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CLIENT FEATURE: The Tartisan Nickel $TN.ca Kenbridge Property Hosts M&I Resource of 7.14 Million Tonnes of 0.62% Nickel + 0.33% Copper $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 5:29 PM on Monday, December 30th, 2019
Tc logo in black

Investment Highlights

  • Kenbridge property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper
  • 17.5 (21.8 fully diluted) percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property

Kenbridge Ni Project (ON, Canada)

  • Advanced  stage  deposit  remains open  in  three  directions,  is  equipped with a 623m  deep  shaft  and  has  never  been  mined
  • Preliminary  Economic Assessment completed and updated returned robust project 
    economics and operating costs including  a  NPV  of  C$253M  and  cash costs of US$3.47/lb of nickel net of  copper credits
  • Plans for Kenbridge include updating PEA, advancing the project through to feasibility and exploring the open mineralization at depth

Click Here to View Kenbridge 43-101 Technical Report

FULL DISCLOSURE: Tartisan Nickel Corp. is an advertising client of AGORA Internet Relations Corp.

Empower Clinics $CBDT.ca – #CBD 2020 Outlook: How the #Cannabidiol Forecast Looks in the New Decade $WEED.ca $CGC $ACB $APH $CRON.ca $HEXO.ca $OGI.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:30 PM on Monday, December 30th, 2019

SPONSOR:

Why Empower Clinics

  • A leading owner/operator of physician staffed health and pain management clinics.
  • Patient database of over 165,000 patients 
  • Platform generating $1.4M USD (9 months ending Sept. 30, 2019)
  • Proprietary technology platforms including Electronic Health Records portal and e-Commerce for CBD product distribution
  • Recently launched CBD extraction facility
  • First extraction system capacity = 6,000 Kg per year.
  • CBD based products are poised to be a $20B global industry by 2022
  • Medical cannabis is poised to be a $100B global industry by 2025

CBD 2020 Outlook: How the Cannabidiol Forecast Looks in the New Decade

  • The 2020 outlook for CBD forecasts a beautiful and bright upside with a slight chance of raining on the cannabis oil craze parade
  • As 2019 made cannabidiol a household name, what will the new decade bring in terms of new cannabinoids CBG, CBN and THC-V discoveries, science and regulatory advancements

by: Alexia Akbay

Cannabidiol, or CBD, won the supplement ingredient of the year by surpassing all other herbal extracts and products in the world in terms of popularity, demand and sales. The impressive rise of CBD cannabis oil extract has been quite an adventure in the past few years and seems to only have more upside in 2020 and beyond.

It was only a year ago now, where the 2018 Farm Bill was passed that legalized hemp-derived cannabidiol and essentially opened the floodgates to all kinds of oils, edible gummies and skincare to name a few. And now, many are projecting the CBD use to continue to grow in demand, projecting it to be a $22 billion dollar industry by 2022/2023.

The 2020 CBD forecast calls for a bright, sunny and green landscape as the next few years are set to be highly lucrative and innovative for the coveted cannabis oil substance. However, let’s focus on the smaller scope of its industry and talk about the 2020 CBD outlook before we attempt to paint a ten year prediction.

First, a recap of what happened in 2019, where the CBD craze in America and the world really picked up momentum, and then a peak around the corner as to what can happen in 2020 as science, commercial and consumer interest intensifies across the globe as legal barriers come down and studies reveal results.

Let’s paint a picture of where CBD is today and what the first year of a new decade can bring to the emerging cannabis (hemp and marijuana) markets.

Year 2019 – Strides in CBD

This year came with a lot of major changes for the CBD industry as it rose to the top of the charts for being the most popular and sold herbal ingredient. It was the first full year that hemp-based CBD was legalized after the 2018 Farm Bill, which introduced a wild world of controversies and other issues, though there have been many supporters to make big changes. For instance, the legalization of CBD alone has spurred substantial cannabis reform efforts.

In 2019, cannabis reform legislation was brought forth by 27 states for either recreation or medical use. Arizona was one of the most major states to push for these changes and will see legal recreational use on next year’s ballot. Florida joins Arizona in the efforts, though Mississippi is amongst the few states that have still yet to legalize medical marijuana, which could change with this year’s proposal. Other states included in this list are Nebraska, Idaho, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and more.

Politically, many Democratic presidential hopefuls have discussed legalization, but Bernie Sanders released a comprehensive plan that would effectively legalize state and federal marijuana use, while pushing for the expungement of marijuana-related convictions. The plan, released in October, would take place within 100 days of taking the presidential office, if Sanders were to be elected.

Lowell Farms was part of the substantial progress of 2019, launching the first cannabis cafe to ever reach the US market. Located in California, the new restaurant has been created to offer a safe public place to cannabis users, while still offering an area for non-users of the substance. While partaking, patrons can snack on a variety of infused dishes, including everything from the grilled peach salad to a cold beer.

Experts from Brightfield believe that this year will reach $5 billion in the CBD industry for sales alone, increasing by over 2,500% since 2015. The growth that happened this year has been almost unbelievable and, while 2019 may have come with a few bumps, there have been major milestones reached by the new industry. But what’s next?

Year 2020 – What’s Coming for CBD?

The cannabis industry already saw a surge in the number of states seeking legalization, so what might happen to them next? Since 1996, medical use of cannabis has already been approved by 33 states, and a third of those states pushed forward even further by legalizing recreational use. Many huge votes will take place in 2020, and experts at CBD Origin predict that several states will end up legalizing recreational cannabis as a result of CBD’s influence – New York, New Mexico, New Jersey, Arizona, Idaho, and Arkansas.

While Florida is still gathering signatures for the Florida Marijuana Legalization Initiative, it appears as though the efforts will fall short, meaning that the proposal probably won’t even be on the ballot. Missouri could end up on the ballot with enough signatures by May 3rd, the support from local voters has not been strong enough to provide a clear idea of which side they will choose. South Dakota, while it pushed to add cannabis legalization to the ballot, fell short, as did Ohio.

The Effects of Regulation on Quality

Right now, there’s a substantial missing piece in the CBD industry – regulation. Without regulation, many consumers are fearful of even getting involved, since there are many companies that are publicly dishonest with their business practices. As a result, there are only a few brands that can even prove their product’s potency. Based on the predictions of CBD Origin, it is likely that the public will aim to learn more about CBD with its legalization, seeking out higher standards and greater transparency from companies.

Along with the demand for lab tests to come with higher standards, consumers will likely give more attention to terpenes and cannabinoids. This information allows consumers to learn more about the products that they choose, and a common theme throughout the CBD industry will likely be the desire for quality products and honesty.

New Options and Less Vaping

As CBD blends become more diverse, and as the industry progresses, the innovations in the market will likely lead to new options for consuming CBD. Brands will be pushed to offer more value and benefits to remain competitive, and additional markets will likely be developed to push for this grown.

With these new options, especially as consumers seek to be excited about these opportunities, prominent media outlets are predicting that the strains available to consumers will likely see an extended “dessert craze,” as products like Gushers and Runtz become more appealing flowers than the savory flavors, like GMO Cookies. However, with this opportunity, there’s a chance that CBD will be seen as more of a potent medicine and wellness product, rather than a recreational option. Basically, consumers will start to understand what is offered to them more effectively.

Vaping became a big concern in 2019, and many industry experts and authoritative publications don’t believe the heat is wearing off any time soon. Multiple states have already implemented bans, regardless of the use of cannabis or tobacco vaping products, which will probably push users to choose edibles and natural options instead. The idea of a clean and tamper-proof product will be in higher demand. While the FDA is expected to impose on the industry with new vaping regulations, it may still survive at a minuscule level.

Ethical Practices

The CBD market is still filled with a lot of “unknown” factors, regarding what is actually in the products that consumers use. After all, this industry is still very new, and the creation of proper guidelines was rather difficult as the industry started to expand. There were many brands that manage to have integrity in their work with ethical business practices, but there are even more brands that directly went the opposite direction.

