Cannabis Watch: Aurora Cannabis CEO Terry Booth is stepping down and company plans layoffs, sources say

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Aurora Cannabis Inc. Chief Executive Terry Booth is stepping down and the company is planning a round of layoffs, sources told MarketWatch on Thursday, making the Canadian licensed producer the latest in the sector to move to cut costs to conserve cash and stay afloat.

The stock ACB, -5.42% ACB, -5.16%  was halted for the news mid-afternoon after falling 5.6%.

Booth will remain on the board, while Executive Chairman Michael Singer takes on the role of interim CEO, according to the sources. The news comes less than two months after the company announced the departure of Chief Commercial Officer Cam Battley, the man widely viewed as the face of the company.

Aurora, which is the most widely held stock on Robinhood, has lost 74% of its value in the last 12 months, after repeatedly failing to meet its own financial targets. Analyst downgrades, a controversial convertible bond exchange that was highly dilutive for shareholders and reports of insider selling have further weighed on sentiment.

For more, read: Aurora Cannabis stock slides after dilutive bond deal, drags broader sector lower

Related: Aurora Cannabis stock suffers worst day in more than five years, analyst says ‘it would be fair for investors not to believe them

Jefferies analyst Owen Bennett downgraded the stock to hold from buy after Battley’s departure and said the company has lost the trust of investors after repeatedly promising one course of action and then immediately choosing another.

Like its rivals, Aurora has struggled to become profitable following a rocky rollout for legal cannabis in Canada, with red tape hampering the creation of a network of retail stores and allowing the black market to thrive.

See also: All the excuses cannabis companies are making for an ugly crop of earnings

With companies unable to get their product to customers, revenue numbers have disappointed investors and cash piles have dwindled, forcing companies into some desperate measures to raise capital. Many have resorted to measures such as the sale and lease-backs of real estate, or have canceled or revised the terms of previously-agreed deals.

The job cut news comes just days after rival Tilray Inc. said it was laying off 10% of its workforce, a move that Bennett welcomed on Thursday.

See: U.S. pot retailer MedMen says it is trying to use stock to pay its bills amid cannabis industry’s cash crunch

“Both companies have a relatively clouded path to profitability right now, very large operational footprints, a history of aggressive investments, and will likely need to raise capital in the near future (in our view),” Bennett and Jefferies analyst Ryan Tomkins wrote in a note to clients. “With many factors impacting sales/gross margins arguably less able to be controlled, opex (operating expense) rigor can be a key to profitability.”

Booth’s departure is yet another management shake-up in the sector, coming after Canopy Growth Corp.’s CGC, -2.26% WEED, -2.12%  Bruce Linton was ousted in July and Aphria Inc.’ APHA, -4.56% APHA, -5.20%  ormer CEO Vic Neufeld was forced to step down.

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