Close Menu
  • Home
  • News
  • Lifestyle
  • Law
  • Business
  • Education

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Breaking Down Cannabis Automation’s Road to Success

June 10, 2026

Cooking With Weed Just Got Higher. And It’s Not Just Brownies.

June 10, 2026

The Cannabis Industry Forgot Who Built It

June 10, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Thursday, June 11
  • Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn VKontakte
Smoke Professional
  • Home
  • News

    More Than 1,000 Arrested in Sweep of U.K. Weed Grows

    July 8, 2023

    Scotland Calls On UK To End ‘Failed’ Drug War With Decriminalization And Harm Reduction Approach

    July 8, 2023

    Germany’s draft law for first phase of cannabis reform

    July 8, 2023

    High Times Cannabis Cup Illinois: People’s Choice Edition 2023 Kicks Off

    July 8, 2023

    Pennsylvania Committee Advances Expansion to State Medical Cannabis Program

    July 7, 2023
  • Lifestyle

    The Cannabis Industry Forgot Who Built It

    June 10, 2026

    Rappin’ The Rivers Is Building Montana’s Hip-Hop Outpost

    June 3, 2026

    How Many Times Was Paul McCartney Arrested for Weed?

    June 1, 2026

    The DEA’s New Cannabis Form Has a Self-Incrimination Problem

    May 31, 2026

    The Role of Humor in Psychedelic Integration

    May 30, 2026
  • Law

    Democratic Candidate for Iowa Gov. Releases Adult-Use Legalization Plan

    April 23, 2026

    Virginia Gov. Sends Adult-Use Cannabis Sales Bill Back to Lawmakers With Requests

    April 15, 2026

    IRC 280E Still Applies to Your Marijuana Business, Unfortunately

    February 24, 2026

    Oklahoma Campaign to Legalize Adult-Use Cannabis Will Begin Collecting Signatures Next Month 

    July 29, 2025

    Republican Lawmakers Kill Cannabis Legalization Provisions in Wisconsin Gov’s Budget Proposal

    June 16, 2025
  • Business

    Cooking With Weed Just Got Higher. And It’s Not Just Brownies.

    June 10, 2026

    Why Does Watching The World Cup Feel Like A Panic Attack? Weed Can Help, If You Don’t Screw It Up.

    June 9, 2026

    A U.S. Weed Company Finally Cracked The NYSE. It Had To Leave The Recreational Pot Behind.

    June 8, 2026

    WNBA Drops Marijuana Ban, Adds Psychedelics In New CBA

    June 5, 2026

    Medical Cannabis Behind the Wheel: NSW Proposes ‘Three Strikes’ Before Penalties

    June 5, 2026
  • Education

    Breaking Down Cannabis Automation’s Road to Success

    June 10, 2026

    AI Is Growing Your Weed Now

    June 6, 2026

    They Already Ruined Cannabis. Now Psychedelics Are Next.

    June 5, 2026

    How Magic Garden’s Loosie Became a Multi-Cup Winner

    June 4, 2026

    5 Hemp-Derived Drinks To Pour This Summer

    June 3, 2026
Smoke Professional
You are at:Home»Business»Target Just Made A Big Bet On Hemp THC Drinks Six Months Before A Federal Ban. Do They Know Something We Don’t?
Business

Target Just Made A Big Bet On Hemp THC Drinks Six Months Before A Federal Ban. Do They Know Something We Don’t?

adminBy adminMay 7, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Target Just Made A Big Bet On Hemp THC Drinks Six Months Before A Federal Ban. Do They Know Something We Don't?
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Target is expanding its intoxicating hemp THC beverage program to more than 300 stores across Florida, Texas and Illinois, just six months before a federal ban that would wipe most of those products off shelves. Either Target’s government affairs team knows something the rest of the industry doesn’t, or the math works even if the ban hits. Either answer is news.

