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We’ve made it to Wednesday, folks. And if you’re in New York or Southern California, we hope you enjoyed the beautiful weather. It might help you  digest some of the data reported today in the consumer price index. Prices for oil and natural gas climbed again. But there was one notable price drop, as our colleague Meghan McCarty Carino reports, and it comes sunny-side up.
— Carrie Barber, newsletter writer, and Dylan Miettinen, digital producer
Two cartons of Eggland's Best eggs rest on the top of a grocery store shopping cart.
Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP via Getty Images
Do you take your price relief scrambled or over-easy?
The price of eggs is down more than 40% since 2025, but other grocery staples got more expensive.
The February consumer price index report might not be the best reflection of the current economy given recent global events, but it does include an Easter egg of sorts. The price of eggs dropped by more than 40% year over year in February, as shortages caused by the longest-running avian flu outbreak have stabilized. But that relief in the egg aisle hasn’t translated to other staples.
 
The national average was $2.50 for a dozen large, grade-A eggs last month, after hitting a high of more than $6 a year ago.
 
The shock was specific, but the high cost of eggs came to feel like a symbol of everything that was unaffordable, said Gregory Daco, chief economist at EY-Parthenon.
 
“The key element when it comes to these price categories is what economists call salience, which is essentially how visible these prices are to the average consumer,” he said.
 
Stores might not post the price of eggs on giant signs like gas stations but consumers have a strong mental anchor of how much a staple should cost.
 
“And so when these prices change, they tend to have an immediate effect, not just on consumer wallets, but also on the psyche of consumers across the U.S.,” Daco said.
 
Thing is, the drop in egg prices might not stretch as far as consumers hope, said David Ortega, a food economist at Michigan State University.
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News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Stocks were generally down this hump day. The Dow fell 0.61%, and the S&P 500 shed 0.08%. The Nasdaq rose 0.08% on gains in tech stocks. And oil prices continued their climb.
     
  • Inflation for consumer prices clocked in at an annual rate of 2.4% in February. That’s the lowest level in five years, but the reading came before the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran.

  • Speaking of which, how much is war in Iran costing U.S. taxpayers? One estimate puts it at roughly $800 million a day.

  • Papa John’s shares spiked 19% today on news that a Qatari investment fund again made a bid for the pizza chain, this time cutting its offer to $47 a share.
Energy
  • The International Energy Agency’s member nations agreed today to release 400 million barrels of oil — a record — in an attempt to calm jittery oil prices.
     
  • Natural gas prices are up 10.9% in a year, driven largely by cold winter weather and energy-hungry data centers.
     
  • Tribal governments are being forced to get creative about filling funding gaps left after President Donald Trump’s tax bill last summer clawed back $1.5 billion intended for renewable energy projects in Indian Country.
Artificial intelligence
  • Generative AI is helping make scams cheaper and more effective. Last year, Americans lost a reported $16.6 billion to cybercrimes. 
     
  • The newest star reporter at the Cleveland Plain Dealer is actually not a reporter at all. It’s AI. (Artificial intelligence could never compete with the charm, wit, and devilish good looks of Marketplace’s 100% human newsletter team.)

  • Oracle is spending more than it makes as it moves full steam ahead on building AI infrastructure. It’s a risky bet that’s making investors antsy.

  • And in case you needed to feel ancient today: Most of the co-founders of Aaru — a start-up that uses AI bots to predict human behavior and was recently valued at $1 billion —  aren’t old enough to legally drink.
 


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“Child care doesn't take IOUs. Grocery stores don't take IOUs.”
— Johnny Jones, secretary-treasurer of AFGE Council 100, the union representing TSA employees
It’s hard to live off of IOUs. Just ask TSA agents, who are considered essential employees and must continue working — even without pay — during the ongoing partial government shutdown. Some TSA screeners haven’t been showing up to work or have left for other jobs. All this is translating to longer wait times for passengers.
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Two men wearing Pikachu visors look down at their phones while playing
Photo by Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images
Final note
Image data? Catch 'em all!
A tech company is using a huge cache of images captured by hundreds of millions of Pokémon Go players to create an AI model capable of precise location navigation. Niantic Spatial plans to put that data to good use, with robots delivering pizzas within a few centimeters of their destinations. But odds are pretty slim that any delivery robot could be as cute as Pikachu.
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