Mark Case, the founder and CEO of the International Hemp Auction and Market in Knoxville, Tennessee, makes a good point about the way that the market has changed, warning,

“2020 is not a year for gamblers. Rather, it will be successful only for those who are wise and prudent, fully integrated and who work with a good business plan to go the long haul.”

Unethical business practices will likely be more heavily criticized and regulated through the next year, as consumers start to expect more reliable lab testing and authentic lab reports with new regulations. Consumers have educated themselves, and it will become harder to fool that average CBD user.

CEO of Validcare, Patrick McCarthy, pointed out,

“The U.S. consumer is going to wake up to the fact that certification and dosing matters. They’re going to get particular, where they’ve been trying things in the past. They’re going to start really paying attention to, what is the product I’m taking? How do I know that it’s safe? How do I know how much that I should take, and who says it’s safe?”

Since the market is projected to be more effectively regulated, it wouldn’t be a stretch to say that major brands and retailers will be prepared to get involved. The market alone is set to reach over $25 billion by 2025, and companies like Walmart, Amazon, and Whole Foods will likely want a piece of the action.

Move Over CBD, Make Room for CBG, CBN and THC-V Cannabinoids

CBD became the cannabis industry’s global leader in recognition, sales and popularity – but what about any of the 100 plus cannabinoids found in marijuana and hemp plants? The new decade may lead with CBD as the prized cannabis compound, but there are a few cousin cannabinoids like CBN, CGB and THC-V which may follow CBD’s growth path.

As mentioned, with the passing of the Farm Bill last year and the constant mention of cannabis in politics, pretty much everyone has already heard of CBD by now. The non-intoxicating substance comes from both hemp and cannabis, and it is touted as a solution to wellness, pain, and a million other purposes. Even when its popularity and niche-ness wears off, CBD will likely remain a staple of this industry, just like THC. However, THC and CBD are two of over 100 cannabinoids that presently exist in the cannabis plant, and others could easily line up to offer benefits to the public, according to the latest science and research.

CBG, or cannabigerol, is considered to be the “mother cannabinoid,” earning the nickname because nearly all other cannabinoids that are presently known start with CBG as their preceding letters. Ultraviolet (UV) light transforms a part of CBGA that then becomes CBCa, CBDA, or THCA.

The creators of the various cannabinoids and cannabis strains haven’t been very interested in maximizing this compound since its presence inherently means that there is less THC. While cannabinoids largely have the same properties, CBG seems to offer an elevated antibacterial, antispasmodic, and vasodilation effect, which is why it is the first one on this list to watch out for. While there’s a possibility that CBG could take CBD’s place, it is equally likely that the two will be able to coexist for their various purposes.

CBG has a unique ability to become something much different than its natural state, according to some growers. Though THC is restricted by the percentage it offers in a cannabis plant, CBG is not governed by the same rules, and breeding a genotype with high CBG levels is relatively easy, as is harvesting it. With the right synthase, making CBG into multiple other cannabinoids is simple for producers.

CBN, or cannabinol, is another cannabinoid getting a lot of attention. CBN comes from the degradation of THC-A, which happens as a result of air and UV light exposure. Part of the reason that attention has been on this cannabinoid has been for its ability to push users into sleep, which is why old cannabis tends to make users tired. A dose of 5 mg of CBN was found to be as effective as a 10 mg dose of Diazepam in making consumers fall asleep. Sleep concerns are among the most common reasons for non-users to take up cannabis.

THC-V, or tetrahydrocannabivarin, may be currently popular, but it was originally recognized in 1970 as “skinny weed,” since it helps to reduce the user’s appetite. It suppresses the CB1 receptor, while THC and CBG tend to stimulate the appetite. When used with the proper timing, it can balance the effects of THC and improve insulin resistance.

Unlike CBD, THC-V offers a clear and focused high with the right dose, albeit short-lived. There’s very little research on the cannabinoid, but the information available suggests that the dosage seems to be the key to actually getting all of the effects that this compound can offer. With a dose of 3 mg to each kilogram of body weight in mice, insulin resistance improved, and weight loss was stimulated. For the average adult, that would mean a 200-mg dose is necessary, which seems rather difficult to reach in the market today. However, if the market shifts to the need for this cannabinoid, access to this much THC-V may become a reality.

For consumers that prefer the lack of intoxication that they get from CBD, the use of THC-A may hit the spot. This variation of THC is in the acid form, which basically means that it is structured the same way as THC before being heated. Research shows that this variation is highly effective in reducing inflammation, and it offers both neuroprotective and anti-cancer effects. Plus, the user can take high doses without the risk of feeling intoxicated.

THC-A has earned a lot of accolades from medical circles, which source the compound from juicing either fresh or frozen cannabis fan leaves. Many people believe it is easiest to source THC-A from this state, comparing it to other foods with broader nutritional profiles that preserve their nutrients by avoiding heat and creating cold-pressed juices.

Even the biggest fans of CBD and THC could end up finding a new favorite as the industry progresses. The stigma surrounding cannabis is slowly dying down, and the broad legalization happening throughout the country will likely pave the way for researchers to learn and develop more options for the public to try.

Get Ready 2020, CBD Is Coming!

It is clear CBD made its mark in 2019, becoming a household name and topping the charts in terms of most herbal supplement sales. As the election year begins the new decade, the 2020 CBD outlook has many catalysts that could kickstart the new calendar year off in a big way.

From new CBD product research and develop innovations (applications/product types), to accumulating scientific studies and supportive medical literature, to regulatory clarity and beneficial policy updates, to advancing third-party lab testing verification and certification of analysis proof standardization, cannabidiol is bound to have an incredible 2020 year as the cannabis green rush powers onward into the new decade.

Source: https://www.healthmj.com/cbd/cannabidiol-2020-outlook/

Entrepreneurs experiment as #Edtech catches on in India SPONSOR: BetterU Education Corp. $BTRU.ca $ARCL $CPLA $BPI $FC.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:30 PM on Monday, December 30th, 2019
SPONSOR:  BetterU Education Corp. aims to provide access to quality education from around the world. The company plans to bridge the prevailing gap in the education and job industry and enhance the lives of its prospective learners by developing an integrated ecosystem. Click here for more information.

Entrepreneurs experiment as edtech catches on in India

  • The need for online intervention has existed for a long time in India, but it’s in the last two years that edtech has scaled up
  • Edtech has proved to be a slippery slope for entrepreneurs in the past, but 2020 may offer a vision of new horizons

By: Malavika Velayanikal

BENGALURU : Chirag Arya comes from a family of teachers. Now the Georgia Tech graduate is building a “digital classroom” called PaperVideo, which he launched a few months back.

There are big players in this space, including the unicorn Byju’s that offers courses from kindergarten to class XII as well as for competitive exams. Another Bengaluru-based startup Vedantu, catering to middle and high school students, raised $42 million in a funding round led by Tiger Global in August. Unacademy, which is also based in Bengaluru and focuses on competitive exams, had a $50 million funding round in June.

But Arya feels there remains huge scope for entrepreneurs to experiment with new technology and design to make online learning more engaging and effective in such a massive, underserved market.

India has the largest population in the age group of five to 24, with 250 million school-going students, according to the India Brand Equity Foundation, a government trust.

The poor standard of school education, with a scarcity of good teachers, also makes a case for online resources. The Annual Status of Education report for 2018 found that three out of five eighth-graders in India struggle with simple math, such as subtraction.

One of the ways PaperVideo hopes to make a difference is by using machine learning to track a student’s activity on the portal. “Technology can give actionable insights to students and teachers on skill gaps they need to close,” explains Arya. “We can then create question sets, explanations and videos very quickly for concept-based learning.”

