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Cannabis Industry at a Crossroads: Schedule III Win, Adult-Use Uncertainty, Market Volatility

Cannabis Industry at a Crossroads: Schedule III Win, Adult-Use Uncertainty, Market Volatility

Published 7 hours ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the US cannabis industry faces regulatory turbulence following the Department of Justices April 23, 2026 order rescheduling only FDA-approved and state-licensed medical cannabis to Schedule III, easing tax penalties for medical operators while leaving adult-use under Schedule I controls.[2][4] This partial reform sparked market volatility, with the MSOS ETF closing at 5.11 dollars on Wednesday, far below investor expectations of 10 dollars or more from an ATB Cormark survey conducted April 13-21.[2] A June 29 hearing looms for Phase 2, potentially expanding to adult-use, but litigation could delay full relief into late 2026.[2]

Regulatory wins and setbacks mark the week: An Oklahoma judge lifted a suspension on Cedric Gardens, one of the states largest outdoor farms, restoring operations after proving no public safety risks via Metrc tracking.[3] Conversely, two Rochester smoke shops shut down after a 1.3 million dollar seizure of illegal products,[1] and Texas holds a court hearing today over its ban on smokable hemp and THC.[7] President Trump urged Congress to protect hemp-derived CBD from a November 2025 spending bill restriction, launching a Medicare pilot for up to 500 dollars yearly coverage with 3 milligrams THC per serving.[10]

Market pressures persist, with experts noting wholesale price declines and margin squeezes in states like Illinois, prompting imminent consolidation in California and Colorado.[8] Jushi refinanced at 12.5 percent coupons buoyed by Virginia assets, though equity markets remain skeptical.[8] TerrAscend and Rubicon Organics reported preliminary Q1 2026 results amid rescheduling, with Rubicon amending credit to 2.5 million dollars for working capital.[11][12]

Compared to pre-rescheduling hype, sentiment has cooled from full reform optimism, with 46.2 percent of investors overprojecting MSOS gains.[2] Returning customers drove 4/20 sales growth, but top 10 percent of dispensaries captured 40 percent of revenue, highlighting concentration.[9] Leaders like Cedric Gardens emphasize compliance, while firms eye international expansion in Australia and Europe to counter US uncertainties.[3][8] Overall sales track toward 60 billion dollars post-33.8 billion in 2025, but bifurcated rules deepen a two-tier industry.[6]

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