Thursday, February 12, 2015

Weed Businesses Can’t Put Their Money In Banks, So They Put It In Bongs

Past the sports cars in the driveway, down the stairs of what was once Shirley Temple’s mansion in Beverly Hills, in a vault originally designed to be a wine cellar, there is a collection of bongs worth half a million dollars.



Kenny Kemp


Macey Foronda / BuzzFeed News


The proud owner, 21-year-old Kenny Kemp, is sole heir to hundreds of millions of dollars and a passionate stoner whose support of the functional glass art industry provides a needed infusion of legally acquired money. On a warm evening in the middle of January, Kemp handed out bottles of water and offered his guests the opportunity of a lifetime: to take hit after hit of hash oil off of one-of-a-kind glass pipes worth tens of thousands of dollars each.



instagram.com


The skyrocketing value of glass pipes isn’t simply a result of smokers and dealers’ red-eyed awe at their growing complexity and beauty. Selling marijuana is easier than it used to be, but it’s still pretty hard. Even if you manage to coax the dankest resin out of your female plants, grease the palms of whoever is controlling your state’s cannabis licenses, and build up a loyal customer base, you can’t legally do much with your rapidly accumulating stacks of cash. Not in Colorado, not in Washington, not anywhere. As long as the federal government considers the drug illegal, most banks don’t want to go anywhere near legal pot profits, because even state and community banks in places where the drug is recreationally or medically legal are licensed and overseen by federal institutions.


More than simply works of art, status-affirming trophies, or ways to get high, custom glass pipes have become ways for marijuana entrepreneurs shut out of legitimate financial institutions to invest their otherwise untouchable cash.


Most transactions involving bongs and rigs, which look like bongs but are used for vaporizing concentrates, happen off the books, among friends, at trade shows, or between connoisseurs who meet online. Then, anyone who paid five figures for a pipe using drug money, including dealers in states where weed is very illegal and businessmen in states with medical or recreational cannabis laws, can resell the same pipe with all of the appropriate receipts, paperwork, and taxes. Presto, change-o: Now the money is clean.


“You can use [glass] to launder money,” said one California businessman who deals in marijuana concentrates, showing BuzzFeed News his collection. “You go to a gallery, see something for thirty thousand bucks, make a deal, and then sell it off and just make a stipulation that whoever pays you pays with a check. I could trade half of these pipes within a day or two, if I wanted to.”


(Due to the quasi-legal nature of their businesses and financial practices, almost all of the marijuana merchants interviewed for this story asked to be anonymous.)



Via instagram.com


Unlike flashy cars or mansions, pipes are subtle, keeping nosy neighbors unaware of your growing wealth. Plus, the value of glass can fluctuate dramatically, making it easier to conceal what’s really happening. Some pieces worth $2,000 just a few years ago are now worth $10,000.


"A lot of people like to buy up glass companies because it's really hard for the government to see, to understand it,” said Phil Martin, one of the partners who runs Moxie 710, an L.A.-based seeds and extracts company. “They don’t understand that you can buy glass really cheap and then sell it for a high price — they just don’t understand it — so it's a lot easier for people to put their money in there, launder it, and get it legally back out of the glass company. And that happens a lot."



Macey Foronda / BuzzFeed News


Kemp has an extensive, legally paid for collection of pipes, pendants, marbles, and tubes featuring psychedelic swirls, fantastical creatures, skulls, and nostalgic references to Nintendo characters. When you’re hanging out in his mother’s basement, you can smoke out of a black Glock, a bear shaped like a honey container, or a monkey in a suit smoking a cigarette and holding a banana like a gun.


But Kemp acknowledges that he’s not the typical customer when it comes to five-figure pipes, in that he doesn’t work in the weed industry.


“The demographic that does buy [glass] usually has money that’s not the cleanest,” he said. “How are you not gonna spend a lot of money on [glass], when you have so much [cash]? Like how are you going to wash it out?”


Just as in cannabis itself, the market for pipes has changed considerably in the past few years alone. Back in 2011, a top glassblower named Scott Deppe told the makers of the pipe-art documentary Degenerate Art that the most expensive piece he’d ever sold had been $18,000. A few months ago, Deppe posted on his Instagram feed a green skull pipe covered in gold-encrusted pot leaves priced at $100,000.



Via instagram.com


“If you did that five years ago, people would think you were fucking crazy,” said Jordan Moezinia, who owns the Honeydrop Glass Gallery in Los Angeles. “Now, somebody will buy it.”


