Can gas fall back to $3 a gallon this year? - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
Search Top Stocks:

Can gas fall back to $3 a gallon this year?

Posted Jul 31 2008, 08:01 AM by Douglas McIntyre
Rating:
Filed under: , ,

Through much of the spring and early summer, Wall Street experts and oil analysts said gasoline could break above the $5-a-gallon barrier as oil moved close to $150 a barrel and vacation travel increased. This has broken the back of the car industry and crippled airlines as well.

In some regions of the country premium gas prices did top $5, but now, for the first time in a long time, the move in prices is downward. Data from the AAA show the national price for a gallon of gas falling to $3.96 this week, down from $4.05 a week ago.

With crude still dropping, how far can gas fall and can it make it back to $3 this year? Because of changes in consumption patterns, gas prices could fall sharply and fast.

The link between $150 crude and $4 gas is one that the public associates with an absolute link between crude and petrol. The relationship is less direct than most consumers believe.

Because of falling demand and a strengthening dollar, crude has dropped below $124, and, barring political instability in one of the large producing nations like Nigeria or a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico, oil should keep dropping.

Based on OPEC production and the flow out of other major producing nations, the supply of crude is fairly stable. Use of oil in large consuming nations including India and China should be dropping modestly. They have cut the level at which they subsidize gas and diesel, raising prices to consumers and businesses.

Airlines, tremendous consumers of fuel, are cutting capacity by as much as 15%, further denting demand.

The most significant point as which the link between the price of oil and the price of gas diverges is in the habits of the car driving public. Production of gas out of major refineries is likely to stay steady. A fast drop in crude prices should actually improve margins at major refiners as oil drops faster than what they charge retailers for gas at the pump. Americans have driven 40 billion miles less in the past seven months compared to the same period last year pushing down demand for gas by 2.4%.  More people are not driving at all or are turning to public transportation.

If oil drops 25% from its $150 peak, moving down to $112, gas would likely be pushed back toward $3. But, gas could move down to that level even with oil only slightly under $120, if it stays there for a prolonged time.

One barrel of crude oil makes 19.5 gallons of gasoline. But crude is used for a number of other products including petrochemicals. The prices of oil by-products including plastics, synthetic fibers, and detergents have spiked up sharply, cutting demand.

If consumption of jet fuel, petrochemicals, and heating oil drops because of high prices, the amount of crude available to refine for gas will increase. Couple that with the fewer numbers of miles driven by Americans and there is a compounding effect.

Conservation plus less demand for other uses of oil spells gas moving back to $3, even if oil only falls modestly from here.

Top Stock blogger Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 24/7 Wall St.

Related reading:

The market rally depends on crude oil

A scary thought: Gasoline at $7.50 a gallon

Korea's hunt for oil fuels price hikes

Comments

 

It won't stay lower.  As soon as congress breaks session, it will go back up.  they can't seem to pass legislation on the speculators, since the GOP insists on tying it to thier drilling initiatives, tho what one has to do with the other I can't fathom.  COngress can't seem to get ANYTHING done, since they won't work together.  One side won't do anything unless they get something in return.  Can we PLEASE just pass a speculation bill without anything else attached to it?   AND, since demand for gas has declined, the refineries have CUT BACK on production.  That is why the oil prices rose $4 a barrel.  And BP said they were have 'mechanical' problems at thier refineries, thus cutting back production again.  We are trying to save gas, and conserve more, and they just want those 'record' profits.  they are going to get them one way or the other and to hell with the people.

I think Beth makes some good points. This is an interesting anomaly because for once the laws of supply and demand and of economics in general are falling by the wayside...there SHOULD be an excess in supply and prices SHOULD drop...but the oil companies are playing this in a way to maximize profits, absolutely. I'm not sure what will happen though. A part of me wants the prices to drop to $3/gallon just so the Chrysler $2.99/gallon deal fails, lol. Interestingly, in the town where I live in Michigan, gas is usually around $4, and in Toledo, OH where I work (22 miles south) gas has been $3.42 or so for the past week. Go figure...so regionally $3 a gallon isn't a huge stretch in some places in the US.

I have been contacting Congressional reps by email and phone and believe me they have no intentions of passing any legislation concerning speculation. The speculation in oil and corn (for ethanol) are the oil companies and failing banks using Hedge Funds which have no accountability. They are going to extract every penny from us knowing the Congress and the president have no intentions on acting.

Exxon/Mobil posted profits today (7-31-08) of 11.8 BILLION,and yet we still pay over $4 a gallon for gas? Where do i sign up?

I agree with Beth from VA !! Go Beth !! :)

Speculation is not the problem and any economists will tell you that.  The problem is supply and demand.  There is more demand today because of the rising economies in India and China.  It is simple economics.  When there is more demand and the slupply stays the same or slightly increases than prices go up.  If you want to blame anybody blame the Democrats and environmentalists because they are blocking efforts for America to become engery independent and not rely on foriegn oil.

Yes and here in the Northeast, if the price of heating oil doesn't go way down, people are going to be freezing to death. I have a small house and a 250 gallon tank. It will cost me over $1200 to fill the tank at todays prices. I kept the temperature at  at a balmy 62 last winter and had to fill the tank 3 times. Thank God I have income. What about the elderly and disabled on fixed incomes? We are in for a tragic winter. And where are our politicians? They are doing nothing to help while the Oil companies are making record profits. This does not make sense. I hope all of you who voted for W an unbelievable 2 times are happy with yourselves and the state of our formerly great country!

I am so disappointed at our current Congress. they do not think about the people that have elected them to the office they hold. I for one will not forget how they have handled the current problem we have. Mrs Pelosi will not even put the offshore drilling up for vote. I thought we lived in the United States of America. Again I will remember how they handled this problem when election time comes around. Maybe Mrs. Pelosi should not be put up for vote in the next election. Please let the majority make the decision not just a select few.

Beth in Virginia could you please in your own words define the terms:

Profit

and

Profit margin?

It's too bad that the new TESLA Roadster which is all electric has plenty of power and zip and can go 240 miles on a charge, which can be fully recharged in only 3 hours has a price tag of $106,000.  !!!  It's like looking at the Future for the rest of the people.  Kond of like when people had horse and buggies and Mercedes was putting out those beautiful roadster's for the Wealthy in the early 1920's

If electric cars were built to maintain REAL highway speeds like this Tesla is everyone would buy one if they were closer to a Middle Class Price tag.  C;mon Chrysler, Ford, & GM!  Why don't you just sit back and watch the future pass you by?  Here's your chance!

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):