DIFFERENTIATION IS KEY

Apart from adaptive learning, a key area for differentiation is the way that content is delivered to raise the engagement level of students, doing away with the force-feeding usually associated with study. “The concepts remain the same, but we’ve done a lot of A/B testing to see how to present them in a way that students can relate to and retain,” says Arya.

The need for online intervention has existed for a long time in India, but it’s in the last two years that edtech has scaled up. This is reflected in the $1.1 billion that edtech startups in India raised in 2018 and 2019, compared to a little over half a billion dollars in the previous three years, according to data from Tracxn. One of the main reasons for the uptick is internet penetration.

“Due to the Jio effect, a large number of people are now on the internet. That has made it more feasible for edtech companies to scale than in the past,” says Rutvik Doshi, managing director of VC firm Inventus. An Inventus portfolio startup, Funtoot, which provides online tutorials for personalised learning in science and maths, recently got acquired by Mumbai-based Embibe, which was itself acquired last year by Reliance. The Mukesh Ambani conglomerate had committed an investment of $180 million to scale up Embibe, and its acquisitions are a part of that effort.

Most of the edtech tools in India are outcome-oriented to improve grades, crack exams or get certifications. Doshi sees that as a natural offshoot of the market.

“Your marks in school determine where you will do college, and your marks in college decide what kind of job you end up doing. That part of India is unlikely to change in the near future. So the primary focus of any kind of intervention has to be outcome-driven for mass-scale adoption,” says Doshi.

Where the differentiation comes is in the nature of intervention. Polish edtech startup Brainly, for example, claims that 20 million of its 150 million users are in India within a year of its launch in this country. It’s a crowd-sourced platform where students and teachers post questions and get answers. Like many other edtech startups, it uses a freemium model where paying users get special features or freedom from ads.

FINDING TAKERS ABROAD

The reverse is also happening, where Indian startups find takers abroad for edtech tools in tune with holistic learning. Bengaluru-based Quizizz, for example, finds that the largest number of adopters of its multiplayer quiz game is in US middle schools.

Gurugram-based Studypath has a game-based learning product called Splash Math for kids in kindergarten to grade 5. It claims to be the fastest-growing elementary math programme in the US with a presence in 77,000 schools.

Another emerging area is corporate training. MindTickle, which had a $40 million funding round in July, doubled its revenue this year by notching up clients like Ola, Cloudera, and MongoDB. Its platform coaches sales reps with simulated scenarios and gamified lessons.

Edtech has proved to be a slippery slope for entrepreneurs in the past, but 2020 may offer a vision of new horizons.

Source: https://www.livemint.com/

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #Bitcoin demand is strong affirms prominent #crypto-trader $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:26 AM on Monday, December 30th, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

Bitcoin demand is strong affirms prominent crypto-trader

By: Manu Naik

In a recent thread on Twitter, popular cryptocurrency trader, Scott Melker, posted his findings on analyzing candle wicks on the monthly Bitcoin charts.

Wicks usually show the extent to which an asset’s price fluctuated between the open and close of the candle’s time frame. Long upper wicks near a peak indicate market participants are trying to sell as high as possible, increasing selling pressure and driving the price down. Long lower wicks near a valley, however, show traders are looking to buy at the lowest price possible, increasing buying pressure and driving the price up.

Source: @scottmelker on Twitter

Melker, who goes by ‘The Wolf of All Streets’ on Twitter, noted that since May, when BTC nearly touched $14,000, the successive monthly candles’ upper wicks have been receding in length, becoming shorter and shorter toward October.

In a similar fashion, he pointed out how the monthly candles after October showed increasing lengths in their lower wicks, with the month of October itself showing a balance in length between upper and lower candle wicks. According to Melker, this indicated strong BTC selling pressure during the rally earlier this year, as well as stronger buying on dips.

Source: @scottmelker on Twitter

Additionally, Melker affirmed his hypothesis that demand is strong by drawing attention to the previous week’s swing failure pattern. Further, he claimed that BTC‘s last weekly candle’s wick crossing under the last swing’s low indicated the “price was pushed down to fit orders — engineered liquidity.”

Source: BTCUSD on TradingView

While not a flawless basis on which to expect a bull market, a look at the historical data for Bitcoin‘s weekly price shows candles with long wicks have tended to precede considerable movement in BTC value. As the market looks to buy at lower and lower levels, it seems likely that sellers will continue to prop the price up higher and higher, possibly leading to a gradual rise in Bitcoin value over the coming weeks and months.

Source: https://eng.ambcrypto.com/bitcoin-demand-is-strong-affirms-prominent-crypto-trader/

CLIENT FEATURE: CardioComm Solutions $EKG.ca – Connecting Your Heart To The Cloud $ATE.ca $TLT.ca $OGI.ca $ACST.ca $IPA.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 4:01 PM on Friday, December 27th, 2019

Global Leaders in Mobile  ECG Connectivity

  • 20 years of medical credibility licensing technologies to hospitals, physicians, remote patient monitoring  platforms, research groups and commercial call centers
  • Sold into > 20 countries, with the largest customer base located in the US
  • Class II medical device clearances and device agnostic for collecting, viewing, recording, analyzing and  storing of ECGs for management of patient and consumer health
  • ECG solutions for both consumer (OTC) and medical (Rx) markets
  • Owns all IP and source code
  • Market expert contributor for reports in m‐health, mobile cardiac monitoring and new advances in  consumer health and wellness monitoring

Company Accolades

Recent Highlights

  • Company collaborates with ZANA Technologies GmbH to integrate mobile ECG management and Smartphone App technologies
    • ECG technologies to be tested within ZANA’s remote patient monitoring platform in 2020
    • CardioComm’s GEMS™ ECG reviewing and HeartCheck™ ECG monitoring technologies are being evaluated to support ZANA’s novel, voice-directed, remote patient monitoring and patient management platform.

Industry News

FULL DISCLOSURE: CardioComm Solutions Inc. is an advertising client of AGORA Internet Relations Corp.

Empower Clinics $CBDT.ca – #Marijuana On The 2020 Ballot: These States Could Vote $WEED.ca $CGC $ACB $APH $CRON.ca $HEXO.ca $OGI.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:10 PM on Friday, December 27th, 2019

SPONSOR:

Why Empower Clinics

  • A leading owner/operator of physician staffed health and pain management clinics.
  • Patient database of over 165,000 patients 
  • Platform generating $1.4M USD (9 months ending Sept. 30, 2019)
  • Proprietary technology platforms including Electronic Health Records portal and e-Commerce for CBD product distribution
  • Recently launched CBD extraction facility
  • First extraction system capacity = 6,000 Kg per year.
  • CBD based products are poised to be a $20B global industry by 2022
  • Medical cannabis is poised to be a $100B global industry by 2025

Marijuana On The 2020 Ballot: These States Could Vote

By:Tom Angell

Ever since Colorado and Washington became the first two states to approve marijuana legalization initiatives in 2012, additional states have joined them in each biennial election that has followed. And 2020 could be a banner year for cannabis on the ballot.

There are at least 16 states where advocates believe marijuana measures could go before voters next year—some considering full-scale recreational legalization while others would focus on medical cannabis.

Getty

Some of these would be citizen-led voter initiatives where activists collect signatures to qualify a measure for the ballot, while others would be referendums that lawmakers place before voters.

“Since the first adult-use legalization ballot initiative victory in 2012, the marijuana reform movement has successfully maintained its momentum,” Matthew Schweich, deputy director of the Marijuana Policy Project, said. “For four elections in a row there has been a legalization victory at the ballot box, and the upcoming election could deliver more victories in one day than ever before.”

Of course, not every initiated effort will end up securing enough funding, or formulating solid enough campaign plans, to collect sufficient signatures to qualify their measures for voters’ consideration on Election Day—but these are all states where activists or lawmakers have talked seriously about putting cannabis questions on ballots.

