it's no yoke not getting your eggs, hopefully they will have soon cracked it, we shell see, stay with it, don't chicken out and try to avoid the scramble for them when they are back.
It's all by design. Do your job! Do you not remember all those prosuction facilities mysteriously come under fire? Or the chicken culling and blaming it on avian flu which could of been a lie.
Just paid $2.99 for a dozen of cage free large eggs at Trader Joe’s. That’s less than what I paid at Trader Joe’s back in 2019 per old receipts. Whole Foods also has eggs for $2.99 a dozen. 18 eggs organic is ~$4.50-$4.99 at a grocery store around me which has been cheaper a dozen of Walmart eggs around me. I’ve been lucky with cheap eggs and all from just buying organic or cage free.
Depends where you live. Trader joes eggs here is $9 per dozen, whole foods $10 per dozen. Walmart $8 per dozen. Walmart is cheaper than both Trader joe and whole foods in other items. Walmart is almost always cheaper. They dont just charge cheap in one item and sell expensive in many other items unlike Trader Joe or Whole foods. At trader joe you its still reasonable. Whole foods are $ 1 to 10 more per item. Cheese for $20 becos its "organic". Everything that is organic cost more at whole foods. Organic is basically new way for grocers to charge you more for the same items.
@@zlonewolf Walmart regardless of state has been upcharging eggs. I’m just saying eggs alone. However, I’ve gotten items way cheaper at Trader Joe’s than Walmart. The prices for eggs at Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods being $2.99 has been seen in multiple states so kinda universal in way. I get your point. All of these organic eggs are certified organic and everything while being cheaper than regular eggs.
@@xwrtkWell you're right about Walmart eggs being overcharged. Currently Walmart charges $7 for dozen. We pay everything else less at Walmart beside eggs than Trader Joes or Whole foods or Aldis or anywhere else. Also you can compare prices before buying. Walmart and Trade Joes both have online webpages with prices.
@@zlonewolf $2.99 was seen at a Whole Foods near San Jose, CA. My cousin’s closest grocery store to her place is Whole Foods so she frequents sometimes.
Sometimes I go through periods where I don't eat eggs for months so no big deal. But also how long will these eggs sit on the shelf? No one is buying them. They will go bad and get thrown out. Does not make sense to me. Don't buy them. Try other kinds of breakfasts.
Go to Costco to buy eggs are cheaper than other grocery stores. But they do limit to get 2 that’s good idea so the shoppers not crazy to loading up buy so many of them.
OMG, this made my day, 8 minutes on egg prices. 😂King Nakamura! The Assistant Professor was indifferent. 4:55 Those are cows. Cow eggs? LOL The report is hot! 😍😍
But demand outweighs supply. Chain stores price their price based on "future" pricing not current pricing. Meaning they charge what they "think" would be a shortage even if the shortage is no longer a problem. Why? To recoup their loss from sales or from lack of supplies from suppliers. Suppose that supplier can give them 1 million eggs and they have 1 million customers Walmart can afford to sell at $1 a dozen each. But if they have 100k eggs and they still have 1 million customers, they are selling still only 100k eggs and if their LOSS is 900k dollars. Then Walmart will try to price them "appropriately" at $4.99 a dozen to "recoup" some of the loss. Sure its a rip off. But its supply vs demand. Welcome to economics 101 class.
I can't believe the US board regulation now is protecting egg price gouging/scammers. The regulation is working against egg prices. This is what happened when too much regulations in place especially with our food supply chain. The FTC like police only show up after gaga happened (until consumers hurt)
@@nguyen42120 you can tell your theories to less knowledgeable consumers while FTC and DOJ investigate the price gouging scam nationwide. Supply and demand is a basic elementary theory and the real world is different than just applying that basic theory to justify the price gouging scams. Please study the whole industry before drawing supply and demand conclusion to this public outcry like any other dumb reporter.
@@mando074 My cousins have paid half more that price at Whole Foods. $4.49 at Whole Foods for 18 eggs. Whole Foods in the Chicago area. A good amount of people buying Whole Foods eggs but not flying off the shelves. It’s not all of Chicago with that high of a price.
There are lots of eggs at my Grocery Outlet because less people want to pay that much money for eggs. Went without eggs for a week myself and since eggs came down 50 cents, although still spendy, I broke down and bought some again. I saw a UA-cam video just the other day of a guy saying his Amish friend sold a dozen eggs for $7.99 wholesale. Maybe they were fertile?
@pia pretty much all eggs are fertile if you see the yolk has an embryo. But its hard unless you know what to look for. The only thing regular markets do to ensure it doesnt develope further is to sterilize the egg. Often you wont be able to grow it even if it is not sterilized. You need the right temp and refrigerator is too cold for that.
@@zlonewolf The chicken hen might be fertile in as far as she is producing eggs, but unless that hen was popped by a rooster, the egg will not have that fertilized little round spot on the yolk. Store eggs are not fertilized by a rooster. (I have raised chickens before in a place rural enough to allow roosters.) I am sure there is a picture online somewhere of a fertilized yolk.