Not every marijuana dealer thinks spending tens of thousands of dollars on an ornate pipe is a worthy investment. One California dispensary owner had never heard of the practice of collecting glass as assets, and rolled his eyes when he heard about it.


“I try to invest excess money back into my business,” he said. “Don’t the rigs lose value when they start getting used? Is there insurance for these things?”


He described a few friends who were laundering their money through legitimate small businesses, including a sandwich chain and a winery, and then shook his head again at the thought of putting so much cash into a smoking device, adding that some people in the marijuana industry simply have “spending problems.”


In addition to widespread legalization of medical and recreational pot, a few recent developments helped inflate the value and popularity of bespoke smoking devices. First, Instagram and social media made it possible for prominent glass artists to build hype around their products beyond the tight-knit circle of established cannabis growers and dispensary owners.



instagram.com


The growing popularity of hash oil and other concentrated forms of marijuana, which required new tools and equipment, also stimulated demand and innovation in the glass market. Some of the extraction artists who produce hash oil on the West Coast told BuzzFeed News that by 2012, they were pulling in tens of thousands of dollars a month.


Soon, an informal underground pipe economy had sprung up adjacent to the cannabis market.


“There’s some people that [buy glass] to make money,” one Miami-based extraction artist said. “[I have] friends who bought a piece for $15,000 and walked out the door and had an offer for $35,000. Some people smoke out of it for two months and then sell it and make double their money.”


Marijuana is still illegal under federal law, so the fate of state-level experiments with legalization is still in question. The feds are letting legalization go forward for now, but the current truce between the feds and the states might not last. President Obama’s nominee for Attorney General, Loretta Lynch, has already declared that she doesn’t support legalization. Depending on who wins the White House in 2016, many bankers believe the current, relatively permissive environment toward legal weed could quickly come to an end.


So in the meantime, high-end glassblowers find themselves in an oddly crucial position, manufacturing a form of gold bullion for the cannabis industry.


Cannabis banking consultant Paula Givens said that “capital expenditures” like these are one of several necessary but legal workarounds for marijuana businesses facing a lack of banking options.


“[These are] the extremes that cannabis business owners have to go through in order to utilize their legitimate revenue,” Givens said. “Convincing the banks of their ability to service cannabis consistent with their BSA/AML (Bank Secrecy Act/Anti-Money Laundering) obligations has been far more difficult than getting a buy-in from the cannabis industry.”


Although several Colorado and Washington marijuana dispensaries will accept credit card charges from customers, they are only able to do so by miscoding the transactions. Other pot shops are processing debit card purchases through something called cashless ATMs, which can avoid federal detection by classifying the money spent on cannabis as an ATM withdrawal. Which makes a six-figure bong a safer investment than it sounds, especially since the feds don’t seem to care about pot paraphernalia like they used to.


“It’s a lot better than having $12,000 in cash,” one California ganjapreneur told BuzzFeed News, when showing off one of his favorite pieces.


In the 12 years since actor Tommy Chong was arrested as part of Operation Pipe Dreams, a raid on 55 bong traffickers, the glassblowers who dominate the cannabis paraphernalia industry have sunk to a very low priority for the Department of Justice.


“I don’t think marijuana paraphernalia is taken nearly as seriously by law enforcement as it was at once time,” said D.C.-based lawyer Keith Stroup, founder of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Law. “It used to be the advice all of us lawyers were told we should give our clients was, ‘If you’re going to sell pipes and papers then you have to have a sign out front that prominently says, ‘To be used only for tobacco or legal products,’…but it’s been a long time since I’ve had one of those calls.”



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It helps that, according to Drug Enforcement Agency Special Agent Matt Barden, weed businesses operating in states where medical or recreational marijuana has been legalized are under far less scrutiny than they used to be. Barden said he hadn’t heard anything about money being laundered through bongs.


“If an entity within the state of Washington, for example, is abiding by the rules, I wouldn’t say they’re off our radar — you always have to make sure they continue to do the things they’re supposed to do — but [we won’t] have a full investigation launched against them,” he said.


Plus, because the most expensive pipes are unique, and the cannabis industry is a very small world, glass can’t easily be stolen and resold. There are only so many interested buyers and venues to sell through, and someone will undoubtedly recognize a custom piece, so the size of the community serves as a sort of insurance on your investment. (The same quality could also be incriminating, so most marijuana industry collectors asked BuzzFeed News to avoid describing the details of their best pipes.)


