Forget the bridge-blocking Canadian truckers! A discount membership club for cannabis is on its way to the United States from Canada, and it looks to be on steroids, courtesy of Raj Grover and High Tide Inc. (NASDAQ: HITI) (TSXV: HITI) (FSE: 2LYA), a rapidly growing retail-focused company 
I was interested to know if Grover, who has been in the cannabis business for many years, had altered his original vision or stayed consistent with it. “I’ve been very focused right from the inception of High Tide to be diversified enough to tap into multiple revenue streams and not get tied into one bucket, and we’ve clearly executed on that front since our inception in 2009, when we launched our smoke shop called Smoker’s Corner,” he said. “It was just one store with a total investment of $48,000 and two employees, and we turned that into 19 smoke shops before taking the company public and turning them into dispensaries. I also started a distribution company and banded all of that into one umbrella and took it public in December 2018, and that company is called High Tide today. But the goal, and the projection, was always to have multiple revenue streams in the cannabis industry, and we are doing exactly that.
“If you want to talk about growth, how seriously we have grown, just shrinking this down to a four-year timeline, all of 2018 revenue was just $8.7 million,” he continued. “In 2019, we did $32 million. In 2020, we did $83 million, and we just exited 2021 at $181 million. And we are now forecasting that we will do over $280 million at least in fiscal 2022. So, you can see the exponential revenue growth, and it’s all come together because of our diversified strategy, which we’ve been able to execute on since inception basically, and it continues to grow.”
Because no one could have known in 2009 how the regulatory landscape was going to play out, was High Tide’s strategy devised from the beginning to be regulatory proof? “Yes, absolutely,” replied Grover. “Of course, there was no talk of cannabis legalization when we started in 2009 with a smoke shop, but like I said, I was always looking for diversified revenue streams. When I started the smoke shop, it was just one little store and the goal was to build that into a chain of stores, and at the same time start manufacturing our own accessories to not only service our own ecosystem of smoke shops, but to also then wholesale to thousands of other stores in Canada to begin with, and then to move on into the United States. We’ve played within the regulatory landscape of cannabis right from the beginning. At that point, it was just consumption accessories, and obviously, when Justin Trudeau came into power and delighted us all by saying that we are going to legalize cannabis in Canada, we quickly started devising plans on how to convert these smoke shops into cannabis dispensaries, and how to distribute our products on a global scale, and that is how High Tide was born. We’ve been diversified since inception, but we’ve always kept our eyes on the ball, towards where the cannabis puck is going versus where it is today.”
It would seem the United States is about to experience a power play. I asked Grover to dig down a   
Leveraging ecommerce Commerce
Building out an ecommerce ecosystem on top of a brick-and-mortar network of stores appears to an essential component of the overall plan, along with which some conversations about data, IP, and those crucial components. “I think moving to ecommerce was absolutely a bull’s eye move,” said Grover. “The ecommerce businesses we acquired; on average, we’re looking at 50 percent gross margins in these businesses, but that’s just on average. On the higher side, some of them do 70-75 percent gross margins. You can see the opportunity there, because when you look at our brick-and-mortar business, it’s generating somewhere around 20-25 percent gross margins, or historically around those levels, and those margins are under pressure here in Canada because of how competitive it is. But simply by making this move into the ecommerce side of things and going global, starting with the United States and then moving internationally, we’ve been able to increase our gross margins and increase our consolidated gross margins because of the help we got through our ecommerce businesses.
“And you’re absolutely right about data,” he added. “We’ve grown our data business quite substantially. High Tide has one of the most unique and diversified ecosystems in cannabis, period, no matter which company you look at, If you look at Canada, if you look at the United States, there is not one other company that is doing what High Tide is doing, which is a leader in cannabis retail, a global manufacturer and distributor of consumption accessories, a dominant player in the ecommerce space related to consumption accessories and hemp-derived CBD products.
