Current Oil Price
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- WolfattheDoor
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Driving in today, I noticed that one garage had already upped its petrol to 103.9 after being 102.9 for ages.
I remember that when oil rose to around $97 a month or so back, all the garages put their prices up. Then it dropped to about $90 and, oddly, all the prices stayed the same. Now oil rises again and the price of petrol rises. How curious...
I remember that when oil rose to around $97 a month or so back, all the garages put their prices up. Then it dropped to about $90 and, oddly, all the prices stayed the same. Now oil rises again and the price of petrol rises. How curious...
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Alerting the world to the dangers of peak oil
Alerting the world to the dangers of peak oil
- Totally_Baffled
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- Location: Hampshire
There is something strange going on in the US regarding gasoline too (but the other way around)WolfattheDoor wrote:Driving in today, I noticed that one garage had already upped its petrol to 103.9 after being 102.9 for ages.
I remember that when oil rose to around $97 a month or so back, all the garages put their prices up. Then it dropped to about $90 and, oddly, all the prices stayed the same. Now oil rises again and the price of petrol rises. How curious...
Someone on PO.com calculated that with oil at $99, gas would be circa $2.40 excluding taxes, refining costs, transport, refining margin etc etc, and yet retail gasoline is still only around $3?
Are the refineries producing gasoline at no profit at the moment?
Even wholesale gasoline is at $2.52 as I type, shouldnt prices be in the $3.5 to $4 region already?
TB
Peak oil? ahhh smeg.....
Peak oil? ahhh smeg.....
As extensively explained in the same TOD thread, US Gas prices are in their low season. Demand for Gas (petrol) is lowest relative to demand for diesel , heating oil, and other products derived from different fractions of a distilled barrel of oil in mid winter. So demand exceeds supply to some extent, and profit margins are low. Give it a couple of months, and demand will pick up. Then the price should up to about $3.75 for $100 oil.
- Totally_Baffled
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- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Hampshire
Thanks Ralph, that makes sense.RalphW wrote:As extensively explained in the same TOD thread, US Gas prices are in their low season. Demand for Gas (petrol) is lowest relative to demand for diesel , heating oil, and other products derived from different fractions of a distilled barrel of oil in mid winter. So demand exceeds supply to some extent, and profit margins are low. Give it a couple of months, and demand will pick up. Then the price should up to about $3.75 for $100 oil.
TB
Peak oil? ahhh smeg.....
Peak oil? ahhh smeg.....
- Mean Mr Mustard
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- biffvernon
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Old news (a few hours old) but
Platts wrote:NYMEX March RBOB jumps 10.52 cents to $2.5990/gal
New York (Platts)--19Feb2008
March RBOB futures on NYMEX jumped 10.52 cents to $2.5990/gal Tuesday
after opening 9.12 cents higher at $2.5850/gal.
The rally was a broad-based move higher in commodities as the US dollar
slipped once again. Since November 2007, the US Dollar Index has been
range-trading, stuck between an all-time low of 74.484 and 77.854. The US
Dollar Index was 28 points lower at 75.98 at 14:09 GMT. A weaker US dollar
reduces costs for net importers of commodities such as China and India.
"While many are citing the unwinding of carry trades, we have argued that
other forces are at work, citing Commitment of Traders data from the futures
market that shows that the net speculative long yen position, for example, is
among the largest over the past decade," foreign exchange strategists at Brown
Brothers Harriman said in a report.
There was a lack of fresh fundamental news to justify the magnitude of
the rally in the energy sector, with the swing to the upside technically
motivated.
A strengthening in the front of the curve was also behind the rally in
crude oil ahead of Wednesday's contract expiration. March/April traded out to
plus 9 cents after settling last Friday at plus 5 cents.
While the front spread does not always reflect supply/demand
considerations ahead of a contract expiration due to liquidity issues, the
backwardation was spread across the nearby months as well.
March crude oil opened $2.30/barrel higher at $97.80/barrel while March
heating oil opened 6.91 cents higher at $2.7160/gal.
--Linda Rafield, linda_rafield@platts.com
- biffvernon
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15:11 - $ 99.60
Another 40 cents anybody?
Don't suppose this helps:
Another 40 cents anybody?
Don't suppose this helps:
MoreAlon USA Energy late Monday said it has temporarily shut its 70,000 b/d
Big Spring refinery located 290 miles (467 km) west of Dallas after the
facility was hit by an explosion and fire.
The cause of the explosion, which occurred at approximately 8:15 am
central time, and the extent of the damage are not yet known, the company said
in a statement.
The fire has been contained and is in the process of being extinguished
and a thorough investigation will begin as soon as reasonably possible, it
said.
http://www.cbc.ca/money/story/2008/02/19/oil.htmlLight, sweet crude for March delivery rose as high as $100.10 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange Tuesday. That's a jump of more than $4 a barrel on the day.
We've been going up all last week on tight diesel stocks and various refinery outages (EU and US) plus the Venezuelan vs Exxon situation and production outages in Nigeria. Plus every commodity under the sun was going on a stupendous rally as central bankers basically committed to keeping economies running by letting inflation loose. Commodities are always an inflation hedge, especially when the dollar is going down down down. And then today added to that mix, a Nigerian militant leader was allegedly shot in custody after being handed over to Nigerian authorities. And you can bet the militants are just a tad peeved. Threats to start killing (rather than kidnapping) oil workers abound...
- biffvernon
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- Totally_Baffled
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- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Hampshire
Apologies this was my fault, I think I said in another thread that with extra production coming online this year, rising inventories coupled with slowing demand due to economic slowdown and reaching the end of the Northern Hemishphere winter - I thought would prices would come down!Vortex wrote: Oil closes above 100 dollars for first time
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show ... -time.html
Sorry guys
Glad I dont do this professionally or I'd be another Nick Leeson!
TB
Peak oil? ahhh smeg.....
Peak oil? ahhh smeg.....