Posted on 12/29/2022 12:08:01 PM PST by Red Badger
Egg prices jumped 49% in the past year, more than any other grocery category, according to the consumer price index.
ird flu is the primary culprit, economists said. Millions of egg-laying hens died in 2022 as a result of the deadliest outbreak of avian flu in U.S. history.
Perhaps counterintuitively, chicken prices have been declining. Chickens raised for meat consumption aren’t as affected by bird flu, economists said.
The surge in egg prices has stood out in a year when Americans saw their bills balloon across the grocery store.
Average egg prices jumped 49.1% in November compared with those a year earlier — the largest annual percentage increase among all grocery items in that period, according to the consumer price index, a barometer of inflation.
By comparison, the overarching “food at home” category was up 12%.
The increase is even more acute when measured by the cost of a dozen large, Grade A eggs, which more than doubled to $3.59 in November from $1.72 the year-earlier month, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
Bird flu is largely to blame for rising egg prices Those price dynamics are primarily due to the deadliest outbreak of bird flu in U.S. history, which has killed millions of egg-laying hens this year, according to economists.
“A lot of things are up since 2020,” Bill Lapp, president of Advanced Economic Solutions, a consulting firm specializing in food economics, previously told CNBC. “But the recent spike is extraordinary in the shell-egg as well as egg-product markets.”
About 57.8 million birds have been affected by avian flu in 2022, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data as of Dec. 28. These figures include birds such as turkeys and ducks.
Bird flu is relatively rare in the U.S. The last bout was in 2015, when 50.5 million birds — the previous record — were affected, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The flu hadn’t emerged in at least a decade or two prior to that, Lapp said.
Here’s why this matters: Avian flu is “highly contagious,” the New Jersey Department of Agriculture said in October. It’s also extremely lethal: It kills 90% to 100% of chickens, often within 48 hours, according to the CDC.
Farmers generally must kill their remaining birds — not by choice but due to federal rules meant to prevent spread, Brian Moscogiuri, a global trade strategist at Eggs Unlimited, an egg supplier based in Irvine, California, previously told CNBC.
About 40 million egg-laying hens — “layers,” in industry shorthand — have died this year due to avian flu, Moscogiuri said. There were 375 million total layers in the U.S. as of Dec. 1, which is down 5% from last year, according to the USDA.
Egg quantity has declined in lockstep. About 8.9 billion eggs were produced in November, down from 9.7 billion in December 2021, according to USDA data issued Dec. 20.
“It’s a supply disruption, ‘act of God’ type stuff,” Moscogiuri said. He called the situation “unprecedented.”
“It’s kind of happenstance that inflation is going on [more broadly] during the same period,” he added.
Price pressures may be easing
Bird flu typically arrives during the spring migration and disappears by the summer, experts said. But this year was different; the virus reemerged in September.
In October, the USDA revised its production forecast for table eggs downward for 2023 and the remainder of 2022 following “September detections” of bird flu.
That avian flu flare-up — and its associated death toll for egg-laying hens — is running headlong into peak demand. Consumers generally buy more eggs now for holiday baking, for example, experts said.
Consumer demand for eggs has also been buoyed by a pivot away from some higher-cost proteins amid broader food inflation, the USDA suggested in an October outlook report.
Egg prices jumped 2.3% just in the month of November, and by 10.1% in October, according to the CPI.
Elevated egg prices “could last into the first quarter of 2023,” Lapp said.
But price pressures appear to be easing, according to Moscogiuri. That’s partly a seasonal effect, as demand naturally lets up after the holidays. It’s also due to record egg prices somewhat dampening demand, he said.
“The market has now topped and spot prices are becoming increasingly negotiable,” Moscogiuri said. “As the spot price falls, the market will follow and we will likely see a 25%-30% correction from current all-time highs.
“This adjustment will likely take place over the next three weeks.” Any additional, large outbreaks of bird flu could disrupt this trend, he added.
Meanwhile, chicken prices have been falling
Perhaps counterintuitively, chicken prices have been declining in recent months, moving opposite those of eggs.
Chicken prices retreated in October and November, falling by 1.3% and 0.8%, respectively, according to CPI data.
Chickens raised for meat consumption — known as “broilers” — aren’t affected by avian flu to the same extent as the “layers.”
“It’s two totally different styles of production, two totally different breeds of bird,” Moscogiuri said.
The life cycle of a broiler is much shorter — anywhere from 5.5 weeks to nine weeks, from hatch to slaughter, according to Vencomatic Group, a poultry consulting firm.
That cycle can be upwards of 100 weeks for an egg-laying hen, Moscogiuri said. It can take about five to six months for layers just to reach full productivity, according to the USDA. The latter are therefore more susceptible to bird flu since farmers must keep them alive for longer, experts said.
Broiler quantity is also up, contributing to lower chicken prices at the grocery store.
For example, about 851 million broiler chicks hatched in October — up 5% from the prior year, the USDA said. The number in August (865 million) broke a monthly record, which had previously been set in March 2020.
Broiler “production” (measured by total pounds of meat) will rise 2% in 2023 relative to 2022, according to government data.
Despite the recent retreat, chicken prices are still up 12% compared with October 2021, according to the CPI. Higher prices for commodities such as corn and soybeans — the primary ingredients in chicken feed — have likely contributed to inflation for chicken, as well as eggs. Higher annual energy prices also factor into elevated costs for food distribution, for example.
And trans-roosters.................
We get them from people with chickens. $3 a dozen. People here have lots of chickens thanks to Rural King
Went to Costco this past Monday. No eggs, no butter.
Fred Meyers had eggs and butter, but had signs on the eggs about the shortage and price increases.
A commercial laying hen produces an egg a day, eight days a week.
We called ours "yard goats".
But really, who gives a cluck?
So again, why are bananas at the same price they’ve been for the past few years, with a much longer transportation need than eggs and yet they’ve remained at the same price as they have for the last few years?
Ben?
See if they throw the eggs out at the same time every week, and would they consider selling them at a discount a few hours before tossing them out?
Clearly,
this is not our fathers’ maths class...
our father who runs the math class hallowed by thy name,
Let C be one, and one be 1 both from now and until semester two...
amen.
(no blasphemy intended... but the false truths these days are pushing me that direction... a little)
A recent fire next door in Lancaster County (PA), wiped out 250,000 chickens, both layers and broilers. Prices here in York County jumped noticeably.
Look down stream.......
Actually prior to Covid, companies were complaining that they couldn’t get price increases through or stick and that earnings were beginning to get meager. Guess they found a way around it.
So again, 19 cent bananas are now about 34 cents at Walmart. I call that a substantial increase but I don't buy them very often.
Maybe you're not affected by this idiot in the White House
Good for you
Not really.
What happens is the little man from the Ag Department shows up and says your flock has tested positive for "avian flu". Now at that point you can sell all your birds to the government and they can be destroyed or you can try to fight it and end up selling all your birds to the government by court order and they will be destroyed and you have legal bills on top of it.
Your birds may or may not have avian flu. But if the little man from the Ag Department says they do then you are stuck.
Not saying I’m not affected, just pointing out that something that should be fuel sensitive in my area has had stable pricing.
Because nobody burned up all the banana trees.
No eggs available at all at 3 stores I have been to near FR HQ (Central CA). Empty shelves where they used to be.
Yeah - Walmart has jumped everything substantially
I began to notice it in March
I only expect to get worse but then I think Murphy was an optimist
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