JAY-Z quietly exited the cannabis company before it reported a $575 million loss. The Roc Nation mogul, known for his sharp business acumen, appears to have escaped financial disaster by distancing himself from The Parent Company (TPCO), the cannabis conglomerate that once owned premium cannabis brand Monogram.
As TPCO’s shocking $575 million loss in 2022 came to light, people familiar with the matter said that JAY-Z had exited long before its collapse.
High Tales Episode 6… This is a solid case of grilled cheese on a first date. https://t.co/XB4RPE2LnL @CurrenSy_Spitta pic.twitter.com/FcZABOEza6
— MONOGRAM (@monogramcompany) June 24, 2021
“Jay-Z left a few years ago and it was a mess,” a source told TMZ Hip Hop, adding that his official departure will happen in December 2022. Now under control of another LLC, leaving JAY-Z unscathed as the fallout continues.
Launched in 2020, Monogram markets itself as a luxury cannabis brand, and its aggressive marketing campaign has been featured in GQ, Vogue and Vanity Fair. However, the ambitious business struggled in California’s competitive market.
Cannabis industry expert Seth Yakatan explained to SFGATE that high-end events opened the door to disaster for the brand. Yakatan said the campaigns cost the parent company an incredible amount of money, claiming Monogram’s $50 joints would be a hard sell in a state flooded with affordable alternatives.
Despite its stellar debut, insiders believe Monogram may have played a role in TPCO’s financial collapse. The brand, positioned as ultra-premium, has been criticized for failing to impress consumers. The GQ review even noted that Monogram’s $50 hand rolls failed to stay lit — a basic expectation among cannabis enthusiasts.
“Monogram is supposed to be an ultra-high-end product, and I don’t know anyone who has tried it and thought it was just a mid-range product,” Yakatan said.
He also pointed out that TPCO burned $575 million in cash, mainly due to overvalued acquisitions, missed sales expectations and fierce competition.
Due to TPCO’s massive capital hemorrhage, JAY-Z’s involvement as the brand’s chief visionary officer may exacerbate the company’s bloated expenditures. The rapper-turned-tycoon’s clout and celebrity boosted the cost of a marketing campaign that recruited the likes of famed director Hype Williams but failed to translate into sales. But by the time TPCO reported staggering losses and merged with Gold Flora in 2023, JAY-Z had already separated from the cannabis business.
Meanwhile, Gold Flora is currently grappling with more than $56 million in losses and lawsuits over unpaid bills and struggling to gain a foothold in the industry. With debt far exceeding its assets, industry analysts are already speculating whether the company will face bankruptcy.
For JAY-Z, the failure of marijuana is just a blip in his otherwise brilliant business record. With a net worth of $2.5 billion, he has shifted his focus to more successful ventures, including Armand de Brignac Champagne, D’Usse Cognac and Roc Nation. As Yakatan aptly puts it, the “hype doesn’t match reality” for marijuana businesses associated with rappers — a lesson JAY-Z seems to have learned before the ship sank.
See the post below for a previous ad from Monogram when HOV was still attached.
Good life, redefined.
Slim Aarons, reimagined by Hype Williams – starring Slick Woods.
— MONOGRAM (@monogramcompany) April 12, 2021