Target just made a strategic bet that’s hard to read. According to BevNet, the retailer is expanding its intoxicating hemp THC beverage program to over 300 stores across three new states, including all locations in Florida and Texas, plus the Illinois stores where local jurisdictions allow it. Brands on shelf reportedly include Cann, Wynk, Trail Magic, Stigma, Gigli and Daizy’s. The expansion follows last fall’s 10-store pilot in the Minneapolis region and a January expansion to 72 additional Minnesota stores.

Photo by Elsa Olofsson on Unsplash

Six months from now, on November 13, 2026, a provision buried in the spending bill President Donald Trump signed last year is set to redefine federal hemp. After that date, the only legal hemp products will be those containing no more than 0.4 milligrams of total THC per container. Most of what Target just put on shelves wouldn’t survive that cap.

The two facts don’t seem to fit together. Either Target is making an aggressive bet that the November cliff won’t actually land, or it has already done the math on a worst-case scenario and decided to expand anyway. Both readings are interesting.

What a write-down actually looks like

Industry sources report that Target is hedging by planning to mark down its intoxicating hemp inventory in October if no regulatory solution is in place. That’s a write-down. In retail accounting, when a company can no longer sell inventory at full price (or at all), it has to formally reduce its book value to reflect what it can actually recover. The difference between what Target paid wholesale and what it ultimately gets for clearing the shelves is the loss.

For a company of Target’s size, even a multi-million dollar inventory write-down on hemp THC beverages is mathematically negligible. Target generated almost $107 billion in revenue in 2024. A $10 million write-down represents 0.009% of annual revenue. The downside is small enough that the question becomes whether the upside justifies the risk.

The math, scaled

300+

Target stores adding hemp THC drinks across FL, TX, IL

Nov 13

Date federal hemp THC cap of 0.4mg per container takes effect

$107B

Target’s 2024 revenue. A $10M inventory write-down is rounding error.

10mg

Maximum THC per container Target now stocks. Far above the proposed federal cap.

Target isn’t betting that the ban won’t happen. It’s betting that the cost of being wrong is smaller than the cost of being late. Six months of incremental sales, the supplier relationships established, the consumer behavior data captured, and the shelf positioning earned all hold value even if the November cliff arrives on schedule. If it doesn’t arrive, or arrives in modified form, Target is positioned at the front of the category.

Target is not alone

The expansion fits a pattern. Sprouts Farmers Market mainstreamed hemp THC drinks across 120 stores. Circle K added them to convenience-store shelves in allowable states. Beverage alcohol distributor Breakthru Beverage entered the category. Each of these companies has lawyers, government affairs teams and strategic forecasting that tracks Farm Bill negotiations as closely as anyone in Washington. None of them appears to be acting like the November ban is a settled outcome.

Photo by Mathew Benoit on Unsplash

The collective behavior of major retailers is a market-level signal. Either they’re collectively misreading the legislative situation, or there’s enough lobbying momentum, regulatory ambiguity or expected delay built into their forecasts that the bet looks defensible. The House passed the Farm Bill on April 30 with the looming hemp ban intact, but lobbying pressure to push the effective date is active and ongoing.

The 280E contradiction nobody is talking about

Here’s the part of the Target story that should land hardest for anyone in the regulated cannabis industry. Target can sell a 10mg THC drink in Florida and Texas, deduct every cost associated with that sale (cost of goods, payroll, rent, marketing, shipping), and pay normal corporate income tax on the profit at 21%. Standard retailer treatment.

A state-licensed adult-use cannabis dispensary selling a chemically similar product (often the same molecule, same dosage, same consumer experience) operates under IRS Section 280E, which prohibits the deduction of any business expense other than cost of goods sold. Marketing, rent, payroll, security, none of it is deductible. Effective federal tax rates routinely land between 60% and 80%, sometimes higher. Operators pay federal income tax on revenue rather than profit, which is precisely why so many state-licensed dispensaries struggle to break even.

