
Standard Dental Labs Inc. (OTC: TUTH) Receives SEC Qualification for Regulation A Offering
'This is a major milestone for Standard Dental Labs.' said James Brooks, CEO of SDL. 'The SEC's qualification of our Regulation A offering opens the door for us to raise the funds needed to accelerate our acquisition strategy, expand our market presence, and deliver greater value to both our customers and shareholders.'
SDL plans to use the proceeds from the offering to acquire additional dental laboratories in Florida, enhance operational efficiency, and invest in technology to better serve dental professionals.
The Company has spent the past year working closely with its securities counsel, CPAs, and auditors to ensure compliance with all SEC and FINRA requirements. This latest achievement follows SDL's recent completion of multiple audited financial restatements and its successful transition to trading under the ticker symbol 'TUTH.'
Details of the offering, including the offering circular, are available on the SEC's EDGAR system.
About Standard Dental Labs Inc.Standard Dental Labs Inc. (OTC: TUTH) is a publicly traded company focused on consolidating the highly fragmented dental laboratory industry, beginning in Florida. By acquiring well-established labs and retaining their skilled technicians, SDL aims to preserve the craftsmanship of dental restorations while providing the benefits of scale, modern technology, and operational support.
Forward-Looking StatementsThis press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied. The Company undertakes no obligation to update these statements except as required by law.
Website: https://sdl.care
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Straits Times
2 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Humble coconut oil turns into a luxury on rising demand, shrinking output
MUMBAI/JAKARTA/KUALA LUMPUR: Prices of coconut oil are surging in Asia, where top consumer India leads the charge with a tripling in two years, as supply shortages and booming demand for the nutrient-rich water enclosed within turn the kitchen staple into a premium product. The edible oil is slipping out of the reach of price-conscious consumers, and those accustomed to its distinctive flavour, deeply embedded in regional cuisine, must search harder to find alternatives. "I will switch to the more affordable refined sunflower oil for everyday cooking and save coconut oil for dishes where its flavour is absolutely irreplaceable," said Leelamma Cherian, who lives in India's southern state of Kerala. The price surge that began in the second half of 2024 was accelerated by output disruptions across major producer nations from India to Southeast Asia, caused by seasons of lower rainfall, extended heat, and more ravages by pests and disease. Prices in India have nearly tripled in less than two years, to a record 423,000 rupees (US$4,840) a metric ton, while global prices surged to an all-time high of US$2,990 per ton over the same period. A group of producer nations, the International Coconut Community (ICC), says growing demand in the face of production limits will keep second-half global prices in the range of US$2,500 to US$2,700, well over the 2023 figure of about US$1,000. Coconut oil supplies usually improve in Southeast Asia in the second half, and new season output will help ease prices off records, said a Singapore-based vegetable oil trader. "Still, prices probably won't drop below US$2,000 anytime soon," he said. A fall below US$1,800 a ton in the next two years was unlikely, he added, pointing to the neglect of plantations and unfavourable weather in recent years as factors likely to delay a broader production recovery, especially at a time when supplies of other similar lauric oils are tight. "While prices are expected to ease gradually, the current rally is likely to establish a new normal." The price surge also affects unripe green coconuts harvested for their electrolyte-laden water, and products such as copra, milk, and powder, while squeezing makers of shampoo and skincare items, who prize the oil for its high content of lauric acid. SUPPLY SQUEEZE Globally, coconut oil output is falling as trees age, replanting proves inadequate, and plantations grapple with a shortage of better seed varieties, said Dorab Mistry, a director of Indian consumer goods company Godrej International. World coconut oil production was 3.67 million tons in 2024–25, with no growth over the past three decades, barring minor annual fluctuations, the U.S. agriculture department says. As weather conditions increasingly swing from hot, dry spells to sudden heavy rains, both extremes disrupt coconut production, said Joe Ling, executive director of Malaysia's Linaco Group, a leading supplier. These days, at least one producing country is affected - if dry weather is not curtailing output in Indonesia or Malaysia, it is highly likely that typhoons are disrupting production in the Philippines, or vice versa, Ling said. Yields fell in 2023 as the El Niño weather phenomenon brought above-average heat and below-average rains to key growing regions, said a Mumbai-based dealer at a global trading house, who sought anonymity in line with company policy. The shortfall was only reflected in 2024, since coconuts typically need nearly a year to mature after flowering. In the wake of years of underinvestment thanks to low prices, coconut production was further hit by the COVID-19 outbreak, as lockdowns brought a slump in demand and prices. That in turn led farmers to neglect plantations, resulting in lower yields just as demand began to recover when social media influencers drummed up attention to the health benefits of coconut water. Higher demand for the water prompted farmers to harvest coconuts earlier and further narrowed the supply of mature nuts used to make oil and copra. Even at higher prices, the perceived health benefits continue to fuel demand for coconut food products, said Ling of Linaco Group. The rally has led his company to raise prices almost monthly and maintain supplies despite upsetting customers, Ling added. Coconut oil's premium over rival palm kernel oil, also primarily produced in Asia, has surged to a record US$1,000 per ton, up from the usual US$100 to US$200. Palm kernel oil prices have also risen, climbing 30 per cent this year. Any major shift away from coconut oil could drive up prices of alternatives, including palm kernel oil for industry and palm, soy, and sunflower oils for households. GLOBAL DEMAND While coconut oil is popular in Asia, demand for copra, coconut cream, and milk is strong in Britain, China, Europe, Malaysia, the United States, and the United Arab Emirates. To capitalise on rising demand, Indonesian farmers are increasingly shipping whole coconuts instead of extracting oil, said Amrizal Idroes, vice chairman of the Indonesian Coconut Processing Industry Association. Indonesia's coconut oil exports fell 15 per cent between January and June, while shipments of items such as desiccated coconut and endocarp coconut rose by 58 per cent annually, government data showed. Shortages have spurred calls for changes to trade policies that make more oil available at home. In Indonesia, the Association urged suspension of coconut exports for six to 12 months to stabilise prices, while in India, the Solvent Extractors' Association asked New Delhi to allow imports of coconut oil and copra. India regulates imports of coconut oil tightly, with a duty of more than 100 per cent that makes them expensive, and traders required to seek permits from state trading enterprises. Higher prices have spurred farmers to expand planting, with strong seedling demand depleting most nurseries' stocks this year, said an official of India's state-run Coconut Development Board, who sought anonymity.


