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The company that owns Corona is getting into the pot business

Posted at 11:53 AM, Oct 30, 2017
and last updated 2017-10-30 15:13:05-04

The company that owns Corona is getting into Canadian pot.

Constellation Brands has agreed to pay $190 million for a 10% stake in Canopy Growth Corporation, which sells medical marijuana in Canada and plans to sell recreational pot there when it becomes legal, as soon as next July.

It’s an unusual move because alcohol companies tend not to cross over into the marijuana industry. But Constellation CEO Rob Sands, in a statement, called cannabis “an emerging market that is predicted to become a significant consumer category in the near future.”

The company stressed it has no plans to sell pot in the United States unless it is legal at all levels. Recreational marijuana is legal in eight states and Washington, D.C., and medical marijuana is legal in 29 states, but it’s illegal in the eyes of the federal government.

Constellation has 76 brands, including Modelo and Pacifico beer, Svedka vodka, and Wild Irish Rose wine.

Canopy is publicly traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol WEED. The company produces several brands of medical cannabis, including Tweed, Spectrum and Bedrocan. Canopy says that its Tweed Farms greenhouse is the largest marijuana greenhouse in the world.

Canopy spokesman Jordan Sinclair told CNNMoney that his company plans to sell recreational marijuana when it becomes legal in Canada “and in any federally legal market opportunities that emerge around the world.”

Constellation did not return messages from CNNMoney.