“We’ve got a lot going on for us,” Grover emphasized. “And what we can do because of these multiple business lines is we are able to package all this information and sell our data to multiple industry stakeholders. This goes beyond the licensed producers who absolutely need the data to guide their manufacturing and growing priorities; if they don’t get their growing priorities right, that can account for major losses. But we also have investment banks that are interested in our data, we have multiple industry stakeholders that are interested in our data, and we’ve increased our data business quite substantially. Actually, in just the beginning of fiscal 2021, in 2020, our data revenue was only $2 to $3 million annualized, and we are roughly around $16-$17 million annualized now, so we’ve grown our data business quite tremendously. And the data business is also a very high margin business, because the output is only the report that we present to our customers.
“And then if you talk about IP, it’s a good point,” he continued. “Because of some of the acquisitions we’ve made, especially on the ecommerce side – like Smoke Cartel, which we acquired in March of  
High Tide also has acquired a retail technology and smart locker called Fastendr through its recent acquisition of Bud Room, a retail cannabis store located in Ottawa, Ontario. “Fastendr is also a very unique technology, said Grover. “Because of how competitive it’s gotten in Canada in terms of gross margins, you have these retail kiosks with advanced smart locker technology. We’re able to drop our overhead costs, drop our labor costs, and further monetize data through these kiosks that we have in our stores and eventually to third parties. So, High Tide continues to make moves above and beyond what traditional retail looks like and think outside the box.”
I asked Grover if, if addition to aiding with gross margins, the focus on ecommerce was also intended to grow High Tide’s market share by gaining new customers. “Absolutely, it’s doing all of that for us,” he responded. ‘It’s giving us extended market share. What I’m really proud of is that at the start of fiscal 2021, we were sitting at roughly 650,000 international customers in our database that had purchased cannabis accessories from us. Today, we have over 3 million international customers in our database, and 80 percent of that count, which is roughly two and a half million customers, reside in the United States. These customers have purchased clients’ bongs, vaporizers, rolling papers, or CBD products, so these are our future potential THC customers. They’re buying all of this paraphernalia, obviously to consume cannabis. We already have them in our database, and we talk to them every day.
“So, I feel that High Tide has more than one competitive advantage,” he added. “But if you look at the way we’ve scaled up our revenue – our international revenue went up from $11 million at the startup in 2021 to $80 million today – we’ve got a ton of good stuff going for us, and this would not have happened if we had not focused on that market share grab that we did through these ecommerce acquisitions. And you can count on it, we are going to do a whole bunch of these this year as well, because we want to be ahead of the curve when it comes time for federal legalization, and guess what, we have these customers just waiting for us to sell them cannabis products.”
The Costco of Cannabis
With such a good start constructing High Tide’s foundation, I wondered what international markets appeal to Grover. “The United States remains the number one focus market for High Tide, and it will  
When Grover uses the word ‘mimic,’ does that mean building a vertical infrastructure in the target countries, like Germany, or does it mean buying companies in order to set up a footprint?
“So, the German market is absolutely one of the most lucrative markets for High Tide, and we’re going to apply the same playbook in Germany and in Europe that we did in Canada, which is growth by acquisition,” he said. “You’ve seen us grow through multiple acquisitions, but also organic growth. If you look at Canna Cabana stores, we added 48 stores organically in 2021, which is a large amount of brick-and-mortar cannabis stores. It’s not easy to do, especially during COVID. But by building organically and acquiring multiple companies that were strategic and a creative fit into our ecosystem, our numbers speak for themselves. We have exceeded revenues, we have adjusted EBITDA positive for seven consecutive quarters, and I feel that we can replicate this playbook starting with Germany and then moving beyond in Europe, which will be a blend of both organic growth and growth through acquisition.”
I asked Grover if this is the so-called Costco playbook in action? Is High Tide in fact a full-sized, yet scaled-down version of Costco? “We absolutely are, and we are being called that for the right reasons,” he replied. “You’re hearing more and more buzz about the Canna Cabana stores. We’ve been deemed the Costco of cannabis, and I am very proud of the fact because the concept that we have created is completely geared towards our members in Canada. We have the largest loyalty of any competitor in the country, sitting at approximately 400,000 members. We manufacture our own consumption accessories, so we have 5000 SKUs of consumption accessories that we sell.
