# The Thesis (aka why this isn’t just “egg stock”)
People are getting serious about what they put in (and on) their bodies. You’ve seen it:
\- Ditching plastic bottles: stainless/filtered water
\- Ditching non-stick pans: stainless/cast iron
\- Ingredient-checking like it’s a sport: “cleaner,” “traceable,” “ethically produced”.
That behavior shift doesn’t stop at water and cookware. It goes straight into the grocery cart. And Vital Farms is basically the branded “upgrade” button in the egg aisle: pasture-raised eggs (and butter), premium positioning, strong brand, and a supply network built around family farms.
# Fundamentals
Vital Farms has been putting up real numbers, not “vibes-based revenue.”
\- FY2024 net revenue: $606.3M (+28.5% YoY)
\- FY2024 gross margin: 37.9% (up 352 bps)
\- FY2024 net income: $53.4M (more than doubled)
\- FY2024 Adjusted EBITDA: $86.7M
And this isn’t “one lucky quarter.” Management literally frames the business as scaling toward bigger targets:
\- They previously guided FY2025 around $740M net revenue / $100M adj. EBITDA (earlier guidance)
\- More recently (Investor Day / late 2025), they updated FY2025 revenue to $755–$765M and still expect Adjusted EBITDA > $115M
\- They also put out a $2B net revenue target for 2030 and an initial 2026 net revenue outlook of $930–$950M
That’s not “tiny niche brand” talk. That’s “we think we’re building a real platform brand” talk.
# Why the “Better Food” Trend is a Tailwind
Eggs are one of the easiest “upgrade” purchases:
\- It’s cheap enough that people will pay extra without feeling like they’re financing a yacht.
\- It’s high frequency (weekly buyers = recurring demand).
\- When consumers get more health-conscious, they don’t just buy supplements, they trade up staples.
Vital Farms leans hard into ethical production + brand trust (“traceability,” mission, B Corp identity), which matters when people are in their “no toxins, no BS” era.
# Catalysts (aka what could make the line go up)
\- Distribution + shelf space gains: premium brands can win more facings as demand rises (company materials emphasize distribution expansion + item growth).
\- Margin staying strong: they’ve shown they can expand/hold gross margin while growing.
\- “Egg chaos” cycles: When commodity egg prices spike (avian flu, supply shocks), the price gap to premium narrows and some shoppers “upgrade.” (This dynamic has been discussed in major outlets covering egg inflation).
\- Long-term growth narrative: Investor Day targets ($2B by 2030, strong 2026 outlook) give institutions a roadmap.
# The Bear Case
This isn’t a free money glitch:
\- Premium product = consumer trade-down risk if the economy gets ugly.
\- Supply chain + input costs (feed, packaging, logistics) can bite margins.
\- Operational hiccups happen: they cited a temporary order-pattern disruption tied to an ERP transition in late 2025.
\- Category risk: eggs are exposed to disease shocks and industry volatility (even if their model can be more resilient than conventional in some scenarios).
VITL is the “people are waking up” grocery play:
\- Consumers are going cleaner + more intentional
\- Vital Farms is a brand-led premium staple (not a gadget trend)
\- The company is showing real growth + improving profitability
\- Management is out here calling shots like $930–$950M 2026 revenue outlook and $2B by 2030
TL;DR: VITL is the “people are upgrading their everyday food” play. As consumers get more intentional (ditching plastic bottles, non-stick pans, sketchy ingredients), they trade up staples, and eggs/butter are easy wins. Vital Farms has real growth + improving profits, and management is guiding for continued scaling. Risks: premium trade-down in a recession, input costs, and egg-category volatility.
Position: 1500 shares $VITL @ $31.14 avg cost.