-based MTL in a cash-and-share deal valued at about $125 million. […]
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Canopy Growth Corp.’s proposed acquisition of MTL Cannabis could boost the pot producer’s bottom line, experts say, but the future remains hazy for the company and other players in the sector.
Canopy, located in Smiths Falls, announced in December it had agreed to purchase Montreal-based MTL in a cash-and-share deal valued at about $125 million. MTL’s shareholders approved the acquisition this week, and the deal is expected to close by the end of March.
Canopy has touted the move as a way to bolster its presence in Quebec and beef up its share of the Canadian medicinal cannabis market, which CEO Luc Mongeau pegged at between $300 million and $400 million in a recent call with analysts to announce Canopy’s third-quarter results.
Mongeau, who joined Canopy in January 2025, told BNN Bloomberg in mid-December the deal will "accelerate" the company's push to become cash-flow positive.
“This transaction is highly accretive,” he said, noting MTL is part of a “select group” of Canadian licensed producers that have achieved positive EBITDA and are generating positive cash flow.
Mongeau said Canopy has focused on controlling costs and beefing up its balance sheet since he came on board, adding recreational cannabis sales have risen 20 per cent year-over-year while its medical cannabis revenues have also posted double-digit gains.
“All these things will really accelerate our journey to positive EBITDA and positive cash-flow generation,” he explained.
Canopy hopes moves such as the acquisition of MTL will finally help it deliver on what many saw as immense promise. Founded as Tweed by Ottawa entrepreneurs Bruce Linton and Chuck Rifici in 2013, Canopy Growth adopted its current name two years later and in 2018 became the first cannabis producer to trade on the New York Stock Exchange.
The firm’s stock quickly soared as cannabis was legalized for recreational use in Canada later that year, and investors scrambled to buy into what was expected to become a multibillion-dollar industry. By 2019, Canopy was the world’s largest cannabis producer based on market capitalization and was expanding rapidly through a series of acquisitions.
But the firm soon crashed to Earth, weighed down by ballooning expenses, soaring net losses and dampening sales amid stiff competition from other legal producers and the black market.
Canopy’s stock, which once traded for more than $600, plummeted as the company slashed its staff count and cycled through a series of senior executives in an effort to get back on track.
In 2022, Canopy exited the retail business when it sold its Tweed and Tokyo Smoke stores across the country. The following year, it announced it was selling its 700,000-square-foot growing facility in Smiths Falls back to its original owner, Hershey Canada.
Today, Canopy’s stock trades at around $1.60 on the TSX, and the slimmed-down organization is still chasing profitability. It’s hoping the deal to acquire MTL could help it get there.