Of course, most canna-businesses would prefer not to keep their wealth in the form of glass, but even the semi-legitimate banking options that have emerged in the past year or two have proven unstable at best and illegal at worst.


Anticipating legalization in the next decade, a handful of services and consultants like Givens have popped up in the past year attempting to parse the Treasury Department’s 2014 memo on how marijuana businesses can comply with federal regulations.


Givens, a former trial attorney from St. Louis, developed a risk management program to help banks and marijuana businesses work together to follow the new rules. She said many ganjapreneurs would like to comply but are not willing to put forth the effort necessary to do so, especially when it comes to keeping meticulous records.


Most financial institutions remain rightfully wary. According to Amanda Averch of the Colorado Bankers Association, the Treasury Department’s guidance actually made it more difficult for banks to accept cannabis money, and most Colorado banks that have done so have been forced to close those accounts.


“We see this as a very concerning public safety issue. It’s not if there’s going to be an incident but when,” Averch said. “It could be a robbery, who knows? There’s a lot of money in these businesses, and we don’t know how these people are safely storing it.”



Photograph by Macey Foronda for BuzzFeed News






Weed Businesses Can’t Put Their Money In Banks, So They Put It In Bongs http://ift.tt/1J1sthN

11 Revelations From Former Sony Pictures Chief Amy Pascal's First Interview Since Being "Fired"

A week after the news broke that she’d be leaving her position of 15 years, Pascal sat down with Tina Brown on Wednesday, addressing the hack and its consequences for the first time publicly.



Less than a week after leaving her position as Sony Pictures chief, Amy Pascal sat down with Tina Brown during the Women in the World summit in San Francisco on Wednesday, and spoke openly about being at the center of the largest cyber hack in history, dealing with a massive security breech — which included the leak of her personal emails — and what really caused her to leave her position behind.


"All the women here are doing incredible things in this world. All I did was get fired," Pascal joked to Brown.


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"I ran this company and I had to worry about everybody who was really scared...People were really scared...But nagging in the back of my mind, I kept calling [IT] and being like, They don't have our emails. Tell me they don't have our emails. But then they did. That was a bad moment. And you know what you write in emails."


"There was this horrible moment where I realized there was absolutely nothing at all that I could do about whether I'd hurt people, whether I'd betrayed people, whether I'd said things I didn't mean. I couldn't protect anyone, not their feelings, not what they thought of me. And it was horrible because that's how I figured I did my job for all of my life. And it was also strangely freeing because all of a sudden it was just what it was."


On a leaked email from producer Scott Rudin to Pascal in which he called Angelina Jolie a "minimally talented spoiled brat.”


On a leaked email from producer Scott Rudin to Pascal in which he called Angelina Jolie a "minimally talented spoiled brat.”


"The first person I talked to was Angie after that email. Yes, everybody understood because we all live in this weird thing together called Hollywood. If we all actually were nice, it wouldn't work."


Neilson Barnard / Getty Images




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On Its First Birthday, Slack Declares Itself The "Fastest Growing Business App" Ever

And its daily users have doubled twice in six months.



kris krüg / Via flic.kr


Slack could be the only business application that doesn't provoke regular bursts of homicidal rage from its users, and instead, on occasion, prompts real joy.


The corporate chat tool — or "essential team communication platform" — is celebrating its one year anniversary today. Founded by Flickr co-founder Stewart Butterfield, the company said that it has more than 500,000 people using it every day and that its user count grew by 35% (at least 130,000) just in the first six weeks of the year. That count, the company said, has doubled twice just in the last six months. And all those incessant corporate chatterers sent 1.7 billion messages.


To fund this rapid growth, Slack has attracted $162 million worth of venture capital from investors like Google Ventures, Accel Partners and Andreessen Horowotiz.


"Messaging has emerged as one of the most fundamental applications of the Internet, and its value is shifting into our work lives," Butterfield said in a statement. The company says that employees at Airbnb, Stripe, Walmart, Foursquare, Box, Braintree, and a gaggle of digital publishers (including BuzzFeed) use it.


And a lot of them are paying for it. Slack said it had $12 million in "annual recurring revenue," a widely-watched metric for enterprise software companies that basically adds up monthly or quarterly subscriptions over the year. Slack said it hit $10 million in annual recurring revenue in "record time" and has 135,000 paid accounts (Slack has three tiers of service that range from free to $12.50 per user per month.)


