US egg producers face new wave of price-fixing lawsuits

Reuters
2025.11.18 20:19
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Major U.S. egg producers, including Cal-Maine Foods and Rose Acre Farms, face a new wave of class action lawsuits accusing them of price-fixing. The lawsuits, filed in Wisconsin and Illinois federal courts, allege that the companies coordinated prices through Urner Barry's pricing benchmarks and a private trading platform. The alleged scheme ran from 2022 until March 2025. The lawsuits seek class action status on behalf of millions of commercial buyers and consumers. Cal-Maine is cooperating with a U.S. Justice Department investigation.

By Mike Scarcella

WASHINGTON, Nov 18 (Reuters) -

Major U.S. egg producers are contending with a growing spate of class action lawsuits accusing them of fixing pricesas consumer frustration over the cost of eggs continues to simmer after years of inflation.

The first of the new wave of cases was

roups

of

and restaurants filed the latest cases in

Wisconsin and Illinois federal courts

on Friday and Monday.

The lawsuits each target Cal-Maine Foods, Rose Acre Farms and other producers. Data analytics and consulting firm Urner Barry is a defendant in some of the cases.

The plaintiffs claim the companies coordinated on prices through Urner Barry’s pricing benchmarks and a private trading platform. The lawsuits also

allege that egg producers used the of late 2021 as a pretext for increases, even though flock reductions were modest and feed and fuel costs declined.

Cal-Maine and Urner Barry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Rose Acre declined to comment.

The alleged price-fixing scheme ran from 2022 until March 2025, when news that the U.S. Justice Department was probing the producers’ conduct sent prices lower.

Ridgeland, Mississippi-based Cal-Maine, the largest U.S. egg producer, has said it is cooperating with the Justice Department investigation.

The new lawsuits seek class action status on behalf of millions of commercial buyers and consumers, among other buyers.

They follow earlier lawsuits against Cal-Maine and other companies that alleged a price-fixing conspiracy in the 2000s.

In a lawsuit related to those earlier cases, a jury in 2023 awarded food giants Kraft (KHC.O), General Mills (GIS.N), Kellogg (K.N) and Nestle (NESN.S) $17.7 million in damages for alleged overcharges during a four-year window in the mid-2000s.

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