Why do eggs cost more in CA than other states? You remember voting YES on that proposition mandating cage-free hens and such? You didn't think that would increase prices by voting yes on it?
We have mandated cage frees hens here in the Northeast and the price is still almost half as cheap than California. So no, it wasn't the yes vote on the proposition but rather corporate greed.
@@katrinagarrett9612 Exactly. All these increased costs due to fuel, feed and avian flu, yet the egg supplier profits have increased 40%? Another example of corporations taking advantage of a situation to screw the consumers.
The avian flu DNR should be responsible for everything that goes on with these Bird flu because it started with wild geese and they protect wild geese so therefore they should be responsible for them and what they cause.
Funny I hear that pride chickin feed kept out the two ingredients that helps chickens lay eggs with out it they lay hardly no eggs look it up this was done on purpose
man i love scene like these, its so organic. Raising chickens are cool!
And cheaper for you as the producer too. Sure you won't be rich but you will be chemical free and know where your food comes from.
You gotta be fuckin kidding me
Crazy idea. Don’t eat eggs for a while. 🤯
The whole food sector is being under attack by nefarious groups
Then how am I going to get my cholesterol up to quadruple digits???
@@henrylee8510 butter or margarine
Single family home prices will hold steady because you cannot raise chicken in HOA run property. ‘It is against the code’😂
🤣 HOA is a scam.
it's no yoke not getting your eggs, hopefully they will have soon cracked it, we shell see, stay with it, don't chicken out and try to avoid the scramble for them when they are back.
It's all by design. Do your job! Do you not remember all those prosuction facilities mysteriously come under fire? Or the chicken culling and blaming it on avian flu which could of been a lie.
No egg diet for now. I can live without eggs!😆
A man recently proposed to his girlfriend with a dozen eggs. He went to Meijer.
Who families? Is that families that live in Whoville?
Chicken feed is not cheap though.
Just paid $2.99 for a dozen of cage free large eggs at Trader Joe’s. That’s less than what I paid at Trader Joe’s back in 2019 per old receipts. Whole Foods also has eggs for $2.99 a dozen. 18 eggs organic is ~$4.50-$4.99 at a grocery store around me which has been cheaper a dozen of Walmart eggs around me. I’ve been lucky with cheap eggs and all from just buying organic or cage free.
Depends where you live.
Trader joes eggs here is $9 per dozen, whole foods $10 per dozen. Walmart $8 per dozen.
Walmart is cheaper than both Trader joe and whole foods in other items.
Walmart is almost always cheaper. They dont just charge cheap in one item and sell expensive in many other items unlike Trader Joe or Whole foods.
At trader joe you its still reasonable.
Whole foods are $ 1 to 10 more per item. Cheese for $20 becos its "organic". Everything that is organic cost more at whole foods.
Organic is basically new way for grocers to charge you more for the same items.
@@zlonewolf Walmart regardless of state has been upcharging eggs. I’m just saying eggs alone. However, I’ve gotten items way cheaper at Trader Joe’s than Walmart. The prices for eggs at Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods being $2.99 has been seen in multiple states so kinda universal in way. I get your point. All of these organic eggs are certified organic and everything while being cheaper than regular eggs.
@@xwrtkWell you're right about Walmart eggs being overcharged. Currently Walmart charges $7 for dozen. We pay everything else less at Walmart beside eggs than Trader Joes or Whole foods or Aldis or anywhere else.
Also you can compare prices before buying. Walmart and Trade Joes both have online webpages with prices.
@@zlonewolf $2.99 was seen at a Whole Foods near San Jose, CA. My cousin’s closest grocery store to her place is Whole Foods so she frequents sometimes.
Simple, I go without. Too expensive
Our family is dealing with it simply by not buying eggs. Problem solved. If you can't live without eggs for a couple months…
You remember when COVID first hit and people rushed to get... TP?
Don't underestimate the stupidity of the general public.
Fasting off eggs for a few months like 12 and then I will re imagine Lake Pontchartrain. ☕🍳🥞
Sometimes I go through periods where I don't eat eggs for months so no big deal.
But also how long will these eggs sit on the shelf? No one is buying them. They will go bad and get thrown out. Does not make sense to me.
Don't buy them. Try other kinds of breakfasts.
Go to Costco to buy eggs are cheaper than other grocery stores. But they do limit to get 2 that’s good idea so the shoppers not crazy to loading up buy so many of them.
🐇There is always bunny eggs but only around Easter. 🐰🥚
2.40 ??? Is about 7 bucks here on my neighborhood
Heard of little thing called average?
Eggs cost more than anything else seems like at this point?
Sorry is no one going to point out the spelling mistake😅 they put who instead of how🤣🤣🤣🤣
Hen of golden eggs. 7.50 18 eggs at Walmart San Diego.
OMG, this made my day, 8 minutes on egg prices. 😂King Nakamura! The Assistant Professor was indifferent. 4:55 Those are cows. Cow eggs? LOL
The report is hot! 😍😍
grt video
Tell your neighbors though, I hit one in the street that jumped out. I felt so so so bad. They are also pets for the kids that live there.