It’s not feasible to list every measure that activists took the modest trouble to initially file, and this overview looks primarily at efforts that seem most poised to advance. This post also doesn’t include the long list of states that might legalize marijuana through actions by lawmakers, as opposed to citizens via the ballot—which will be the focus of a separate piece.

In alphabetical order, here’s a comprehensive overview of the states where marijuana could be on the ballot in 2020.

Arizona

Voters in Arizona narrowly rejected a marijuana legalization measure in 2016, thanks in part to sizable campaign contributions from the pharmaceutical industry. In 2020, though, the state’s medical cannabis companies will be working to pass an initiative making marijuana legal for adults.

The effort, known as Smart & Safe Arizona, would allow people 21 and older to possess, consume, cultivate and purchase cannabis from licensed retailers. It would also create a pathway for individuals with prior convictions to have their records expunged, and it proposes using some tax revenue from legal sales to invest in communities disproportionately impacted by prohibition.

Dispensary chains MedMen, Harvest Health and Recreation and Curaleaf Holdings are helping to fund the campaign. Advocates must collect 237,645 valid signatures from voters by July 2 in order to put the measure on the ballot.

Arkansas

In 2016, Arkansas voters approved a constitutional amendment allowing patients to have legal access to medical cannabis. Now, activists are floating separate measures to more broadly end marijuana prohibition and expunge past records.

In order to place the measures on the ballot, Arkansans for Cannabis Reform must gather 89,151 signatures by July 3, including required minimums in at least 15 counties.

Under the legalization proposal, adults over 21 would be allowed to to possess up to four ounces of marijuana, two ounces of cannabis concentrate and edible products containing cannabis with THC content of 200 mg or less. They could also cultivate up to six cannabis seedlings and six cannabis flowering plants for personal use.

A system of legal and regulated sales would be created, with tax revenue funding the program’s implementation, public pre-kindergarten and after school programs as well as the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.

Under the separate expungements measure, people with certain prior marijuana convictions would be able to petition courts for relief, including release from incarceration, reduction of remaining sentences and restoration of voting rights.

Connecticut

Despite the advancement of marijuana legalization legislation through several General Assembly committees this year, lawmakers weren’t able to form the consensus needed to get a bill to the desk of supportive Gov. Ned Lamont (D).

But while Connecticut doesn’t have the initiative process where activists can collect signatures to place a question on the ballot, some elected officials have floated the idea of advancing a referendum that would let voters weigh in on ending prohibition.

Most activists would prefer that lawmakers go ahead and just pass a legalization bill—because running a public education campaign to ensure a ballot measure passes would be expensive at a time when resources are needed in other states. A general referendum question would also require subsequent implementation legislation, and even putting it on the ballot in time for 2020 would take a supermajority of 75 percent of legislators.

Florida

Florida voters approved a constitutional amendment to legalize medical cannabis in 2016. Now, a group called Make It Legal Florida is working to place a full-scale marijuana legalization measure on the key swing state’s 2020 presidential ballot.

The proposed amendment to the state constitution would allow adults 21 and over to possess up to 2.5 ounces of cannabis. Existing medical marijuana dispensaries would be permitted to sell marijuana to adults. While the measure doesn’t mention a licensing system to establish separate recreational shops, lawmakers will likely enact detailed regulations should it pass, as they did with the prior medical cannabis measure.

The campaign is being backed by cannabis companies such as MedMen and Parallel (formerly known as Surterra Wellness).

A separate group, Regulate Florida, recently acknowledged that its lesser-funded effort wouldn’t be be able to successfully collect enough signatures to qualify for the ballot.

Idaho

Idaho is one of only a handful of states in the U.S. that doesn’t even allow patients to access CBD medications with low-THC content. That could change, however, under a proposed medical marijuana ballot measure for which activists are currently collecting signatures.

The Idaho Cannabis Coalition’s proposal would let approved patients and their caregivers possess up to four ounces of marijuana. A system of licensed and regulated growers, processors, testers and retail dispensaries would be established.

Patients would not be allowed to grow their own medicine unless they qualify for a hardship exemption for those who have have a physical, financial or distance difficulty in acquiring marijuana at a dispensary. Those patients could grow up to six plants.

Organizers need to collect 55,057 valid signatures from voters in order to qualify the measure for the ballot.

Mississippi

In September, activists filed what they believe are more than enough signatures to qualify a medical cannabis measure for Mississippi’s 2020 ballot.

If the initiative is approved, patients with any of 22 conditions—including cancer, chronic pain and post-traumatic stress disorder—be allowed to possess up to 2.5 ounces of cannabis per 14-day period.

The secretary of state is expected to announce whether organizers collected a sufficient number of signatures for ballot access early in 2020.

Missouri

Voters in the Show Me State approved a medical cannabis measure in 2018.

Now, activists are looking to expand on that with a broader marijuana legalization. Several different proposed measures to end cannabis prohibition have been filed with the secretary of state, but the campaigns at this point seem to be operating largely under the radar, so it remains to be seen whether any group will have the funding needed to mount a successful signature gathering drive.

Last year three separate medical cannabis measures ended up qualifying for the ballot, but two were rejected by voters.

Montana

Montana already has a medical cannabis program, and activists are looking to expand that to include legal adult use of marijuana in 2020.

The group New Approach Montana is currently in the process of drafting two separate legalization measures—one constitutional and one statutory.

The details of the proposals aren’t yet publicly available, but the statutory proposal will need roughly 25,500 valid voters signatures to qualify for ballot access, while the constitutional amendment would require nearly 51,000 signatures.

The national groups Marijuana Policy Project and New Approach PAC are backing the effort.

A separate group, MontanaCan, has already filed its own legalization proposal.

New Jersey

While legislative leaders in the Garden State, along with Gov. Phil Murphy (D), had hoped to simply pass a bill legalizing marijuana this year, the votes didn’t materialize. Instead, lawmakers decided to put the question of ending cannabis prohibition directly before voters.

Under the referendum adopted by the Senate and Assembly, the November 2020 ballot will contain a question that reads, “Do you approve amending the Constitution to legalize a controlled form of marijuana called cannabis?”

If the proposed constitutional amendment is approved, lawmakers would then get to work adopting regulations for the legal cannabis industry.

New York

Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) put marijuana legalization language in his budget submission earlier this year but, despite support for the idea from leading lawmakers, disagreement over particulars such as how to spend tax revenue meant that the proposal didn’t get over the finish line.

Indications are that Cuomo and lawmakers will try the legislative route again in 2020, but the governor has floated the idea of referring the question to voters at the ballot box.

“The opposition Senate position is there is no state that has passed it without a referendum. It’s never been done just by the legislature,” he said in a radio interview this year. “I believe Jersey may be moving to a referendum also, but Massachusetts, et cetera, the legislature acted after a referendum. So that’s what the senators who oppose it say—they think it’s an overreach by the legislature.”

If lawmakers can’t agree on the details of legalization again this year, Cuomo may call skittish legislators’ bluff and seek to advance a cannabis referendum to fulfill what he has said is one of his top agenda items.

North Dakota

North Dakota voters approved a medical cannabis ballot measure in 2016 and two years later swiftly defeated a proposal to more broadly legalize marijuana.

But advocates may have another chance in 2020. While the unsuccessful 2018 measure contained no limits on the amount of cannabis people could possess or grow, the new initiative, written by the same group of activists, has robust regulations—including a ban on home cultivation.

Legalization supporters hope more voters will agree to the narrower proposal this time around.

There is also another proposed legalization measure vying to collect the 13,452 valid signatures needed for ballot access.

Ohio

In 2015, Ohio voters overwhelmingly rejected a marijuana legalization measure that even many longtime activists opposed due its proposed regulatory structure that would have granted control over cannabis cultivation to the very same group of wealthy individuals who paid to put it on the ballot.

Advocates have cited the Buckeye State as a potential target for another try in 2020, though no proposals have yet been filed.