"I've been working closely with and analyzing SaaS companies extensively for nearly seven years, and based on the data I've seen, Slack is the fastest growing B2B company to hit these milestones in 12 months," said Redpoint Ventures partner Tomasz Tunguz in the statement distributed by Slack.



Slack






On Its First Birthday, Slack Declares Itself The "Fastest Growing Business App" Ever http://ift.tt/1AfH6tR

China's Largest Tech Company Throws Its Weight Behind Marriage Equality

Ten couples were chosen by the public to be flown to California to marry this summer in a contest run by the online retailer Alibaba.



Elsie Liao, right, and Mayu Yu kiss in an alley outside the registry office where they asked to be married, before being turned away, in Beijing on February 25, 2013.


ED JONES / Getty Images / Via buzzfeed.com


China's largest online commerce company has thrown its weight behind marriage equality with its latest PR campaign, which invited the public to vote for ten same-sex couples who will be flown to California to marry this summer.


The campaign is a publicity stunt for TaoBao, a subsidiary of Alibaba, the company that controls 80 percent of China's online retail and does more business than eBay and Amazon combined. More than 75,000 votes were cast to pick 10 couples out of 200 who were shortlisted with the help of four LGBT rights organizations, Reuters reported. The couples will receive a weeklong honeymoon package along with the flight to California. Alibaba spokeswoman Melanie Lee told Reuters that it intended the contest to be "a symbolic kind of gesture" that it "hopes to evoke respect and understanding of homosexuality and support the realisation of dreams."


The contest may have been aimed as much at audiences in California's tech hubs as in China itself. Alibaba is increasingly positioning itself as a global tech giant, raising $25 billion in the world's largest IPO ever when it went public on the New York Stock Exchange in September. But this is the latest sign that there are substantial openings to promote LGBT rights in China — where though sodomy was decriminalized around twenty years ago, the chosen couples chosen for this promotion would be unable to marry legally — even as the government keeps a close watch on overtly political activities.


Nine activists were arrested last May in Beijing and ordered to cancel a seminar teaching organizations how to register with the government, which would give them formal permission to operate in the country. The arrests were unusual and part of a larger clampdown on civil society ahead of the 25th anniversary of the 1989 massacre of democracy activists in Tiananmen Square.


Generally, Chinese authorities have tolerated a broad range of LGBT events as long as they were not portrayed as political protests, so there has been a bright line against organizing pride marches. Last May's arrests were triggered in part because of the participation of a 20-year-old named Xiang Xiaohan, who was arrested the year before for organizing a pride parade in his province of Hunan. A march he'd planned for a short time after the arrests instead was converted into a group hike billed as a social outing.


But authorities have not prevented events that organizers describe as "performance art," such as staging same-sex weddings on the street or going to government offices to attempt to register unions. LGBT activists have also found some opportunities in the courts. In December, a 30-year-old named Yang Teng won a judgement against a clinic that used electroshock therapy to try to "cure" him of homosexuality and was awarded modest damages equivalent to about $560. In late January, a court in the Southern city of Shenzhen heard the country's first nondescrimination case brought by a gay man, who said he was fired after posting a coming out video online.






China's Largest Tech Company Throws Its Weight Behind Marriage Equality http://ift.tt/1vnEKSl

Expedia To Buy Orbitz, Creating Large Travel-Booking Giant

The goal, according to industry insiders, is to take on Priceline.



AP Elaine Thompson


Expedia will buy Orbitz, creating a travel-booking giant to compete with rival and industry leader Priceline, the companies and analysts said Thursday.


The deal is valued at about $1.6 billion, said in a news release. They will acquire all of Orbitz's worldwide brands for $12 a share.


Expedia, Inc. strongly believes that regulators will recognize that this deal is an important step in helping Expedia continue to compete alongside global and regional players in this highly competitive market," the company said in a news release.



This is a developing story, please check back for updates.






Expedia To Buy Orbitz, Creating Large Travel-Booking Giant http://ift.tt/1AfdbC1

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Jet.com Gets A Big New Funding Round — Now All It Has To Do Is Launch

The new online retail project from Diapers.com founder Marc Lore is getting plenty of hype from investors, even though it has yet to go live.



