STOCKHOLM(Reuters) - Growing numbers of Swedish investors are getting a buzz from trading in listed marijuana stocks even though the country has some of Europe’s most restrictive drug laws.

FILE PHOTO: A worker collects cuttings from a marijuana plant at the Canopy Growth Corporation facility in Smiths Falls, Ontario, Canada, January 4, 2018. REUTERS/Chris Wattie/File Photo

Shares in companies including Canadian cannabis producers Aurora and Canopy Growth and Sweden’s Heliospectra, which makes lighting for greenhouses that can be used to grow the plant, were the most heavily traded sector in January and February at online stockbroker Nordnet.

While private investors sold heavyweight Swedish stocks such as H&M, Nordea and Ericsson, cannabis stocks drew in around 700 million Swedish crowns ($85 million) over the period.

“It feels like a Klondyke rush. There is a new, big market opening up,” said Joakim Bornold at Nordnet. Investors are betting on cannabis as a growth market as a number of American states, including California, legalize marijuana used in healing for at least 3,000 years and smoked recreationally -- and often illegally -- around the globe.

Canada is expected to pass a bill this summer, legalizing cannabis for recreational use.

“The cannabis trade, at least to some extent, will go from illegal to legal,” said Rikard Josefsson, CEO of Swedish internet broker Avanza said.

Nearly 30,000 of Avanza’s 700,000 clients bought cannabis stocks in the first two months of the year.

HARD LINE

The demand for cannabis stocks is in stark contrast to Sweden’s general attitudes to drugs.

As in many countries, it is a crime to sell, buy or possess drugs in Sweden. But unlike elsewhere, it is also a crime to use them.

Swedish police can force anyone they suspect is using drugs to take a urine or blood test and users can get up to six months in prison.

While many countries consider legalizing marijuana at least for medicinal purposes, the issue remains taboo in Sweden.

A recent poll showed 83 percent of Swedes against legalization despite more liberal attitudes on other social issues in the country.

“The issue of legalization is almost non-existent,” said Camilla Waltersson Gronvall, Moderate Party social policy spokeswoman.

Many buyers of cannabis stocks see them as just like any other trade.

Avanza’s Josefsson said many investors are men aged between 20 and 40, looking for high risk, high return shares. Many have also invested in bitcoin.

“This is the world of capitalism - if it is legal and I can make some money - I will invest,” Josefsson said.

But others like Marina Trenkoska, a 36-year-old civil servant, are hoping that trading cannabis stocks will be a step on the way to it being legalized for medicinal uses. “I think it should be free for those who need it,” she said.