Voters in number of communities throughout the state have in recent years approved measures to decriminalize marijuana possession on a local basis, indicating that there is public support for cannabis reform if placed on the state ballot again next year.

That said, Ohio is a large state, and qualifying initiatives there is very expensive, so any successful effort will likely need to have industry support.

Oklahoma

Voters in Oklahoma shocked national observers by approving a medical cannabis ballot measure last year during a midterm primary election by a solid margin, even though demographics thought to be most supportive of marijuana reform tend to turn out in bigger numbers during general elections in presidential voting years.

Since then, people have flocked to the program, with nearly 5 percent of the state’s population registered as approved patients.

Now, seeing potential for expansion, activists are looking to follow up next year with a broader marijuana legalization initiative.

Backed by the national New Approach PAC, the new effort will have to collect 178,000 valid signatures from registered voters to qualify for ballot access.

Under the measure as initially filed, adults 21 and older would be allowed to possess, cultivate and purchase cannabis from licensed retailers. There would be a 15 percent excise tax on marijuana sales, revenue from which would cover implementation costs and fund schools, drug treatment programs and other public service programs.

Personal possession would be capped at one ounce and individuals could grow up to six plants. The proposal would also provide expungements for those with prior marijuana convictions.

Backers recently withdrew the initial measure, but plan to redraft it with feedback from the medical cannabis community, with a new version expected to be filed soon.

Rhode Island

Lawmakers in Rhode Island have filed marijuana legalization bills for the last several sessions but they have never been brought to a vote. In 2019, Gov. Gina Raimondo (D) went so far as to put legalization language in her budget proposal, but it was removed by legislative leaders.

The governor has indicated she will make another attempt in 2020, but if that doesn’t pan out, lawmakers may consider putting the question to voters via a referendum.

In 2016, Raimondo said she is “open to” giving voters a chance to decide on legalization via a ballot question. And House Speaker Nicholas Mattiello (D), said that he was “considering the possibility of placing a non-binding referendum question on the ballot regarding the use of recreational marijuana.”

A bill for a marijuana referendum that was filed in 2018 never received a vote, but it’s an avenue the legislature might consider pursuing next year as legalization comes online in more nearby states.

Nebraska

Lawmakers in Nebraska have repeatedly rejected medical cannabis legislation. Frustrated with their colleagues’ unwillingness to change the law to let patient legally medicate, two senators in the state’s unicameral legislature are partnering with local and national advocacy groups to put the question directly to voters through a ballot initiative.

Under the proposed constitutional amendment, physicians or nurse practitioners would be able to issue recommendations to patients, who would then be allowed to “use, possess, access, and safely and discreetly produce an adequate supply of cannabis, cannabis preparations, products and materials, and cannabis-related equipment to alleviate diagnosed serious medical conditions without facing arrest, prosecution, or civil or criminal penalties.”

The measure would also provide for a system of legal and regulated cannabis distribution through dispensaries.

Organizers must collect valid signatures from roughly 122,000 voters in order to make the ballot.

South Dakota

The South Dakota secretary of state’s office certified this month that activists collected more than enough signatures to qualify a medical cannabis measure for the November 2020 ballot.

If approved, patients suffering from debilitating medical conditions would be allowed to possess and purchase up to three ounces of marijuana from a licensed dispensary with approval from their doctors. They could also grow at least three plants, or more if authorized by a physician.

A separate campaign led by a former federal prosecutor is currently collecting signatures in support of a proposed constitutional amendment to legalize marijuana for adult use.

That measure would allow adults 21 and older to possess and distribute up to one ounce of marijuana and cultivate up to three cannabis plants. The state Department of Revenue would issue licenses for manufacturers, testing facilities and retailers.

South Dakota voters rejected medical cannabis ballot measures in 2006 and 2010, but advocates hope that the changing national and regional climate on marijuana reform means that voters will be more supportive this time around.

Non-Marijuana Initiatives On State Ballots

Activists in a few states are taking steps to bring broader drug policy reform questions to voters’ ballots in 2020.

A group called Decriminalize California is preparing to soon begin collecting signatures in support of a measure to legalize psilocybin mushrooms.

In Oregon, organizers are already collecting signatures to qualify separate initiatives to legalize the psychedelic fungus for therapeutic uses and to decriminalize all drugs while expanding funding for substance misuse treatment programs.

2020 Will Be A Big Year For Marijuana

While 2019 was a huge year for marijuana, 2020 is poised to be even more impactful.

Separate from the huge number of states where cannabis and drug policy reform questions could appear before voters on ballots, lawmakers in many states are expected to consider bills to legalize marijuana.

Meanwhile, advocates will push to expand on cannabis reform momentum in Congress, where this year a marijuana banking bill was approved by the full House of Representatives and legislation to federally legalize cannabis and fund programs to begin repairing the harms of the war on drugs advanced at the committee level.

And with presidential candidates increasingly embracing cannabis legalization and other far-reaching reforms, 2020 is poised to be the biggest year for marijuana yet.

“In 2020, hundreds of thousands of Americans will turn out to vote not for the top of the ticket, but for the rights of cannabis consumers in upwards of a dozen states,” said NORML Political Director Justin Strekal. “As we have seen in previous elections, marijuana initiatives increase voter turnout in nearly every demographic. With public support growing by the day, 2020 will be the biggest year yet for expanding the freedoms and liberties of cannabis consumers.”

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/tomangell/2019/12/26/marijuana-on-the-2020-ballot-these-states-could-vote/#66043c2679df

What Will Be The Biggest #Edtech Trends In 2020? – SPONSOR: BetterU Education Corp. $BTRU.ca $ARCL $CPLA $BPI $FC.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:00 PM on Friday, December 27th, 2019
SPONSOR:  BetterU Education Corp. aims to provide access to quality education from around the world. The company plans to bridge the prevailing gap in the education and job industry and enhance the lives of its prospective learners by developing an integrated ecosystem. Click here for more information.

What Will Be The Biggest Edtech Trends In 2020?

  • The focus today is more on immersive experience-based learning & vocational and skill-based training
  • Digital innovation is disrupting and redefining India’s education landscape
  • Interactivity has taken centre stage and data and analytics are playing a key role

By: Meha Agarwal

From the ancient to modern era, Indian education has transformed from gurukuls to digital learning platforms and from handwritten manuscripts to app-based programs on smartphones and tablets. Education technology or edtech has revolutionised the way education is consumed in the present era.

“Today, stuff you needed to know at a basic level is available for free on Khan Academy or similar platforms. This “Basics for free” is forcing a higher bar for truly quality education.  In future, a platform that provides content, or does a modicum of personalisation will not be enough. A deep understanding of how best to teach and innovation in the way one learns will lead to better learning outcomes of the future, as tech and connectivity are becoming cheaper,” said Manan Khurma, CEO and founder, CueMath.

So, how different education in the modern era is?

Learning today is not limited to books but has become more of an immersive experience. Lalit Singh, COO of Udacity believes that new-age technologies like AI/ ML are pushing boundaries of education as well as pushing the new generation to not only rethink what we learn but how we learn. A virtual journey into a lattice, touch and feel your way, or a virtual journey into Schrodinger’s box, see for yourself if the cat is dead or alive?, or walk back in history to the Indus valley civilisation and experience it. “An experience can be recalled much more easily, cross-referenced at will by our brain, making our learning grow exponentially,” added Khurma.

Virtual learning is now a global norm. Also, peer-to-peer learning apps and web portals are enabling students to connect with their peers and share knowledge, despite geographical barriers. Pearson found that 50% of learners in India use the internet for self-study. The survey also revealed that 78% of Indians believe students today have the benefit of using tech-based tools and smart devices to support their learning.

“The continued reliance on online supplementary courses, video tutorials and edtech platforms indicate a shift is taking place – from classroom learning to virtual learning,” said Arshan Vakil, founder and CEO of Enguru.