The egg shortage started last summer, and I don't believe taking a long time for chicken to grow up.
But demand outweighs supply. Chain stores price their price based on "future" pricing not current pricing. Meaning they charge what they "think" would be a shortage even if the shortage is no longer a problem. Why? To recoup their loss from sales or from lack of supplies from suppliers.
Suppose that supplier can give them 1 million eggs and they have 1 million customers Walmart can afford to sell at $1 a dozen each.
But if they have 100k eggs and they still have 1 million customers, they are selling still only 100k eggs and if their LOSS is 900k dollars. Then Walmart will try to price them "appropriately" at $4.99 a dozen to "recoup" some of the loss.
Sure its a rip off. But its supply vs demand.
Welcome to economics 101 class.
I can't believe the US board regulation now is protecting egg price gouging/scammers. The regulation is working against egg prices.
This is what happened when too much regulations in place especially with our food supply chain.
The FTC like police only show up after gaga happened (until consumers hurt)
@@nguyen42120 you can tell your theories to less knowledgeable consumers while FTC and DOJ investigate the price gouging scam nationwide. Supply and demand is a basic elementary theory and the real world is different than just applying that basic theory to justify the price gouging scams. Please study the whole industry before drawing supply and demand conclusion to this public outcry like any other dumb reporter.
Top notch serious eggs is like water
I bought 18 eggs for 4.79 at whole foods in San Francisco. What's the whole fuss about
For 18 eggs in the Chicago metro area it's about $9.50 or so.
And the shelves here are full. No one buying them for that much.
@@mando074 My cousins have paid half more that price at Whole Foods. $4.49 at Whole Foods for 18 eggs. Whole Foods in the Chicago area. A good amount of people buying Whole Foods eggs but not flying off the shelves. It’s not all of Chicago with that high of a price.
The non-organic eggs are going up in price as so many chickens have been effected with avian flu. Free range and cage free chickens seem to be fine.
@@xwrtk cool I'll check out whole foods... But I can also go without eggs go a while. No big deal...
I'm am going to the central state to buy my eggs at $2.40.
There are lots of eggs at my Grocery Outlet because less people want to pay that much money for eggs. Went without eggs for a week myself and since eggs came down 50 cents, although still spendy, I broke down and bought some again. I saw a UA-cam video just the other day of a guy saying his Amish friend sold a dozen eggs for $7.99 wholesale. Maybe they were fertile?
@pia pretty much all eggs are fertile if you see the yolk has an embryo. But its hard unless you know what to look for.
The only thing regular markets do to ensure it doesnt develope further is to sterilize the egg. Often you wont be able to grow it even if it is not sterilized.
You need the right temp and refrigerator is too cold for that.
@@zlonewolf The chicken hen might be fertile in as far as she is producing eggs, but unless that hen was popped by a rooster, the egg will not have that fertilized little round spot on the yolk. Store eggs are not fertilized by a rooster. (I have raised chickens before in a place rural enough to allow roosters.) I am sure there is a picture online somewhere of a fertilized yolk.
I have my own chickens
California Gold hehe
Why do eggs cost more in CA than other states? You remember voting YES on that proposition mandating cage-free hens and such? You didn't think that would increase prices by voting yes on it?
We have mandated cage frees hens here in the Northeast and the price is still almost half as cheap than California. So no, it wasn't the yes vote on the proposition but rather corporate greed.
@@katrinagarrett9612 Exactly. All these increased costs due to fuel, feed and avian flu, yet the egg supplier profits have increased 40%? Another example of corporations taking advantage of a situation to screw the consumers.
Chicken gets tax when walking around California streets.
The proposition definitely reduced supply for CA egg market.
The avian flu DNR should be responsible for everything that goes on with these Bird flu because it started with wild geese and they protect wild geese so therefore they should be responsible for them and what they cause.
They have to be cage free and you must read the chickens a story about lemon pie, from now on. Its law
Meanwhile, billionaires, politicians all jet to a swanky Switerland mountain resort for WEF to tell us how to live. Twilight zone for real.
I’m sorry but this is to funny not to point out🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Funny I hear that pride chickin feed kept out the two ingredients that helps chickens lay eggs with out it they lay hardly no eggs look it up this was done on purpose
Try youtube shorts: The Eggstasy Of Gold
All part of Biden's build back better plan!
I pay less for eggs than I did in 2019. 2020 as well but so many people price gouged back in 2020.
And it all boils down to the Biden administration.
Boycott eggs 🥚 🐔
Capitalism at its finest
*I'm done sitting tight for the award advance since i acquire$23,000 every 12 days of my investment* 🇱🇷❤️
I'm from India, 🇨🇮 I and two others of my friend's tried her immediately we testified her performing wonders
I just looked on google and confirmed she's a licensed broker, I am contacting her right away, thanks
Cackle fruit. 😋😋😋😋😋😋😋😋😋 BTW We raise our own. F Cali.