“We also design, manufacture, import, wholesale and retail 75 percent of all of these SKUs, which is completely like the Kirkland Signature brand,” he added. “We have our own brands, and we’re able to 
I asked Grover why the discount club membership model sometimes works and sometimes it doesn’t? I assume that scale is essential to getting discounts in place on a regular basis, but I’m sure it’s been tried before, unsuccessfully. My other had to do with who loses in a discount model, because when prices are discounted 25 percent, someone’s on the short end of that stick.
“You’re totally right, the first thing you need is scale to even think about launching a discount model,”  
“To compete with High Tide or to start matching what High Tide is doing as a discount club retailer, you’ve got to have an ecosystem that High Tide has, which I don’t believe any of the North American competitors that I’m currently looking at has the ability to do,” he added. “And like I said, we’re not just competing on price; we’re banking on our diversified ecosystem coupled with the best price for our club members, and our club loyalty is absolutely exploding because they can’t see this value in any other region.”
As powerful as this plan sounds, it also sounds long term, and I wondered how High Tide plans to replicate its fast growth in a shorter period of time in new markets. “My focus is on the United States, 
High Tide is even ready for 50 states with 50 different regulatory schemes. “We already know what the U.S. market is,” said Grover. “Yes, regulations differ state by state, but they’re already a lot more favorable for cannabis retailers. For example, in Canada, we have to live with these tiny gross margins on the brick-and-mortar front, which is probably 15 to 30 percent. In the United States, these numbers look like 45 to 70 percent. These are unheard of in Canada, so when we go to the U.S. market, it’s going to be a lot easier because of the experience we’ve gained in the last four or five years in Canada, because of our scale, and because of interprovincial differences that we’re already used to. We’re ready for all the challenges, but I’m looking forward to the U.S. challenge.”
The plan, he added, is to acquire brick-and-mortar shops in the U.S. “In fact,” said Grover, “we are in a few conversations right now to execute on an option agreement which will allow us to put that option into place today with a particular retailer, or more, and execute on that option when federal legalization happens. Which is, we tie the business up at a set multiple of EBITDA that they’re performing at today, and we’re able to take them over as soon as federal legalization takes place. We already have a few brick-and-mortar shops in the U.S., so we are working on that strategy, and as federal legalization takes place, or we are allowed by the exchanges that we trade on, we are going to start building a lot of stores organically in the U.S. But it will be a blend of both, just like we’ve done in Canada, where we acquired our second largest competitor at the time in November of 2020. This is called meta growth. We doubled our store count from 33 to 66, and we intend to do exactly that in the United States when federal legalization takes place.”
With time for one last question, I asked Grover what he has learned about the average cannabis consumer over the years but add that I’m not sure most cannabis consumers like to think of themselves as average.
“I agree with you that no one likes to be called average,” he said, “but let’s talk about the word average, because it’s really about the average. The one thing I will tell you is that the average cannabis user – which is over 70 to 75 percent – cares directly about variety and price. Let me elaborate. Variety means, when you and I go to a liquor store, you may have your favorite, which might be Grey Goose, I might have my favorite, which might be Glenlivet. So, every time we go to a liquor store, I know I want my single malt and I want this particular brand, and you want this particular brand of vodka. It’s very different with cannabis, where the average user wants a crazy amount of variety. They want something new all the time, and that is what makes the grower’s life really difficult, because they always need to stay ahead of the curve and come up with something new and exciting. That is only going to continue, and that was a big learning curve for me, too, because, again, this is a new industry. And I know personally, as a consumer, I also want variety. I don’t want to use the same strain over and over again. At some point, I want to change it, and then maybe go back to it eventually.
“The second thing is price,” added Grover. “What we find from multiple data sources, multiple surveys, and our own data, is that 70 percent of Canadian cannabis consumers care strictly about price. They want it cheap, and they want variety, and this is starting to show in our results. We’ve launched the discount club concept and we are experiencing fantastic success, and we’re not just providing our customers with value-focused cannabis brands only. We are showing them the entire premium selection at value prices. That’s why we call ourselves better than value. But these are the two big differences that I would like to point out, that variety and price are most important to the average cannabis consumer today.”
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