Also, the focus today is more on vocational and skill-based training. Khurma believes the rapid pace of change, powered by the immense data engines and breakthrough tech riding on massive data, will now require all of us to re-skill 2-3 times in a duration of a lifetime.

Simplilearn’s CEO and founder Krishna Kumar seconds Manan’s thoughts and believes the edtech startups are willing to encash this opportunity well. “With more learners taking to online skilling programs, the Indian Edtech sector is today going through a phase of metamorphosis. Online training programs are becoming the answer to upskilling and building a strong skill set for career growth and development as a professional,” Kumar added.

Mrinal Mohit, Chief Operating Officer, BYJU’S further emphasises that the advent of digital learning tools has pushed digital consumption of education at home. Interactivity has taken centre stage and data and analytics are playing a key role in personalisation and customisation of learning. “Importance of formative learning and early conceptual understanding has gained more acceptance. Also, edtech startups are now experimenting with vernacular languages to cater to the huge student population outside metros,” he added.

Yet India has a lot to learn from its global peers. As Shobhit Bhatnagar, cofounder and CEO Gradeup highlights, in China companies like VIPKid, Zouyebang, Yuantiku have taken a big leap in Chinese live tutoring market. With focus on student outcomes, they have successfully been able to scale and innovate their products & processes at a rapid speed, resulting in better engagement and effective results for students.

What are the key drivers of India’s edtech growth?

The educational technology sector in India has been growing rapidly. The increasing demand for tech-enabled learning solutions can be gauged by the fact that there are a total 4,450 edtech startups operating in India currently.

According to Datalabs by Inc42, 186 unique edtech startups have raised $1.73 Bn funding since 2014. Key edtech players holding a majority market share in India’s education system include Byju’s, Unacademy, Vedantu, Coursera, Toppr and Flintobox among others.

“Digital innovation is disrupting and redefining India’s education landscape, widening access to quality education and promoting student engagement. With the advent of EdTech platforms, video-based content, and peer-to-peer learning portals, online learning is taking over traditional, classroom-based learning,” added Enguru’s Vakil.

At the same time, there are several government programmes as well which are playing a key role in propping up edtech. This includes Skill India, SWAYAM, Sankalp (Skills Acquisition and Knowledge Awareness for Livelihood Promotion), STRIVE, Diksha, National Digital Library, eBasta among others.

Edtech Vision: The Biggest Edtech Trends To Follow In 2020

The industry leaders Inc42 spoke to a shared consensus on one point altogether: the Digital learning tools/aids utilising AI/ ML/ data analytics and offering personalisation and customisation will see greater adoption from teachers, students and parents.

Because of better awareness of the positive impact of digital learning, the coming year will see teachers/educators/ parents/ students increasingly adopt tech-enabled learning tools to support their students’ learning needs. This could be in a classroom or in an after-school learning setup.

Here are a few more trends shared by industry leaders for the upcoming year

“In 2020, learning will go Phygital which will bring in an effective blend of physical and digital learning. Seamless offline-online integration will add a whole new dimension to digital learning and key to delivering impactful learning programs. The environment will be conducive to a homogenous format of learning, which will translate into learners ‘learning’ while they are ‘doing’.” ~ Mrinal Mohit, COO, BYJU’S

“Personalisation is the new trend of 2020  We believe that every student is different and so is his learning needs so our focus going forward would be on providing personalised learning needs.” ~  Anil Nagar, CEO and Cofounder, Adda247

“The demolition of ‘one size fits all’ approach will be the biggest disruption in the edtech industry in 2020.  Usage of live interactive video content, emphasis on building E2Q (Emotional & Employability Quotient) along with subject matter knowledge and adoption of blockchain at the backend, will be the other emerging trends in edtech.” ~ Mayank Kumar, Cofounder and Managing Director, upGrad

“In the year 2020, technology will actually manifest itself in student’s everyday learning rather than just being in the newspapers. We will see a stronger implementation of ML and AI in the next 10 years; giving rise to truly adaptive platforms and personalized learning paths. We also expect demand for physical learning spaces for students, where students have more freedom to experiment and learn by doing.”  ~ Zishaan Hayath, CEO and Founder, Toppr

“The days ahead will witness an increase in access to online education for both students and professionals alike and more learners from non-metro cities taking to online skilling programs. This points towards the need to keep online education more experiential and engaging as well as design programs as per industry standards.” ~ Krishna Kumar, CEO and Founder, Simplilearn

“Lifelong learning has become an essential part of the job and people now understand that constantly upskilling themselves is what keeps them competitive in the job market. AI, ML and data science will continue to dominate the conversation in the workplace. In addition, employees are increasingly focused on improving their soft skills as they play an important role in their holistic development.” ~ Irwin Anand, MD, Udemy India

“Incorporation of gamification into video-based learning modules will be a trend in 2020. The Global Learner Survey released by Pearson suggests that 74-79% of Indians think that YouTube will become a primary learning tool in the near future. Capitalizing on this trend, EdTech companies are incorporating gamification elements such as points, timers and level-enhancement badges into video lessons to drive student engagement and improve knowledge acquisition.” Arshan Vakil, Founder and CEO, Enguru

“I personally feel we need to abandon the blackboard, or the digital blackboard and tech should help us deeply personalise to create the right learning path, medium, tools even for a classroom of one student,” Manan Khurma, founder and CEO, CueMath

Source: https://inc42.com/features/what-will-be-the-biggest-edtech-trends-in-2020/

PyroGenesis $PYR.ca Announces Completion of SR&ED Tax Credit Financing $LMT $RTN $NOC $UTX $HPQ.ca $DDD.ca $SSYS $PRLB

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:07 PM on Monday, December 23rd, 2019
  • Announced today that it completed a financing in which the Company received funding pursuant to a Term Loan Agreement with R & D Capital Inc. for a total of CAN $247,500
  • Loan is guaranteed by an existing security interest in favor of R & D.

MONTREAL, Dec. 23, 2019  — PyroGenesis Canada Inc. (http://pyrogenesis.com) (TSX-V: PYR) (OTCQB: PYRNF) (FRA: 8PY), a high-tech company, (the “Company”, the “Corporation” or “PyroGenesis”) that designs, develops, manufactures and commercializes plasma atomized metal powder, plasma waste-to-energy systems and plasma torch products, announced today that it completed a financing in which the Company received funding pursuant to a Term Loan Agreement with R & D Capital Inc. (“R & D”) for a total of CAN $247,500 with respect to its Scientific Research and Experimental Development Tax credits (“SR&ED Tax Credits”) for the Company’s fiscal year ending December 31, 2019,  (the “Loan”).

The Loan is guaranteed by an existing security interest in favor of R & D. The security interest is on the universality of the Company’s assets excluding its Intellectual Property but including the refundable portion of its SR&ED Tax Credits for the fiscal years ending December 31, 2019.

“This financing, which we did today, is similar to previous SR&ED type of financings that the Company has entered into which is entirely non-dilutive to shareholders,” said Mr. P. Peter Pascali, President and CEO of PyroGenesis.

In connection with the Loan, the Company paid R&D, fees of $22,275 CAD.

Separately, with respect to the recent decline in the stock price, Mr. P. Peter Pascali commented as follows:

“We have no knowledge of any material news which could explain the recent decline in the Company’s stock price, and we have reported these observations to the appropriate authorities,” said Mr. Pascali.  “In fact, this recent decline is even stranger given the recent news the subject of which is even more imminent than it was when we first disclosed it, which stands to reason. On a separate note, we expect to build a solid DROSRITE™ business on top of the recent news as we are actively working on a number of DROSRITE™ deals in Europe.”

About PyroGenesis Canada Inc.