The Trump administration’s recent announcement of steps toward rescheduling marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III would likely address 280E for medical operators. It does nothing for adult-use businesses, which remain fully subject to the provision until federal law changes more substantively. Even after rescheduling, the existing tax inequity between Target’s hemp THC drink program and a licensed dispensary’s adult-use sales remains intact.

Same drug. Same effect. Same consumer. Two completely different regulatory pathways, two completely different tax regimes, two completely different economic outcomes. Target is exploiting the gap. It’s not doing anything wrong. The gap exists because Congress wrote the 2018 Farm Bill in a way that left synthetic and converted hemp cannabinoids in legal ambiguity, and the same Congress now weighing whether to close that gap is also responsible for designing 280E in the first place.

The signal Target is sending

Target isn’t a lobbying force in cannabis policy. It’s stayed quiet through the Farm Bill negotiations and has not joined any of the industry coalitions pushing to delay the November ban. But the expansion itself is a signal. When a $107 billion retailer commits floor space, supplier contracts and category leadership to a product class six months before a federal ban could erase it, lawmakers notice.

The signal is that Target sees a viable, growing consumer market for low-dose THC beverages and is betting that the November cliff either won’t fully land or won’t last. Other retailers are reading the same data and reaching the same conclusion. The regulated cannabis industry, meanwhile, watches a major retailer profit from a product category licensed operators can’t access without paying double the tax rate, even after the rescheduling everyone has been waiting for.

Either Target is wrong about the timing, or the ban isn’t as inevitable as Congress made it sound. Either answer is news. The one that hurts more is the answer to a different question: why does the regulated cannabis industry still have to pay 70% in federal taxes while Target gets to deduct shipping costs on the same molecule?

Source link

Ban Bet big Dont Drinks Federal Hemp Months Target THC
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous Article‘Mutant Marijuana’ Is Changing How Weed Is Grown. It’s Not What You Think.
Next Article Harvard Doctor’s New Book Reframes Cannabis As A Senior’s Way Out Of Pharmaceutical Overload
admin
  • Website

Related Posts

Cooking With Weed Just Got Higher. And It’s Not Just Brownies.

June 10, 2026

Why Does Watching The World Cup Feel Like A Panic Attack? Weed Can Help, If You Don’t Screw It Up.

June 9, 2026

A U.S. Weed Company Finally Cracked The NYSE. It Had To Leave The Recreational Pot Behind.

June 8, 2026

Comments are closed.

Our Picks

Breaking Down Cannabis Automation’s Road to Success

June 10, 2026

Cooking With Weed Just Got Higher. And It’s Not Just Brownies.

June 10, 2026

The Cannabis Industry Forgot Who Built It

June 10, 2026

Why Does Watching The World Cup Feel Like A Panic Attack? Weed Can Help, If You Don’t Screw It Up.

June 9, 2026
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
Education

Breaking Down Cannabis Automation’s Road to Success

By adminJune 10, 20260

There’s a moment most cannabis operators hit where hustle stops being enough. At first, production…

Cooking With Weed Just Got Higher. And It’s Not Just Brownies.

June 10, 2026

The Cannabis Industry Forgot Who Built It

June 10, 2026

Why Does Watching The World Cup Feel Like A Panic Attack? Weed Can Help, If You Don’t Screw It Up.

June 9, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Smoke Unlimited about Weed & CBD vaping.

From Our Partners
About Us
About Us

Get all the current news stories, latest trends and legislation regarding cannabidiol, products, usages and its benefits. So don’t miss out any buzz and stay tuned! We offer a minute to minute updates regarding Marijuana industry.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
Our Picks

Breaking Down Cannabis Automation’s Road to Success

June 10, 2026

Cooking With Weed Just Got Higher. And It’s Not Just Brownies.

June 10, 2026

The Cannabis Industry Forgot Who Built It

June 10, 2026
Sponsors
Copyright © 2026. SmokeProfessional
  • Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.