Jet / Via Jet.com


It turns out that promising to undercut Amazon — and the rest of the retail industry — in what could easily become the mother of all price wars is an attractive proposition to big investors.


Jet.com, the online retailing venture that promises to always offer the cheapest prices on the internet, announced on Wednesday evening it has raised a new $140 million round of venture capital, on top of the $80 million it had previously raised.


The fresh cash "will help us accelerate our ability to deliver on our core promise of radical price innovation in e-commerce," said founder Marc Lore in a statement posted to his blog. "We believe that there is big opportunity to deliver meaningful value to mass consumers by optimizing the underlying economics of online shopping and unbundling the embedded retail costs that drive up price."


The funding values the company at around $600 million, according to the Wall Street Journal, which was first to report the round.


That's a healthy valuation for an online retailer whose core promise is being extremely cheap, and particularly for one that has still not launched. It has signed up over 350,000 "Jet Insiders" who will have early access to try the site. It will open sign-up for the general public in the late spring.


Jet will operate as a members-only online service, charging an annual fee for subscribers to access its online marketplace. The company says it has developed a proprietary software system that will apply ever-increasing discounts to baskets of goods from third-party retailers that are plugged into its system.


"Jet is able to dynamically adjust prices in real time in response to the unique composition of a shopper's basket, always maximizing for cost-savings," said Lore. "Customers are seamlessly guided towards orders that are economically more efficient to fulfill. And because Jet only profits off the annual membership fee, the full benefit of that efficiency gets passed back to customers in the form of lower prices."


As BuzzFeed News reported in January, the company's big promise is simple: It will always be cheaper than all of the competition, including Amazon. Now all it has to do is launch, and deliver on that promise, and not get killed by Amazon in the process.






Jet.com Gets A Big New Funding Round — Now All It Has To Do Is Launch http://ift.tt/1AdjGoW

Pepsico Claims Food And Beverage Domination Despite Currency Troubles

The food and drink giant said on its earnings call Wednesday that it was driving more retail sales growth than any of its competitors, even as a strong U.S. dollar crimps the profitability of its global operations.



Jim Young / Reuters


Pepsico has anointed itself king of U.S. food makers, claiming on its fourth quarter 2014 earnings call Wednesday that its portfolio of products, including Quaker Oats, Frito-Lay, Tropicana, and Gatorade, was the largest contributor to retail sales growth in the U.S. among all food and beverage producers.


The nearly $1 billion in retails sales growth Pepsico produced was more than the next 27 food and drink makers combined, according to Chairman and CEO Indra Nooyi, citing IRI data. Nooyi said on the call this was due, in part, to new business deals and product innovation.


What kind of innovation exactly? According to Nooyi, the "Better Together" food pairing programs, which encourage the simultaneous consumption of two Pepsico products, like Doritos Loaded and Mountain Dew Solar Flare, helped catapult Pepsico to Street-beating profits in the fourth quarter.



Pepsico / Via pepsico.com


New products that were popular in the U.S., like Doritos Jacked and Deep Ridged Chips, were introduced to new markets, also contributing to sales growth in Europe and Latin America.


But while Pepsico may be blessing the rest of the world with Jacked Doritos, it appears as though some nations were not so good to Pepsico in return. Profit fell 25% in the quarter, and revenue decreased by 1%, thanks in large part to a strong dollar and weak currencies and economies abroad. Collapsing currencies in Russia and Venezuela meant earnings from there translated into fewer dollars, hitting the company's margins — although Nooyi called the company's Russian customers "resilient".


"In a country like Russia, because our categories are in juice and dairy, stuff that the Russian consumer really needs, the businesses have been quite resilient. Now, we have to wait and see how 2015 shapes up," she said. "But I'd say for our categories and the nature of the products that we offer them the portfolio has remained quite resilient even going into 2015. But let's watch and see what happens."


Back at home for U.S. consumers, Pepsico introduced new carbonated beverage products like Mountain Dew Kickstart, Pepsi Cola Made with Real Sugar, and Mountain Dew Baja Blast, which, according to Nooyi, "generated double digit estimated annual retail sales growth in 2014 after achieving over $100 million in their launch year."


While new products might have been hits, the wider marker for soda is still looking grim. In North America, the volume of carbonated soft drinks sold by Pepsi fell by 2%, even as non-carbonated drinks increased by 4%. It seems American consumers still haven't absorbed the message from the big beverage lobby that soda isn't bad for you.




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