CBD safety doubts worry retailers

Executive warns of product cutbacks after FDA report

The Food and Drug Administration has updated its stance on CBD products, raising concerns about potentially harmful effects.
The Food and Drug Administration has updated its stance on CBD products, raising concerns about potentially harmful effects.

Cannabidiol wholesalers should "have big concerns" about the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's growing unease about the safety of the cannabis compound, according to one chief executive officer.

The FDA said Monday that it "cannot conclude that CBD is generally recognized as safe among qualified experts for its use in human or animal food."

It added that "some of the available data raise serious concerns about potential harm from CBD," including liver injury, drowsiness, diarrhea and changes in mood and raised questions about its impact on children and pregnant or breastfeeding women.

This could cause big retailers to shy away from products containing CBD, a nonintoxicating compound found in the cannabis plant, said Peter Horvath, chief executive officer of Green Growth Brands Inc.

"It could be that this FDA thing causes the chains to either cut back or discontinue their CBD businesses," Horvath said Tuesday. "I think if you're in a strictly wholesale strategy and if you sell ingestibles, you'd have to have big concerns."

Green Growth Brands primarily sells CBD topicals like lotions and bath oils at mall kiosks. It also has a small ingestibles business.

Consumer CBD stocks fell on the news, with CV Sciences Inc. closing down 12.5% in Tuesday trading. Charlotte's Web Holdings Inc. lost 4.5% and CbdMD Inc. slid 6.8%. Green Growth stocks closed up 1.4%.

The FDA's statement "used an inappropriately alarmist tone," Duffy MacKay, CV Sciences' senior vice president of scientific and regulatory affairs, said in an emailed statement. "There are more direct ways for the FDA to address bad actors while still working with responsible companies to establish the appropriate scope of hemp-derived ingredients for supplements based on sound research."

Bullish forecasts on CBD's sales potential are likely to be slashed in the wake of the FDA's "very cautious tone," according to Jefferies analyst Owen Bennett, whose own model calls for retail sales of $3.5 billion in 2022.

The agency hasn't made a final decision about how to regulate cannabidiol, which is a non-intoxicating compound found in the cannabis plant, but Monday's statement indicates its approach is likely to be stringent, he wrote in a research note Tuesday.

"The safety risks as well as the spike in consumer interest will likely see heavy regulation (especially against the backdrop of the recent vapor deaths, an area where the FDA has arguably dropped the ball on regulation), with companies having to support product launches with detailed reports likely including clinical studies," he said.

Business on 11/27/2019

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