Member Blog: The SAFE Banking Act Is Delayed. Again.
Here’s what cannabis businesses can do to make the most out of the current financial landscape.
Companies in the cannabis industry looking to start a relationship with federal banks and credit cards are going to have to wait a little longer. Despite bipartisan support, the Secure and Fair Enforcement (SAFE) Banking Act has stalled in the Senate; caught in minor disagreements, it has missed the opportunity for a vote during the summer session, leaving cannabis-related companies caught in financial limbo. Unfortunately, this isn’t new news: the first version of this bill was introduced to congress 10 years ago.
Politically, the main selling point is that the bill would boost the safety of the cash-heavy industry: Politicians point to an increased number of break-ins at dispensaries as a justification for allowing federal financial institutions to provide services such as bank accounts and credit card transactions to cannabis companies.
An easy political sell, the public safety angle – spelled out in the acronym SAFE – is usually the first (and only) benefit mentioned in the news. Yes, SAFE would allow dispensaries to shift away from cash transactions by permitting credit card companies to service businesses that produce, manufacture, distribute and sell cannabis, despite the fact it is a schedule 1 controlled substance.
But beyond preventing robberies, the bill would start to level the economic playing field for this growing industry that already faces an extremely high rate of federal taxation, on top of other disadvantages, such as higher transaction and banking costs that lead to pricing pressure – and make it tougher to compete with the illicit market.
Because of cannabis’ schedule 1 status, nationwide banks are not allowed to provide any services whatsoever to cannabis-related businesses. Even though the businesses are legal at the state level, national banks operate under a federal charter that prohibits such relationships – not just with dispensaries, anyone who does business with the cannabis industry – web designers, lawyers, marketers, etc.
(I learned that the hard way when, in the early days of working as a virtual CFO for cannabis companies, I had all of my Bank of America accounts – personal and business – frozen and shut down abruptly.)
Since federal banks cannot provide small business loans or even issue checking or savings accounts, cannabis-related businesses are limited to small banks (i.e. credit unions, state banks). They face higher borrowing costs, and receive lower interest rates, cutting them off from many of the privileges other industries enjoy. Best financial practices – like securing a line of credit or keeping operating cash in an interest-bearing account – may seem out of reach.
For cannabis-related companies that had been impatient to take advantage of this new legislation, the news is frustrating to say the least.
But there are lots of ways retailers can work within the current financial landscape. Here’s what I recommend.
- Seek an interest-bearing account – The smaller banks and credit unions servicing the cannabis industry typically do not offer these clients interest-bearing products. However, it is possible to find interest-bearing accounts for operating cash, for example through the fintech company Safe Harbor Financial, with rates starting around 1.5%.
- Secure a line of credit – With loans hard to come by, cannabis companies often feel as though they have to access capital from private investors, forcing them to give up equity. But seeking non-dilutive funding is possible – and recommended – once you’ve established your target operating cash balance of 10-30% of annual revenue.
Many cannabis friendly banks will offer unsecured lines of credit at rates of base rate +4% – but generally only in limited license states.
Note: although rates can be competitive in some cases, the amounts tend to be lower. However, since these facilities are often based on an amount per tax ID, multiple entities could each carry their own line of credit and increase total borrowing capacity.
- Facilitate compliant debit sales – We know cash-only can drive down retail sales and increase risk of theft or employee mismanagement. With credit cards unavailable, two popular, but non-compliant, solutions have been cashless ATMs and Mastercard and Visa debit cards. While cashless ATMs experienced a crackdown last December, the latest news suggests that Mastercard is also cutting off this popular work-around.
Rather than get caught up in the headlines, adopt compliant pin-based debit cards, through products such as Aeropay. Unlike traditional debit card transactions, customers will have a fee, and they’ll also have to set up a specific app to gain access, but as all other cashless options appear to be erased, the benefits outweigh the costs, especially for regulars.
