Solving the high global egg price riddle: Risks and margins need to be shared fairly between all parties

Published 2023년 6월 23일

Tridge summary

Global egg prices have reached record highs this year, with markets experiencing volatility and availability issues. Factors contributing to this include disease, cost inflation, new regulations, and government intervention. While prices have dropped in some markets like the US, they are expected to stay high throughout 2023 and into 2024. The situation is particularly volatile in markets heavily impacted by avian flu, excessive costs, and regulatory changes. Rabobank is calling for a reevaluation of how industry value chains operate and suggests measures such as more customer commitment, demand-driven value chain cooperation, and better access to finance for the sector.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Egg prices have become increasingly volatile and reached record-high levels in markets across the globe this year. This is impacting consumers and players in the egg supply chain. Rabobank believes a rethink is needed in terms of how industry value chains function: from producers to customers, and how governments interact with that value chain. While consumers face soaring prices and availability issues, egg suppliers struggle with disease, cost inflation, new regulations, government intervention, and changing consumer demand. This has resulted in supply chain disruptions, with considerable price volatility, high price peaks, and, in some cases, empty supermarket shelves. Global prices set to stay high Although prices have started to drop in some markets, like the US, global prices are expected to stay high throughout 2023 and into 2024, if lower, on average, than the levels seen in Q1 2023 and with differences between countries. Prices will stay especially high and increasingly ...

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