The Sun
5 hours ago
- The Sun
White House launches TikTok account amid US legal uncertainty
WASHINGTON: The White House officially launched its TikTok account on Tuesday despite ongoing legal uncertainties surrounding the Chinese-owned platform's operations in the United States. President Donald Trump continues to permit TikTok to operate despite a federal law requiring its sale or ban on national security grounds. 'America we are BACK! What's up TikTok?' read the caption on the account's inaugural post, a 27-second video clip. The new White House account garnered approximately 4,500 followers within the first hour of its launch. Trump's personal TikTok account boasts 110.1 million followers, though his last post dates back to November 5, 2024, which was Election Day. TikTok remains owned by China-based internet company ByteDance despite legislative pressures. A federal mandate requiring TikTok's divestment or prohibition was scheduled to take effect on January 19, the day before Trump's inauguration. The Republican president, whose 2024 campaign heavily utilized social media, suspended the proposed ban. Trump extended the deadline for TikTok to find a non-Chinese buyer by another 90 days in mid-June, with this extension set to expire in mid-September. While previously supporting restrictions, Trump reversed his position after believing TikTok helped secure young voter support during the November election. The platform maintains nearly two billion global users despite geopolitical tensions. Trump's official X account has 108.5 million followers, though he prefers Truth Social, which he owns and where he has 10.6 million followers. The official White House accounts on X and Instagram maintain 2.4 million and 9.3 million followers respectively. This strategic move into TikTok reflects the administration's continued adaptation to evolving digital landscapes despite regulatory challenges. - AFP


The Star
6 hours ago
- The Star
Musk's SpaceX, others win US court challenge to labor board's structure
FILE PHOTO: The seal of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) is seen at their headquarters in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 14, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo (Reuters) -A U.S. appeals court on Tuesday agreed with Elon Musk's SpaceX and two other companies that the U.S. National Labor Relations Board's structure is likely unlawful and blocked the agency from pursuing cases against them. The ruling by the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is the first by an appeals court to find that a law shielding NLRB administrative judges and the board's five members from being removed at will by the president is likely illegal. The 5th Circuit on Tuesday said the protections from removal prevent the president from exercising his power to control the executive branch. "Because the executive power remains solely vested in the President, those who exercise it on his behalf must remain subject to his oversight," wrote Circuit Judge Don Willett, an appointee of Republican President Donald Trump. A series of similar cases challenging the board's structure are pending, and the Trump administration is making the same arguments after the president fired a Democratic member of the board in January and she sued to get her job back. The 5th Circuit upheld decisions by three judges in Texas that blocked NLRB cases alleging illegal labor practices by SpaceX, pipeline operator Energy Transfer, and Aunt Bertha, which operates a social services search engine, pending the outcome of their lawsuits. "The Employers have made their case and should not have to choose between compliance and constitutionality," wrote Willett. The board and the companies did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Musk was a top adviser to Trump, spearheading an effort to drastically shrink the federal workforce and slash government spending, until the two men had a public falling out in May. SpaceX has a separate pending lawsuit against the NLRB seeking to block a different board case. The NLRB is the only federal agency that hears private-sector labor disputes. The agency's general counsel can issue complaints against employers or unions that are heard by administrative judges, whose decisions can be appealed to the board. The five-member board has been paralyzed and unable to issue decisions since Trump in January fired Member Gwynne Wilcox. The NLRB was designed by the U.S. Congress to be independent from the White House, and before Wilcox no board member had ever been removed by the president. Tuesday's panel included a second Trump appointee and a judge appointed by Republican President George H.W. Bush. (Reporting by Daniel Wiessner in Albany, New York, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Sandra Maler)