Just make sure you’ve got a point of sale (POS) system with flexibility in terms of their API (application programming interface) – for example Flowhub – so that you can integrate the pin-based debit card payment method.
- Don’t pay monthly banking fees – While most banking institutions charge account fees to cannabis businesses, with a little research you can find some that waive those fees, for example Main Street Bank and Safe Harbor Financial.
- Keep deposits safe – Although the dust has settled since the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, cannabis businesses should still keep an eye on managing their banking risk. Since programs like CDARS and ICS are not available to the industry, we recommend cannabis operators keep deposits at multiple banks to keep the highest possible FDIC insured balance.
Despite these financial obstacles and policy roadblocks, the cannabis industry continues to grow, year after year. Accessible banking products are out there – and as we wait for more federal legislative progress, it can be well worth the investment to do a little research to find out which ones best meet your businesses’ needs.
Member Blog: Payment Processing in the Cannabis Space – Part 3
by Todd Glider, MobiusPay, Inc
This is Part III in a series of blog posts entitled Payment Processing in the Cannabis Space. Click here for Part I, and here, for Part II.
It would be naive to suggest that the cannabis retailer isn’t also facing headwinds resulting, simply, from a century of bad press. Putting the questions of federal vs state legality aside, it’s important to note that payments and banking issues are not unique to the plant-touchers, or Cannabis-Related Business Tier I, or CRB Tier I. CRB Tier II, the ancillary, or cannabis-adjacent businesses, have challenges of their own.
On any given day, there are a galaxy of companies, consultancies, medical practices, and professional organizations expanding their reach into our growth industry. And why not? The legalization of cannabis is a bona fide 100-year event, and intrepid business owners of all shapes and sizes sense opportunity, a new market for their wares and expertise.
And while they may be welcomed with open arms by their new colleagues and contemporaries in the cannabis community, they often find their banking relationships suddenly souring.
A message from their payment processor arrives.
It says, “Sorry, Gayle Force Grow Lights. Your processing has been suspended.”
A message from their bank hits the Inbox.
It says, “Sorry, Gayle Force Grow Lights. Your account is being shutdown down.”
These are chilling, but easily explainable events. And while it may be tempting to tuck them neatly into a dystopian ‘Big Brother is Watching You’ framework, what’s happening here is more Kafkaesque bureaucracy than Orwellian totalitarianism.
So what happened? Gayle Force Grow Lights has been marketing its grow lights to the people of Maine for 25 years. Gayle, the owner, saw cannabis legalization sweeping the nation, and thought, “Here is a new market for my grow lights.”
She updates her digital storefront accordingly, which is to say, she added a new marketing bullet: Ideal for cannabis cultivators.
To us, the word ‘cannabis,’ is an industry term. In Gayle Force Grow Lights’ case, it is marketing jargon. However, to the processors and banks employing dummy algorithms to crawl their clients’ sites, that word is a red flag. When that red flag is tripped, Gayle’s processing is suspended. When that red flag is tripped, Gayle’s business bank account is shut down.
Gayle Force Grow Lights, in the eyes of the PSP it’s been using to accept credit cards, and in the eyes of the financial institution it’s been using to bank, has, suddenly, transitioned from a reliably safe client to a potentially risky client.
Risky clients need to be watched more closely. Risky clients require more due diligence and KYC measures. And since it is not cost-effective for a PSP with 24 million accounts — or a bank with 70 million clients — to police Gayle Force Grow Lights, which processes $100,000 in transactions per-month, and has an average cash balance of $2 million, they show Gayle, and her small business, the door.
The good news? Gayle Force Grow Lights is fictitious. I made it up.
The bad news? Gayle Force Grow Lights is a composite. This is happening to businesses in the cannabis space every day.
What Does the Future Hold?
Right now, merchant accounts are only an option for sellers of hemp and hemp derivatives. But the day will come, with national legalization, when every cannabis-related retailer will have the legal option of accepting credit cards.
