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

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

 

What I worry about is the short memory of the American public. So a few good things have come from higher gas prices, fewer highway deaths and maybe people slowing down and driving less. But we seem to forget very quickly how volatile the oil countries are and I am afraid we will all go back to irresponsible rampant consumption in the blink of an eye. Our government will lose the sense of urgency to move toward oil independence and the big oil companies will continue to rape our pay checks as usual. If we are to ever recover from this financial meltdown, we must develop our own resources full speed ahead or hope that the rest of the world just moves over for us ... like that is going to happen.

Beth has some good points, but Congress's inaction should not be blamed on just the GOP. Democrats have plenty of blame also. Their argument that oil companys have plenty of land now to drill in has little value. If there is no indication of oil on that land or it is nearly impossible to drill ecocnomically, then there is no reason to try to drill there. If my understanding of the article is correct, then gas should fluctuate roughly $.05 per gallon for every $1.00 change in oil price per barrel (not including other uses). So if oil prices have fallen from $135 per barrel to $125 per barrel ($10), why has gas not dropped by $.50 per gallon?

Congress needs to do something NOW about the speculators, who want money and don't give a damn about the public. Everything has gone up. Gas, food, etc. Except our pay does not. People are finding it harder and harder to make ends meet. We vote these people in, can't they finally do something for US, instead of all the bickering, fiinger pointing, and added attachments to these bills? The big oil execs somehow JUSITFY their huge profits and bonuses! How????

The first thing we need to do is get the Dems out of congress!!! If people would realize that the economy was doing relatively good til they got control.  If you want higher gas prices, higher taxes and more "give away programs" leave the Dems in control. If we want the economy to turn back with lower gas, lower taxes and a decrease in subsidies to those to sorry to work get the Republicans back in control

1 barrell of oil makes 19.5 gallons of gasoline? that should make gas prices at around 6 dollars a gallon? Im confused.

Something has to be done. This is hurting the economy,   badly. I live in Idaho and it is effecting every aspect of life. Prices of everything is crazy. We have to choose to eat or buy gas. It's nuts! There is no shortageof oil, the big wigs just want more money in their pockets and the hell with anyone else, just like it's always been . Make life a little easier forus that weren't born with a silverspoon in ourmouths.

With Exxon just posting 11 billon in profits? Why in the world would they let the price of gas go down? They are enjoying their cash flow while everyone else is struggling to put food on their table. Shame on the "Big" Oil schmucks.

Personally, I'd like to see prices settle in at about $2.50 per gallon.  Realistically, it ain't gonna happ'n, cap'n!  As Beth stated, the oil execs, Bush and his cronies, speculators are all lining their pockets.  But the oil companies will swear to the death that they aren't profiting from this.  We are constantly lied to from the top to the bottom.  Only fundamental change at the grassroots will make a difference.  We need to continue to "downsize" our lives.  Walk more, ride bikes more, use public transportation, streamline waste.  Many of us don't realize how much gas can be spared just by simply slowing down.  Folks don't have their "third eye" working.  We need to be smart enough to change our habits.  We can save a lot of money by not using gas at all.  Just trying to illustrate a point!

Crude oil price will probably drop as we get closer to the US Presidential election.  Just like it did a year ago when we had a large number of congressional/senatorial elections...  My family is driving less and combining trips to include groceries/shopping.  Also looking at getting rid of uneconomical vehicles.  I look to see gas at the $4.50-5.00 range by next summer.

if the american public would vote every incumbent politician out of office and start over we might accomplish something for the people by the people instead of the special interest groups who now run this country.JUST A THOUGHT

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