PyroGenesis Canada Inc., a high-tech company, is the world leader in the design, development, manufacture and commercialization of advanced plasma processes and products. We provide engineering and manufacturing expertise, cutting-edge contract research, as well as turnkey process equipment packages to the defense, metallurgical, mining, advanced materials (including 3D printing), oil & gas, and environmental industries. With a team of experienced engineers, scientists and technicians working out of our Montreal office and our 3,800 m2 manufacturing facility, PyroGenesis maintains its competitive advantage by remaining at the forefront of technology development and commercialization. Our core competencies allow PyroGenesis to lead the way in providing innovative plasma torches, plasma waste processes, high-temperature metallurgical processes, and engineering services to the global marketplace. Our operations are ISO 9001:2015 and AS9100D certified, and have been since 1997. PyroGenesis is a publicly-traded Canadian Corporation on the TSX Venture Exchange (Ticker Symbol: PYR) and on the OTCQB Marketplace. For more information, please visit www.pyrogenesis.com.

This press release contains certain forward-looking statements, including, without limitation, statements containing the words “may”, “plan”, “will”, “estimate”, “continue”, “anticipate”, “intend”, “expect”, “in the process” and other similar expressions which constitute “forward- looking information” within the meaning of applicable securities laws. Forward-looking statements reflect the Corporation’s current expectation and assumptions and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated. These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties including, but not limited to, our expectations regarding the acceptance of our products by the market, our strategy to develop new products and enhance the capabilities of existing products, our strategy with respect to research and development, the impact of competitive products and pricing, new product development, and uncertainties related to the regulatory approval process. Such statements reflect the current views of the Corporation with respect to future events and are subject to certain risks and uncertainties and other risks detailed from time-to-time in the Corporation’s ongoing filings with the securities regulatory authorities, which filings can be found at www.sedar.com, or at www.otcmarkets.com. Actual results, events, and performance may differ materially. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. The Corporation undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward- looking statements either as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by applicable securities laws. Neither the TSX Venture Exchange, its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) nor the OTCQB accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this press release.

SOURCE PyroGenesis Canada Inc.

For further information please contact:
Rodayna Kafal, Vice President Investors Relations and Strategic Business Development,
Phone: (514) 937-0002, E-mail: [email protected]

RELATED LINK: http://www.pyrogenesis.com/

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca Announces Completion of Private Placement with St-Georges Eco-Mining $SX $SX.ca $SXOOF #Bitcoin #Ethereum $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 5:26 PM on Monday, December 23rd, 2019
  • Announce that it has acquired 3,000,000 units of St-Georges Eco-Mining Corp. at a price of $0.10 per Unit
  • In consideration, the Company has issued an aggregate of 5,000,000 common shares of the Company at a deemed price of $0.05 per common share and made a cash payment in the amount of $50,000.

TORONTO, Dec. 23, 2019 – ThreeD Capital Inc. (the “Company”) (CSE:IDK), a Canadian-based venture capital firm focused on investments in promising, early stage companies and ICOs with disruptive capabilities, is pleased to announce that it has acquired 3,000,000 units (the “Units”) of St-Georges Eco-Mining Corp. (“St-Georges”) at a price of $0.10 per Unit. In consideration, the Company has issued an aggregate of 5,000,000 common shares of the Company at a deemed price of $0.05 per common share (the “Offering”) and made a cash payment in the amount of $50,000. Each Unit of St-Georges consists of one common share (the “Share”) of St-Georges and one share purchase warrant (the “Warrant”) of St-Georges, with each Warrant being exercisable to acquire one additional Share at an exercise price of C$0.185 for a period of 9 months following the date of issuance.

“ThreeD is very pleased to deepen its relationship with St-Georges,” said ThreeD Capital’s Founder, Chairman and CEO Sheldon Inwentash.

“We are pleased to have the continuous support of ThreeD in our financing efforts. The company has been a supportive partner helping us expand our different business silos and making valuable introductions,” commented Mark Billings, Chairman of St-Georges.

All securities issued and issuable in connection with the Offering are subject to a statutory hold period expiring on April 24, 2020.

About ThreeD Capital Inc.

ThreeD is a publicly-traded Canadian-based venture capital firm focused on opportunistic investments in companies in the Junior Resources, Artificial Intelligence and Blockchain sectors. ThreeD seeks to invest in early stage, promising companies and ICOs where it may be the lead investor and can additionally provide investees with advisory services, mentoring and access to the Company’s ecosystem.

For further information:
Gerry Feldman, CPA, CA
Chief Financial Officer and Corporate Secretary
[email protected]
Phone: 416-941-8900 ext 106

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – Institutional Investment in #Crypto: Top 10 Takeaways of 2019 #Bitcoin #Ethereum $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:32 PM on Monday, December 23rd, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

Institutional Investment in Crypto: Top 10 Takeaways of 2019

By: Scott Army

This post is part of CoinDesk’s 2019 Year in Review, a collection of 100+ op-eds, interviews and takes on the state of blockchain and the world. Scott Army is the founder and CEO of digital asset manager Vision Hill Group. The following is a summary of the report: “An Institutional Take on the 2019/2020 Digital Asset Market”.

No. 1: There’s bitcoin, and then there’s everything else.

The industry is currently segmented into two main categories: Bitcoin and everything else. “Everything else” includes: Web3 innovation, Decentralized Finance (“DeFi”), Decentralized Autonomous Organizations, smart contract platforms, security tokens, digital identity, data privacy, gaming, enterprise blockchain or distributed ledger technology, and much more.

Non-crypto natives are seldom aware that there are multiple blockchains. Bitcoin, by virtue of it being the first blockchain network brought into the mainstream and by being the largest digital asset by market capitalization, is often the first stop for many newcomers and likely will continue to be for the foreseeable future.

No. 2: Bitcoin is perhaps market beta, for now.

In traditional equity markets, beta is defined as a measure of volatility, or unsystematic risk an individual stock possesses relative to the systematic risk of the market as a whole.  The difficulty in defining “market beta” in a space like digital assets is that there is no consensus for a market proxy like the S&P 500 or Dow Jones.  Since the space is still very early in its development, and bitcoin has dominant market share (~68 percent at the time of writing), bitcoin is often viewed as the obvious choice for beta, despite the drawbacks of defining “market beta” as a single asset with idiosyncratic tendencies.

Bitcoin’s size and its institutionalization (futures, options, custody, and clear regulatory status as a commodity), have enabled it to be an attractive first step for allocators looking to get exposure (both long and short) to the digital asset market, suggesting that bitcoin is perhaps positioned to be digital asset market beta, for now.

No. 3: Despite slow conversion, substantial progress was made on growing institutional investor interest in 2019.

Education, education, education.  Blockchain technology and digital assets represent an extraordinarily complex asset class – one that requires a non-trivial time commitment to undergo a proper learning curve. While handfuls of institutions have already started to invest in the space, a very small amount of institutional capital has actually made it in (relative to the broader institutional landscape), gauged by the size of the asset class and the public market trading volumes. This has led many to repeatedly ask: “when will the herd actually come?”

The reality is that institutional investors are still learning – slowly getting comfortable – and this process will continue to take time.  Despite educational progress through 2019, some institutions are wondering if it’s too early to be investing in this space, and whether they can potentially get involved in investing in digital assets in the future and still generate positive returns, but in ways that are de-risked relative to today.

Despite a few other challenges imposed on larger institutional allocators with respect to investing in digital assets, true believers inside these large organizations are emerging, and the processes for forming a digital asset strategy are either getting started or already underway. 

No. 4: Long simplicity, short complexity

Another trend we observed emerge this year was a shift away from complexity and toward simplicity. We saw significant growth in simple, passive, low-cost structures to capture beta. With the lowest-friction investor adoption focused on the largest liquid asset in the space – bitcoin – the proliferation of single asset vehicles has increased.  These private vehicles are a result of delayed approval of an official bitcoin ETF by the SEC.

