Engine lubricants are formulated by people that know what they are doing and do best, according to the the specifications of the licenses and approvals and financial production/market costs to meet the task at hand ,the likeliness of a additive clash (though unlikely) or cause of sludge can often be contributed to ,driving habits, viscosity needs , fuel quality, along with outside temps (environment) and most commonly engine design, and condition of engine, PLUS improper oil change service intervals. & more/less moly, boron, etc additive count is not always the way to go with balancing with the quality of the base oil (s) used , and it's hard to make one size to fit all (engine manufactures, requirements, api , cafe epa etc)...............oh by the way there are different types of moly manufactured , Infinium, Afto, Lubrizol Oronite have their own ,say, recipes. . reading a Safety Data Sheet does not tell you all what is REALLY in the oil it may give at its best a general idea, however it's there solely for a given safety /hazard purpose, it's not a formulators total ingredient blending spec. sheet. product data sheets do have slight variances too which is common in the blend process.