As with CBD, it is inevitable that there will be numerous challenges to merchants when this occurs. It is inevitable that cannabis sales will be deemed ‘high risk’ by the card associations. It is inevitable, also, that only a handful of Acquiring Banks will elect to throw their hats into the ring.
The good news is that it is just as inevitable that the companies providing merchant accounts for CBD businesses today will be the ones providing merchant accounts to businesses selling THC in excess of .3%, tomorrow. As always, the most dependable among them will be those that have direct relationships with the Acquiring Banks. This will ensure that account acquisition and maintenance for all cannabis-related businesses is as smooth and as easy as it can be.
MobiusPay, Inc. is a US-based global financial services organization that is committed to empowering individuals and businesses. For more than a dozen years, MobiusPay has leveraged state-of-the-art secure billing technology, long-standing relationships with financial institutions and award-winning customer support to provide merchant processing and payment solutions to brick-and-mortar and digital businesses around the world.
Todd Glider has been an e-Commerce leader since the start of the Internet age. He has an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Miami, and has served as CEO for small and medium-sized technology companies in Spain, Austria and the United States. As our Chief Business Development Officer, Todd introduces MobiusPay’s suite of award-winning financial services to new industries, and implements the development strategies and key partnerships needed to bring value to new customers.
Member Blog: Payment Processing In The Cannabis Space
by Todd Glider, MobiusPay, Inc
There is a lot of confusion about payment processing in the cannabis space because payment processing is somewhat confusing to begin with, and because, in the cannabis space, ambiguity is a way of life.
The title of this very blog post could, realistically, seem misleading to some.
So, to be clear, when I say, “Cannabis Space,” I mean the entire industry — from plant-touchers (CBD included) to the ancillary businesses built up around it.
The passage of the 2018 Farm Bill marked an exciting new chapter for the industry. Suddenly, CBD, or, more specifically, any ingestible cannabis product containing .3% THC or less by volume, was classified as hemp. And since it is marijuana, and not hemp, that is defined as a Schedule I substance under the United States Controlled Substance Act, the Farm Bill, technically, made products like CBD as legal as cow milk — federally, anyway.
The upshot of this new classification is that now, at least some players in the cannabis space can market their products to a national base of consumers and clients, and they can do so by accepting credit cards as payment.
However, the myriad Acquiring Banks across the United States have not exactly jumped for joy at the prospect of providing credit card processing in the form of merchant accounts to CBD retailers. Reticence rules. CBD is considered high risk, and four years on, only a handful of them have thrown their hat in the ring.
Jargon Alert I: Acquiring Banks and Issuing Banks
In merchant processing parlance, banks fall into two categories: Acquiring Banks and Issuing Banks. Acquiring Banks, or, Acquirers, provide merchant processing accounts to businesses wishing to accept credit card transactions. Issuing Banks, short for Card Issuing Banks, are banks that offer branded payment cards directly to consumers. For example, if your bank has ever offered you a Visa card, it is an Issuing Bank (not that it couldn’t also be an Acquiring Bank, too).
Jargon Alert II: CBD is ‘High Risk’
CBD is deemed high risk by the card associations (i.e., Visa, MasterCard, American Express), and when the card associations deem a product or industry high risk, most Acquiring Banks tap out. This is because financial institutions are, by nature, risk averse (subprime mortgage crisis notwithstanding).
So let’s talk for a minute about risk. High risk, that compound term, is a truncation of a longer phrase: ‘Higher risk of fraud or chargebacks.’
Why are CBD products at higher risk of fraud? It’s impossible to say for sure since the Visas and MasterCards of the world are publicly traded companies with their own trade secrets and IP, but there are several characteristics unique to CBD, or any cannabis product now federally legal, that likely figured into that decision.
Those FDA disclaimers that CBD retailers must print or paste on all product packaging and webpages are as good a place as any to start. They are mandatory because none of the benefits assigned to CBD have been clinically proven. There just isn’t enough data or testing at this point, and no big story there. That’s what happens when you demonize a plant for 100 years.
