The largest producer and distributor of fresh shell eggs in the United States, Cal-Maine Foods (NASDAQ:CALM) shares are up 12% year-to-date, a recovery that looks better on paper than it feels in the fundamentals. Retail sentiment on Reddit has surged to a score of 92 out of 100, firmly in “very bullish” territory, even as the egg price super-cycle that made Cal-Maine briefly one of the most profitable food companies in America continues to unwind.
The story of Cal-Maine is that of a classic commodity hangover as the company rode HPAI-driven egg price inflation to a fiscal year 2025 net income of $1.2 billion, up over 339% from prior years. However, once egg prices corrected, things turned around, and not for the better. In the most recent quarter, conventional shell egg selling prices fell 38.8% year-over-year, dragging revenue down 19.4% and net income down 53%. The stock peaked near $104 at the height of the cycle and has since pulled back, finding footing in the high $80s.

r/WallStreetBets Finds Its Egg Puns
The dominant Reddit thread driving current sentiment is titled “All my eggs in one basket. This is the $CALM before the storm. Mostly YOLO, but with a lil micro DD” on r/wallstreetbets, accumulating 88 upvotes and 61 comments with debate running hot. The tone is speculative and contrarian: retail traders are positioning Cal-Maine as a beaten-down value play, not a growth story.
The post’s author frames the thesis directly: “All my eggs in one basket. This is the $CALM before the storm. Mostly YOLO, but with a lil micro DD.” The title captures the mix of humor and conviction typical of retail contrarian plays.
All my eggs in one basket. This is the $CALM before the storm. Mostly YOLO, but with a lil micro DD
by u/unknown in wallstreetbets
The bullish case rests on three pillars:
- Cal-Maine carries $1.14 billion in cash with minimal debt, giving it firepower to keep acquiring and buying back stock even as earnings compress
- Specialty eggs now represent 44% of total shell egg sales, up sharply year-over-year, reducing dependence on volatile commodity pricing
- The $128.5 million Creighton Brothers acquisition in early March adds 3.2 million laying hens and expands the prepared foods platform, which grew 586% year-over-year last quarter via the Echo Lake Foods deal
The Real Costs of Cal-Maine’s Pivot
CEO Sherman Miller has been direct about the strategic shift. “Cal-Maine is systematically advancing a structural upgrade in the egg category from a position of strength. While the market has long viewed us as a pure commodity business, we are focused on becoming a higher-value, more stable earnings platform,” he said after the most recent quarter. As a result, analyst consensus sits at 3 holds and 2 buys, and the average price target is $87.75, with Wall Street projecting a 36% revenue decline over the next 12 months as egg prices continue to normalize. The forward P/E has expanded to roughly 20x, a jarring contrast to the trailing multiple of under 3.8x that reflects peak-cycle earnings. A looming DOJ antitrust inquiry into egg pricing adds legal uncertainty neither bulls nor analysts have fully priced in.
Insider activity offers little conviction: executives received equity grants in January but also executed coordinated share sales at $72.44, consistent with pre-planned 10b5-1 schedules. With shares trading near $89, well below the 52-week high of $120.67, the next earnings report will show whether prepared foods and specialty eggs are growing fast enough to offset the decline in commodities.