A scary thought: Gasoline at $7.50 a gallon - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
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A scary thought: Gasoline at $7.50 a gallon

Posted May 06 2008, 09:14 PM by Charley Blaine
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I'm really not here to scare you, but, get ready, I AM going to scare you.

The news got lots of attention: Goldman Sachs analyst Arjun Murti predicted Tuesday that the price of crude oil could hit $150 to $200 a barrel in six to 24 months. (Here's one discussion of the report. Another is here.)

Crude oil in New York promptly jumped to as high as $122.73 a barrel in New York before closing at $121.84. And, as I write this, crude was trading slightly lower in electronic trading. But it also had the perverse effect of pushing the stock market higher. Indeed, the biggest winners in Tuesday's stock market were oil and gas production companies, natural gas companies. (But not refiners; crude oil is rising faster than refiners can push their prices up.) 

So, if crude jumps to $150 or $200, how does that translate into prices at the gas pump. Here's the scary part.

If crude hits $150 a barrel, we could be looking at $5 a gallon or so for the retail price of gasoline. That's based on Tuesday's $3.61-a-gallon national average and the rule of thumb that, for every $1 increase in crude oil, the pump price rises 5 cents a gallon.

If crude hits $200, the retail price of gas jumps to $7.52 a gallon. (Plus or minus a few cents) To fill the 10-gallon gas tank on my Honda Civic would cost $75.20, probably more because I live in Washington state, which has relatively high gasoline taxes.

Sure, one could say, well, Murti is a nut, but, as Barry Ritholtz noted on The Big Picture, Murti did suggest in 2005 that crude would hit $105 a barrel.

Gasoline at $7.50 a gallon is something nobody should go into denial over because there are going to be big problems from prices at levels I've suggested, including:

Will there be any U.S.-based auto manufacturers left? The answer depends entirely on how fast they can transform their product lines. Chrysler is in deep trouble already. That probably means more stress for the Midwest.

Will there be any domestic airlines left? The so-called legacy airlines (American, United, Northwest, Delta and Continental) would either try to combine into one big carrier or simply disappear. They're having serious troubles surviving as it is. This means big troubles for cities where these airlines operate hubs that generate thousands of jobs like Atlanta, Cleveland, Newark, Houston, Chicago, Denver, Dallas, Memphis and Minneapolis-St. Paul.

How will big convention cities survive? Places like Las Vegas, New Orleans, Atlanta, Chicago, New York, San Francisco and Houston have thriving convention industries, all built around the capacity of airlines to transport conventioneers to and from the destinations relatively cheaply. Emphasis on the word "cheaply."

How will tourist destinations like Florida or Hawaii cope? Add to that places like, say, Williamstown, Mass., whose Williamstown Theater Festival is a big draw, or Ashland, Ore., home of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. They're not close to major cities.

Although as Douglas McIntyre noted on Blogging Stocks, gasoline at $3.50 a gallon has not cut demand enough to force prices lower, there are signs that adjustments are being made. Sales of big, gas-guzzling SUVs and pickups are slumping. Consumption of gasoline in California fell 4.5% in January from a year ago.

The Department of Energy believes that domestic consumption is likely to fall more steeply than expected this year, the New York Times reported Tuesday. It is forecasting that domestic gasoline consumption will fall slightly this year from 9.29 million barrels a day in 2007 to 9.23 million barrels a day this year. (That's about 140 billion gallons a year, enough to fill my Honda for, well, a very long time.)

Sales of homes in outer suburbs are falling and not just because of the credit crunch and the subprime mortgage mess. Look at the stock prices of U.S. airlines, down 90% in the last 10 years.

Many commentators have wondered at the ability of Americans to grin and bear higher gas prices. But grinning and bearing it is losing any sense of fun. It's just gotten expensive: Over the first four months of 2008, as Peter Beutel of Cameron-Hanover noted this week, gasoline has cost the United States $757.24 million a day more than in the first four months of 2002. 

That’s more than the estimated $720 million a day spent in Iraq.

Comments

 

wow this is really lame :( to reminder u that gas will hit 3 dallor a gal this year :)! Cus really is all about supply and demand :) what a bad article :(

Gas prices are decided just like autmotive prices  what is the buying public willing to pay and add on from ther this is getting ridiculus when are we ALL going to finally stand together on something.

Do people realize which country is our biggest supplier of oil. It is NOT the middle east! People talk about supply and demand and third world countries evolving. Where are they getting their crude from. Its NOT Canada! The supply and demand and the impact at the pump are not related. Do people realize crude is traded in the American dollar?? The reason we are paying is because of BS speculators, a dollar value that is in the toilet, and government both Rep. and Dem. which have lobbyist and interest groups in this market. Did you notice that the price of the barrel was dropping until some JACK*** files a report that stated that oil production was down? Same with a hurricane (like we never had hurricanes prior to 2000). MAKE NO MISTAKE WHILE THERE IS MONEY TO BE MADE NO GOVERNMENT OFFICIAL IS GOING TO DO A DAMN THING ABOUT THIS!!

how do we fix it ? we have to strike from several angles, number one eleminate the speculation on oil, remove it from the commodities makrket, those leeches just drive the price up for everyone, two mandate we start to move to a hydrogen economy, this will take time for the infrastucture to catch up but must be started before we can attain it, this will cut our dependence on foriegn oil number three tax the hell out of gas guzzlers and use that money for research into alternative energy, no one needs to drive a DUMMER, in the mean time open up  offshore leases here in america and in Alaska, this can be done with out the tree huggers throwing a fit, just insure proper steps are in place to prevent ecological damage, and back that up with some hefty fines. All this will take time but we have to start somewhere, to get there, if we don't stop sending a trillion dollars a year to the mideast we are going to be bankrupt pdq washinton needs to wake up and address these issures, unfortunatly seems like every election year you have to choose between the lesser of two evils instead of someone who can get the job done, this is nothing new its been that way for years.

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