In 2013, the Obama administration issued the Cole Memorandum, which called a truce between federal prosecutors and marijuana businesses operating legitimately under state law. After regime change in Washington, however, it may come as no surprise that Jeff Sessions—the Attorney General who once opined that “good people don’t smoke marijuana”—rescinded the Obama-era guidance. The only real surprise is that it took him a whole year to do it.
Since at least 2013, marijuana-related businesses have generally been operating on predictable, albeit legally shaky, ground. Dispensaries have expanded dramatically. Though details vary wildly, nine states currently allow recreational use and medicinal use is currently permitted under the laws of all but four states.
As a result, commercial real estate lenders have to grapple with the increasingly common problem of the dispensary tenant, and a number of lenders are dipping their toes into lending in expectation of securitizing loans secured in part by dispensaries. But given the January 2018 announcement that the Cole memo is no longer in effect, the question everyone’s asking is: are things really that different? The answer, we think, is no—but with an asterisk.
Continue Reading Securitizing Marijuana Dispensary Properties in the Sessions Era