Consequently, from the perspective of the FDA, and the card associations, by extension, consumers are making CBD purchases with baked-in expectations based, exclusively, on word-of-mouth advice and anecdotal data. That’s a recipe for dissatisfied customers. And dissatisfied customers tend to charge back transactions.
The card associations, and the banks who provide merchant accounts, worry incessantly about fraud and chargebacks.
Too Close for Comfort
Dissatisfied customers aside, there are onerous legal nuances that make the prospect of boarding cannabis merchants, even those selling products that are federally legal, daunting for banks.
Selling a product with .31% THC across state lines is felonious. It is a federal offense. Violating a law like that could get a bank’s charter revoked, or, at a minimum, result in massive fines.
On the other hand, selling a product with .30% THC across state lines is 100% federally legal. As stated above, safe as milk, federally.
That is a heck of a distinction. If any product contains more than .3% THC by volume, it is ‘marijuana’ in the eyes of the federal government. From the perspective of the banks, that’s a little close for comfort. Furthermore, banks don’t operate laboratories. They must rely on testing data presented to them in the form of third-party lab reports — Certificates of Analysis or COAs for short — to verify that the products being sold are federally legal.
The last thing an Acquiring Bank wants to do is violate a federal law EVER. It could result in a loss of their charter, lawsuits, and massive fines. And it’s important to keep in mind that the Acquiring Banks out there offering merchant accounts to CBD retailers are not giant, publicly traded institutions like Bank of America or Wells Fargo. They tend to be much smaller, and therefore, have infinitely smaller war chests for court cases.
Still, separating the federally legal Tier I cannabis product from the federally illegal Tier I cannabis product should be pretty cut-and-dry. If the product you’re selling is .3% THC by volume or less, it is exempt from the Controlled Substance Act (CSA). If that threshold is documented in the product’s Certificates of Analysis (COA), you ought to be able to sell it.
Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. When bank underwriters look at percentages of Delta 8, Delta 9, and Delta 10 on the COAs that cross their desks, they’re frequently at sixes and sevens trying to figure the whole thing out.
From the perspective of the 2018 Farm Bill, a cannabis product is hemp if it contains .3% Delta-9 THC or less by volume, but what everybody says is “.3% THC or less by volume.” Consequently, when the compliance officer at the bank is performing her due diligence by inspecting the COAs corresponding to each product, she may encounter a lot of crooked numbers, and she may blanch at the results.
Those results, often, look something like the following:
00.195% D9-THC
52.475% d8-THC.
Federally, the Delta-9 threshold is the only threshold that matters. The 2018 Farm Bill says as much, and the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in California affirmed it in a ruling this past May. Therefore, in the example above, the Delta-9 threshold has not been crossed. It’s not even close. It is textbook HEMP, even if the Delta-8 threshold is off the charts.
However, if the compliance officer was provided the remit, “.3% or lower,” he’s likely to look at this and say, “Fail,” without realizing that the Delta-8 THC information is irrelevant as far as federal law goes.
Complicating the underwriting further is the fact that there is, to date, no standard template for COA reports. Every lab presents them differently. Bank compliance officers rarely moonlight as scientists. Like most of us, these CBD COAs are probably the first lab reports they’ve looked at since high school chemistry.
Furthermore, the banks can set their own rules. They don’t have to board CBD merchants. Few do, and those few that do have their own standards and practices.
Todd Glider has been an e-Commerce leader since the start of the Internet age. He has an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Miami, and has served as CEO for small and medium-sized technology companies in Spain, Austria and the United States. As our Chief Business Development Officer, Todd introduces MobiusPay’s suite of award-winning financial services to new industries, and implements the development strategies and key partnerships needed to bring value to new customers.
MobiusPay, Inc. is a U.S.-based global financial services organization that is committed to empowering individuals and businesses. For more than a dozen years, MobiusPay has leveraged state-of-the-art secure billing technology, long-standing relationships with financial institutions and award-winning customer support to provide merchant processing and payment solutions to brick and mortar and digital businesses around the world.
