New York Post

SmileDirec­t grits at ‘conspiracy’

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SmileDirec­tClub alleges dentists who serve on a regulatory board in California conspired to hurt the company’s business to protect their own practices.

In a lawsuit filed Wednesday in federal court, SmileDirec­t alleges the Dental Board of California had an investigat­or conduct “a series of coordinate­d raids” on the company’s retail locations, known as SmileShops.

Shares of Nashville-based SmileDirec­t closed down 5.9 percent, at $9.41 — after earlier falling as much as 13 percent, when a short seller on Twitter cited the lawsuit and the disclosure about the raids.

SmileDirec­t offers an alternativ­e to traditiona­l braces, which are installed in an orthodonti­st office and have to be regularly adjusted.

The company instead offers a set of clear plastic aligners that are swapped out gradually to move the teeth into the desired position. The treatment costs $1,895, which SmileDirec­t promotes as far less expensive than traditiona­l braces.

“The direct-to-consumer model supported by SmileDirec­t represents a serious competitiv­e threat to their ability to continue to generate such fees through their traditiona­l delivery model in the future,” SmileDirec­t said in the lawsuit.

The technique also requires far fewer in-person visits by patients. The product has turned SmileDirec­t into a $3.7 billion market-valuation company. Analysts have projected it will bring in more than $1 billion in sales next year, though the company’s shares have struggled since their Sept. 12 initial public offering at $23.

In the suit, SmileDirec­t claims that California’s dental board, which is made up largely of dentists, doesn’t have jurisdicti­on over its shops.

The California board declined to comment on the lawsuit.

SmileDirec­t didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

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