Company: SNBH
Filing Date: 2025-04-16
Form Type: 10-K
Source: 0001731122-25-000581
Chunk: 95

Company: SENTIENT BRANDS HOLDINGS INC.
Filing Date: 2025-04-16
Form: 10-K
Item: Item 1A
Chunk 95
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 required to file such reports and materials), other than Current Reports on Form 8-K; and

14

(iv) at least one year has elapsed
from the time that the issuer filed current comprehensive disclosure with the SEC reflecting its status as an entity that is not a shell
company known as “Form 10 Information.”

Shareholders who receive the Company’s restricted
securities will not be able to sell them pursuant to Rule 144 without registration until the Company has met the other conditions to this
exception and then for only as long as the Company continues to meet the condition described in subparagraph (iii), above, and is not
a shell company. No assurance can be given that the Company will meet these conditions or that, if it has met them, it will continue to
do so, or that it will not again be a shell company.

Fiduciaries investing the assets of a trust
or pension, or profit-sharing plan must carefully assess an investment in our Company to ensure compliance with ERISA.

In considering an investment in the Company of a portion
of the assets of a trust or a pension or profit-sharing plan qualified under Section 401(a) of the Code and exempt from tax under Section
501(a), a fiduciary should consider (i) whether the investment satisfies the diversification requirements of Section 404 of ERISA; (ii)
whether the investment is prudent, since the Company’s common stock shares are not freely transferable and there may not be a market
created in which the Common Stock may be sold or otherwise disposed; and (iii) whether interests in the Company or the underlying assets
owned by the Company constitute “Plan Assets” under ERISA.

Our Common Stock price may decrease due to factors
beyond our control.

The stock market from time to time has experienced
extreme price and volume fluctuations, which have particularly affected the market prices for emerging growth companies, and which often
have been unrelated to the operating performance of the companies. These broad market fluctuations may adversely affect the market price
of our stock, if a trading market for our stock ever develops. If our shareholders sell substantial amounts of their stock in the public
market, the price of our stock could fall. These sales also might make it more difficult for us to sell equity, or equity-related securities,
in the future at a price we deem appropriate.

The market price of our stock may also fluctuate significantly
in response to the following factors, most of which are beyond our control:

    ●
    variations in