 I'm Deborah Borchard and this is your Marijuana Money Minute. This week, Verano Holdings announced that they were buying and merging with Alternative Medical Enterprises, or ALT-MED, to create the largest privately owned cannabis company. The value of the transaction was not disclosed, but you may recall that earlier this year Harvest Health was going to buy Verano in a deal that was valued at $850 million dollars at the time. It was a huge week for earnings, with numbers coming from some of the biggest players in the industry. We're going to break it down into winners, losers, and meh category. The winners are Green Thumb Industries, or GTI. They had another tremendous quarter, with revenue increasing 131% to $157.1 million dollars. The revenue growth was driven primarily by the increased scale in the company's consumer packaged goods and retail businesses. Canopy Growth reported net revenue of $135 million dollars for the second fiscal 2021 quarter. That caused the stock to jump. It was a 77% increase over last year's quarter revenue of $76 million dollars. Still, they delivered a net loss of $96 million dollars versus last year's net income of $242 million dollars. No generation released their third quarter earnings. Revenues rose 153% to $55 million dollars. That was way better than last year's $21.8 million dollars for the same time period. Harvest Health and Recreation said that their revenue rose 86% in the third quarter to $61.6 million dollars. This was also a sequential increase of 11%. Acreage Holdings reported their third quarter revenue rose 42% to $31 million dollars. That was also a 17% increase sequentially. Now in the so-so category, our cannabis reported a slight increase in their total and net revenue. They hit $67.8 million dollars, but then they announced a $125 million dollar offering that was not well received by shareholders who are very concerned about the company's cash burn. Tilbury reported that their total revenue for the third quarter was flat at $51 million It was up 2% sequentially and their net losses did fall to $2.3 million dollars. Charlotte's Web reported that their revenue rose to $25.2 million dollars, but that was only a tiny bit better than the $25.1 million last year. Their net losses also increased to $6.6 million dollars over last year's net loss of $1.39 million dollars. In the not so great category, Canopy Rivers acknowledged taking a $112 million dollar hit for their farmhouse investment and their total loss for the quarter was $87 million dollars. Organograms shares plunged this week on an announcement that they were doing a public offering of units for $60 million dollars. And finally in psychedelic news, Saibon began trading this week and Compass reported their earnings. Now they don't really have revenues, but they did say they have enough cash to get them through to 2023. And that's it for this week. I'm Deborah Bortart with the Green Market Report.