Committee Blog: How NCIA’s Banking & Financial Services Committee Can Help You In 2020
by Tyler Beuerlein, CRO of Hypur
Chairman of NCIA’s Banking & Financial Services Committee
As we begin the new year, the NCIA Banking and Financial Service Committee is joining the trend of starting something new for 2020. We are launching a blog series, the very words that you’re reading now, to help the cannabis industry when it comes to banking and payments. Here, you’ll find new content every month. Our goal is to give you actionable information based on current markets so that your business can grow and thrive throughout the year.
In Missouri, the state has issued 192 retail licenses, and 80 licenses for cultivation. To serve the industry, there are numerous banks and credit unions who are actively working with cannabis businesses to offer transparent banking options.
Utah will be issuing 14 retail licenses and 8 cultivation licenses, with businesses expected to start operating in March of this year. There is a financial institution in the state that is ready to bank the cannabis industry, helping your business with compliant financial services.
Finally, the committee has built relationships with additional financial institutions in California, giving even more options for cannabis businesses that need banking solutions. Whether your business is based in Missouri, Utah, California, or any other state with a legal cannabis market, NCIA’s Banking & Financial Services Committee can help provide information that may help you obtain banking services. Please get in touch with us if you need help, and we can make connections that could help.
Considering the changes to legislation in states across the country, as well as the impressive growth of the cannabis industry in recent years, we’d like to take this opportunity to welcome both newcomers and old-timers in this industry. Our community is vibrant and collaborative, with a focus on helping each other grow.
Unfortunately, there are always operators who try to work around the rules instead of following them. As a result, it’s important that we remind all our members about the dangers of breaking the laws or rules regarding cannabis banking and payments. We want to make sure that everyone knows the dangers that can be associated with the few transaction methods that are available to the industry.
Debit and credit card payments for cannabis are not allowed by the branded card networks. What does this mean? VISA and MasterCard do not want anyone paying, or receiving payment, for cannabis on their rails. While not technically illegal, circumventing their rules can lead to some dire consequences, including getting blacklisted and unable to get a merchant account in the future, even when cannabis becomes federally legal.
Instead of trying to work outside the system, focus on compliance and sustainability. How can you ensure that your business thrives for years to come? Build a solution that is legal now and will continue to operate legally as the federal laws expand. Work with banking and payment partners who understand your business and help it grow. Ensure that you only build partnerships with reliable, trustworthy institutions that improve your brand’s viability and performance.
As always, remember that NCIA’s Banking & Finance Committee is here to help you. Our goals are to educate and support operators in this industry across the country. If you’re worried that your banking or financial services solutions might not be fully trustworthy or compliant, don’t stay silent. Make full use of this committee by utilizing all our resources and connections to help your business thrive. Because when your business does well, the association continues to grow and improve, too.
In his role as Hypur’s Chief Revenue Officer, Tyler leverages his extensive experience in building brands, managing key relationships and strategic partnerships. Tyler has been at the forefront of Hypur’s expansion efforts for over five years and touches Financial Institutions, Government Officials, Regulatory Bodies and the State Legal Cannabis industry.
As a result, he possesses an intricate knowledge of the Banking and Regulatory climate, key industry influencers, industry dynamics, and market history. He has also become a key contact for media outlets, analytics companies, industry consultants and investment firms searching for reliable, accurate sources of industry information.
Tyler’s contacts and relationships in the US State Legal cannabis industry are unparalleled.
As a result of his influential value, he was selected to be Chairman of the National Cannabis Industry Association Banking and Financial Services Committee. He is also a member of the Forbes Business Development Council, frequently publishing articles about the banking and payment environment in the cannabis industry. Tyler founded and managed a large beverage company prior to joining the Hypur team and was a professional athlete in the New York Mets Organization.
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