By Sheeba M. | May 28, 2026
Federal Banking Reform Could Unlock Cannabis Valuation Multiples
The structural barrier constraining cannabis valuations isn’t revenue growth—it’s banking friction. Without federal banking access, cannabis operators pay 15-25% of gross revenue in cash management fees, operate with fractional debt capacity, and remain locked out of institutional investor benchmarks. A policy shift here would be transformational.
Congressional advocates are quietly building momentum behind the SAFE Banking Act refresh, which would extend FDIC insurance protections to cannabis-compliant depository institutions. Early signals suggest bipartisan appetite: 3-5 House committee votes are expected before summer recess, with Senate follow-up targeted for Q3.
What Changes if SAFE Passes
- Cost of Capital: Traditional bank debt replaces predatory private equity, reducing leverage costs by 400-800 bps
- Operational Efficiency: Institutional-grade treasury services become accessible; cash drag decreases materially
- M&A Velocity: Traditional acquirers can use bank financing; roll-up dynamics accelerate consolidation
- Institutional Adoption: Pension funds, endowments, and mutual funds can legally hold cannabis equities under fiduciary guidelines
Positioned Players
Operators with the strongest balance sheets and lowest legacy debt loads—particularly HRVSF (Harvest Health & Recreation) and GTBIF (Greenrose Acquisition Corp.)—will benefit most from normalized financing costs.
Sources
- Congress.gov — SAFE Banking Act and amendments
- Bloomberg Law — Regulatory and legislative tracking
- Federal Reserve — Banking system risk assessments
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