In addition to the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust, other bitcoin-focused products this year include the launch of Bakkt, the launch of Galaxy Digital’s two new bitcoin funds, Fidelity’s bitcoin product rollout, TD Ameritrade’s bitcoin trading service on Nasdaq via its brokerage platform, 3iQ’s recent favorable ruling for a bitcoin fund and Stone Ridge Asset Management’s recent SEC approval for its NYDIG Bitcoin Strategy Fund, based on cash-settled bitcoin futures. 

We also observed a growing institutional appetite for simpler hedge fund and venture fund structures. For the last several years, many fundamental-focused crypto-native hedge funds operated hybrid structures with the use of side-pockets that enabled a barbell strategy approach to investing in both the public and private digital asset markets.  These hedge funds tend to have longer lock-up periods – typically two or three years – and low liquidity. While this may be attractive from an opportunistic perspective, the reality is it’s quite complicated from an institutional perspective for reporting purposes. 

No. 5: Active management’s been challenged, but differentiated sources of alpha are emerging.

For the year-to-date period ended Q3 2019, active managers were collectively up 30 percent on an absolute return basis according to our tracking of approximately 50 institutional-quality funds, compared to bitcoin being up 122 percent over the same time period. 

Bitcoin’s performance this year, particularly in Q2 2019, has made it clear that its parabolic ascents challenge the ability of active managers to outperform bitcoin during the windows they occur. Active managers generally need to justify the fees they charge investors by outperforming their benchmark(s), which are often beta proxies, yet at the same time they need to avoid imprudent risk behavior that can potentially have swift and sizable negative effects on their portfolios. 

Interestingly, active management performance from the beginning of 2018 consistently outperformed passively holding bitcoin (with the exception of “opportunistic” managers who also take advantage of yield and staking opportunities, as of May 2019). This is largely due to various risk management techniques used to mitigate the negative performance drawdowns experienced throughout the extended market sell-off in 2018.

Source: Vision Hill Group

Although 2019 has challenged the large-scale success of these alpha strategies, they are nonetheless in the process of proving themselves out through various market cycles, and we expect this to be a growing theme in 2020.

No. 6: Token value accrual: Transitioning from subjective to objective

At the end of Q3 2019, according to dapp.com, there were 1,721 decentralized applications built on top of ethereum, with 604 of them actively used – more than any other blockchain. Ethereum also had 1.8 million total unique users, with just under 400,000 of them active – also more than any other blockchain. Yet, despite all this growing network activity, the value of ETH has remained largely flat throughout most of 2019 and is on track to end the year down approximately 10 percent at the time of writing (by comparison, BTC has nearly doubled in value over the same period). This begs the question: is ETH adequately capturing the economic value of the ethereum network’s activity, and DeFi in particular?

A new fundamental metric was introduced earlier this year by Chris Burniske – the Network Value to Token Value (“NVTV”) ratio – to ascertain whether the value of all assets anchored into a platform can be greater than the value of the base platform’s asset.

The ETH NVTV ratio has steadily declined throughout the last few years. There are likely to be several reasons for this, but I think one theory summarizes it best: most applications and tokens built and issued atop ethereum may be parasitic. ETH token holders are paying for the security of all these applications and tokens, via the inflation rate that is currently given to the miners – dilution for ETH holders, but not for holders of ethereum-based tokens.

This is not a bullish or bearish statement on ETH; rather it is an observation of early signs of network stack value capture in the space.

No. 7: Money or not, software-powered collateral economies are here

Another trend we observed this year is a larger migration away from “cryptocurrencies” in an ideological currency (e.g., money/payment and a means of exchange) sense, and toward digital assets for financial applications and economic utility.  A form of economic utility that took the stage this year is the notion of software-powered collateral economies. People generally want to hold assets with disinflationary or deflationary supply curves, because part of their promise is that they should store value well.  Smart contracts enable us to program the characteristics of any asset, thus it is not irrational to assume that it’s only a matter of time until traditional collateral assets get digitized and put to economic use on blockchain networks. 

The benefit of digital collateral is that it can be liquid and economically productive in its nature while at the same time serving its primary purpose (to collateralize another asset), yet without possessing the risks of traditional rehypothecation. If assets can be allocated for multiple purposes simultaneously, with the risks appropriately managed, we should see more liquidity, lower cost of borrowing, and more effective allocation of capital in ways the traditional world may not be able to compete with. 

No. 8: Network lifecycles: An established supply side meets a quiet but emerging demand side.

Supply side services in digital asset networks are services provided by a third party to a decentralized network in exchange for compensation allocated by that network. Examples include mining, staking, validation, bonding, curation, node operation and more, done to help bootstrap and grow these networks. Incentivizing the supply side is important in digital assets to facilitate their growth early in their lifecycles, from initial fundraising and distribution through the bootstrapping phase to eventual mainnet launches.


While there has been significant growth of this supply side of the equation in 2019 from funds, companies, and developers, the open question is how and when demand for these services will pick up. Our view is that as developer infrastructure continues to mature and activity begins to move “up the stack” toward the application layer, more obvious manifestations of product-market fit are likely to emerge with cleaner and simpler interfaces that will attract high volumes of users in the process. In essence, it is important to build the necessary infrastructure first (the supply side) to enable buy-in from the end users of those services (the demand side).

No. 9:  We are in the late innings of the smart contract wars.

While ethereum leads the space on adoption and moves closer to executing on its scalability initiatives, dozens of smart contract competitors fundraised in the market throughout 2018 and 2019 in an attempt to dethrone ethereum.   A handful have formally launched their chains and operate in mainnet as of the end of 2019, while many others remain in testnet or have stalled in development.

What’s been particularly interesting to observe is the accelerative pace of innovation – not just technologically, but economically (incentive mechanisms) and socially (community building) as well.  We expect many more smart contract competitors operating privately as of Q4 2019 to launch their mainnets in 2020. Thus, given the incoming magnitude of publicly observable experimentations throughout 2020, if a smart contract platform does not launch in 2020, it is likely to become disadvantageously positioned relative to the rest of the landscape as it relates to capturing substantial developer mindshare and future users and creating defensible network effects.

No. 10: Product-market fit is coming, if not already here

We don’t think human and financial capital would have continued pouring into the digital asset space in such great magnitude over the last several years if there wasn’t a focus on solving at least one very clear problem. The questionable sustainability of modern monetary theory is one of them, and Ray Dalio of Bridgerwater Associates has been quite vocal about it. Big Tech centralization is another. There are also growing global concerns related to data privacy and identity. And let’s not forget cybersecurity. The list goes on. We are at the tip of the iceberg as it relates to the products and applications blockchain technology enables, and mainstream users will come with growing manifestations of product-market fit. As more time and attention gets spent on diagnosing problems and working on solutions, the industry will begin to achieve its full potential. Facebook’s Libra and Twitter’s Bluesky initiative confirm that as an industry we are heading in the right direction.  

A 2020 look ahead

We see 2020 shaping up to be one of the brightest years on record for the digital asset industry. To be clear, this is not a price forecast; if we exclusively measured the health of the industry from a fundamental progress perspective, by various accounts and measures we should have been in a raging bull market for the last two years, and that has not been the case. Rather, we expect 2020 to be a year of accelerated industry maturation.

Source: Vision Hill Group

Digital assets are still an emerging asset class with many quickly evolving narratives, trends, and investment strategies.  It is important to note, that not all strategies are suitable for all investors. The size of allocations to each category will and should vary depending on the specific allocator’s type, risk tolerance, return expectations, liquidity needs, time horizon and other factors. What is encouraging is that as the asset class continues to grow and mature, the opacity slowly dissipates and clearly defined frameworks for evaluation will continue to emerge. This will hopefully lead to more informed investment decisions across the space. The future is bright for 2020 and beyond.

Source: https://www.coindesk.com/institutional-investment-in-crypto-top-10-takeaways-of-2019