Store-Level Retail Markup

Continuing on the theme of Retail Markup summarized in my previous posting , I thought it would be helpful for readers of this blog to see a slightly redacted distribution of the levels of markup displayed by individual I-502 Retail stores in the first full year of the State-legal Cannabis market.  As I indicated last time, the folks near the top of the markup “pyramid” are, differentially, serving markets that might reasonably be assumed to contain disproportionate numbers of non-Washingtonians.  It’s not all-or-none, but it’s a definite geospatial tendency.

In the following chart, I’ve taken the same markup metric (markup = (retail sales MINUS wholesale cost of product) ALL DIVIDED BY wholesale cost of product).  With this metric,   1+ markup is the multiplier between wholesale and retail price  (e.g., a “markup” of 2.0 (which I often express as 200%) would imply that a gram purchased for $5.00 was selling at $15.00 (3x multiplier, 200% markup).  All of this is before taxes are added in.  The focus here is on what retailers are making, not on what the man is skimming.

The following scatterplot sheds light on the pattern of markups in individual stores when plotted against their total sales (across all Cannabis-containing products) during the 12.7-month period ending July 31 2015.

The two “redactions” I’ve applied are that all stores with first-year sales in excess of $3 million were fixed at the $3 million level to protect the innocent (and the, apparently, greedy/opportunistic) from easy outing.  I also excluded all stores with less than $100,000 in total sales (thereby removing outliers that might have only been open 1 or 2 months and not yet sold through their initial inventory purchases).

Suggested areas to consider when perusing the graph-

  1. Notice the spread amongst the big stores at the $3 million point. There is a 3-to-1 spread from top to bottom. I’m not passing judgement. There are lots of possible reasons for this.  Some of those might even be reasonable (greed is good, after all). Some might be attributed to an extremely efficient operation clearing it’s inventory much more quickly than most. I dunno ….but it sure is a surprisingly big spread.
  2. The “fit” to the overall redacted data displayed by the red line is a power function. Little stores seem to have lower margins, overall (with some exceptions). Big ones tend to have somewhat higher margins.  This is to be expected, given their superior purchasing power.
  3. More than 60 of these retail stores have averaged overall markups of LESS THAN 100% (for every $5.00 their processors received from them, they have generated less overall EBEEPC (Earnings Before Everything Except Product Cost).  The nice thing about not having an MBA is that I don’t know if I just made that acronym up or not.  Regardless, it’s one I’ll likely use again. This particular EBEEPC pattern implies a sale, at retail (before any taxes are taken into account) of that $5.00 bud for less than $10.00.
  4. Some of these lower markup Retailers should probably look closely at their upcoming tax (and other) obligations. They may have some magical sauce, but I suspect that at least some of them are not running under a financially sustainable model.
  5. Conversely, 23 of these stores averaged markups in excess of 150% in the first year of the retail market. Six of those were in excess of 200%. The same $5.00 wholesale bud would be priced at more than $15.00 (before taxes) in such stores.  That would be approximately $43.50 with all taxes rolled in.

That last statement was a joke, but one dealing with a serious issue.  The Cannabis taxes set by our Legislature are large, and that same $15.00-priced bud would actually, on average, have walked out the door at just over $21.50 per gram (when the 43.5% ish excise/sales tax combo hits).

This is capitalism, and it is good.  Greed is good, also.  So, too, is affordable access to high-quality, high-effectiveness recreational and/or medicinal medicines.

I made the joke in part to focus attention on my opinion that our current 43+% tax rate on “recreational” (and upcoming 37% tax rate on “medical”) is just too much. Particularly when less needy/greedy State (and Provincial) Governments seem to surround our borders.

Lower the tax rate, increase the product volume, and you will very likely increase the overall tax revenue.  Seems simple (although it no doubt is not …. I don’t know Government that well, I just know selling drugs).

I’d love to hear your thoughts about this posting (and/or things you’d like to see me cover in future ones).

I’m thinking next week, I’ll detail the initial impact of Oregon’s great tax-free Cannabis experiment going live on the Washington State-Legal Cannabis marketplace….

Either that, or I’ll get distracted by a pretty bird flying by.

We’ll see.

Go Hawks!

50% wins would make for a new season in the last 8 games (almost like a re-boot)

Jim

ps – if you see value in my postings, please share the link to this site with any and all you think might benefit.  I’m not into social media (doing a blog has pretty much internetted me out).  The end simply does not justify the means in my warped view of human interaction.  However, if y’all (that is me trying to speak like a pandering Presidential candidate) have the knowledge and skills and inclination, please feel free to leverage your networks to increase traffic to this site.  It is my understanding that that is a good thing.  I’ll try my best to make it worth your friend’s, tumblee’s, googler’s, pinteree’s or twit’s time.

pps- If you wish to use any of the materials I produce for non-commercial things, please feel free to do so.  I’d appreciate acknowledgement (and also that you let me know what you are using and for what purpose).  Not necessary, just nice (and might be helpful to you).

ppps- If you are a State-Legal Cannabis Producer, Processor and/or Retailer, then by all means use what I produce in your efforts to make your business better.  Just be careful about buying into my jokes as fact … I won’t always call out my more outrageous assertions for the non-factual drivel that they are.  If you REALLY want to use the stuff I produce to better your business, consider using my services.  I’ll keep most of the jokes out of those interactions.  (biz contacts to jim@straightlineanalytics.biz)

pppps- If you are a competitor of mine, I welcome your presence in this market.  Please know that I view imitation as a form of flattery.  Feel free to use my work (with acknowledgement) – just don’t plagiarize.  I cherish a Darwinian competitive market environment.  Much as I cherish the cream that rises to the top of fresh milk.

May those that add the most value to their clients win.

2 comments

  1. Remember what I said back in ’37:

    Traffic in marijuana is increasing to such an extent that it has come to be the cause for the greatest national concern.

    We increasingly know what you are doing.
    We are watching.
    We are always watching.

    (not really … I’m just testing commenting on the new wordpress theme, but I thought this would be something Harry might say today)

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