The bankrupt single-state operator California-based StateHouse Holdings (CSE: STHZ) (OTCQB: STHZF) is formally on the auction block, with its primary creditor reportedly hoping to fetch north of $100 million for the entire company.
StateHouse’s assets were advertised for sale by GreenLife Business Group beginning on Nov. 12, CEO Drew Mathews told Green Market Report, and he said he’s quite confident that the entire portfolio will find buyers, based on the number of inquiries and offers he’s already fielded.
Up for sale are StateHouse’s:
- 11 storefront dispensaries
- A 15-license farm in Salinas
- Seven product brands (Loudpack, Smokiez, Fuzzies, Kingpen, Kingroll, Dime Bag and Sublime)
- Distribution, nursery, processor, microbusiness, event license and manufacturing licenses.
“A deal is definitely going to get done. The question I don’t know the answer to is if somebody’s going to be in that $100 million ballpark to take down the whole thing,” Mathews said. That figure is the target price from creditor Pelorus Fund, which forced StateHouse into a court-ordered receivership and bankruptcy back in September.
Mathews, who also helped broker sales for assets of the now-defunct High Times chain of California marijuana businesses this year, said there’s been far and away more interest in StateHouse’s various dispensaries and brands than there were for anything related to High Times. He added that his firm hasn’t even begun a marketing push to sell StateHouse yet, and after only a week online, the ad has already generated more leads and offers than High Times.
“Everybody’s contacting me on this … Once we start email blasting, it’s going to be insane,” Mathews said. “High Times generated 36 offers in 17 days of marketing. I have more than 17 days here. I have until Jan. 15. So it’s almost a full 60 days. Our goal is to hit a home run and blow it out of the park.”
Mathews also emphasized that the creditor is very flexible in this situation. Pelorus hopes to find a buyer for the entire StateHouse portfolio all at once, but it also understands that might not happen. The lender also isn’t demanding all cash from potential buyers.
“The key component to highlight is this creditor is very open to seller finance. They’re not looking for all-cash. Obviously, who wouldn’t want that? But they’re definitely willing to get a deal done,” Mathews said.
So far most of the offers have been for individual assets – such as the original Harborside dispensary in Oakland – but the final decision won’t be made until mid-January.
Mathews noted that the company as a whole is still operational, and the dispensaries and brands combined generate more than $100 million annually in revenue.
“These brands, they’re in over 900 stores. Imagine, Day One, being in 900 stores across California, with most people not even being in 200 stores. You’ll be an instant top five player in the state,” he said. “The dispensaries themselves, just the dispensaries, are on pace to do $78 million this year, with the brands on pace to do over $40 million.”
That alone should provide incentive to pay top dollar for the package, Mathews said.
“Somebody looking to acquire this could easily flip it one day for $1 billion.”