Crazy Gas Prices
#21
The oil companies have billions in record profits, yet you still keep hearing how their is a shortage of refineries and the ones that do exist are in bad shape. Poor ability to refine oil into gasilone equals reduced supply, which equals increased prices.
When an industry is raking in the dough but not investing in infrastructure to stay prepared for continued growth and demand, that's called greed. The money is going somewhere, and if it aint going in to the business (new refineries, upgrading current ones) then it's going into someone's pocket.
Remember a year or two ago when just the THREAT of possible damage to refineries in the gulf coast area made prices go up? That's because one refinery is responsible for a very large geographic portion of supply. Unacceptable. The industrty should be forced to build more refineries with the billions of profit earned by gouging the U.S. public the last few years. Give them a deadline, and if they don't reach the pre-detremined refinery goal, fine them heavily.
When an industry is raking in the dough but not investing in infrastructure to stay prepared for continued growth and demand, that's called greed. The money is going somewhere, and if it aint going in to the business (new refineries, upgrading current ones) then it's going into someone's pocket.
Remember a year or two ago when just the THREAT of possible damage to refineries in the gulf coast area made prices go up? That's because one refinery is responsible for a very large geographic portion of supply. Unacceptable. The industrty should be forced to build more refineries with the billions of profit earned by gouging the U.S. public the last few years. Give them a deadline, and if they don't reach the pre-detremined refinery goal, fine them heavily.
Last edited by Rash; 5/2/08 at 06:54 AM.
#25
#26
Don't forget the talk about eliminating the federal gas tax for a while. It's really not a large tax, so it would be very easy for the oil companies to minipulate the price and keep that extra money as well.
#27
In the whitehouse or out, I don't see it making that big of a difference. Al Gore has just as many conflicts of interest as Bush or Cheney, most of D.C. has ties to lobbyists and that's just a start of the problems.
Eliminating the gas tax is a bad idea IMO. We need to focus on either increasing supply or reducing demand for gas, not lowering the price and increasing the demand.
Eliminating the gas tax is a bad idea IMO. We need to focus on either increasing supply or reducing demand for gas, not lowering the price and increasing the demand.
#28
I do not like taxes, but that one is a little dangerous to tinker with. Too many reciprocating affects.
#29
The Man... keeping you down.
Joined: August 15, 2004
Posts: 823
Likes: 1
From: Stealin' ur internetz
The price keeps going up because "Average Joe/Jane American" would rather blame anyone but who's in the mirror as the reason. Want gas to go down, hurt their margins. How do you hurt their margins? Decrease your usage.
#31
If it was just the guy in the mirror, Canadians would be paying less than US consumers. They have more oil, they should pay less. It is a worldwide market now. The Chinese aren't just driving rickshaws anymore and the Indians like cars better than cows.
Bottom line...
WE can no longer do anything to affect their bottom line or hurt their margins.
Suck it up folks, we need to build our economy to outdo India and China.
We will then have enough money to pay for our share of the gas.
Right now, we are losing ground every year.
Gas prices will increase. If we want gas we will have to pay for it.
We need to rebuild America to be the richest country in the world.
Until then, the price of everything will hurt.
#32
The price goes up because worldwide demand goes up.
If it was just the guy in the mirror, Canadians would be paying less than US consumers. They have more oil, they should pay less. It is a worldwide market now. The Chinese aren't just driving rickshaws anymore and the Indians like cars better than cows.
Bottom line...
WE can no longer do anything to affect their bottom line or hurt their margins.
Suck it up folks, we need to build our economy to outdo India and China.
We will then have enough money to pay for our share of the gas.
Right now, we are losing ground every year.
Gas prices will increase. If we want gas we will have to pay for it.
We need to rebuild America to be the richest country in the world.
Until then, the price of everything will hurt.
If it was just the guy in the mirror, Canadians would be paying less than US consumers. They have more oil, they should pay less. It is a worldwide market now. The Chinese aren't just driving rickshaws anymore and the Indians like cars better than cows.
Bottom line...
WE can no longer do anything to affect their bottom line or hurt their margins.
Suck it up folks, we need to build our economy to outdo India and China.
We will then have enough money to pay for our share of the gas.
Right now, we are losing ground every year.
Gas prices will increase. If we want gas we will have to pay for it.
We need to rebuild America to be the richest country in the world.
Until then, the price of everything will hurt.
www.fairtax.org
#33
The Man... keeping you down.
Joined: August 15, 2004
Posts: 823
Likes: 1
From: Stealin' ur internetz
+1 And the best place to start is with an overhaul of our tax system that will give the US economy a significant edge in the global marketplace.
www.fairtax.org
www.fairtax.org
#34
Yes you can. Supply and demand economics my dear Watson. There is no way gas will stay $4 a gallon if we cut our consumption in half. We are OPEC's cash cow and they can't afford to lose our cash flow even if China and India are ramping up their growth. Do you realize how much the global economy depends on our financial health? Oil and the Dollar are two very strategic chess pieces that could break a lot of these little podunk two-bit terrorist countries (ie Iran) in the event we decided to kick everyone off of our island.
The world is bigger than the USA. Everyone has to cut consumption.
The USA may use @20million barrels of oil a day
The rest of the world uses more than 3 times that amount.
Simple math:
If last year oil was $60 a barrel and gas was $2.60 a gallon,
then this year with oil at $120 a barrel shouldn't gas go higher than $4 a gallon?
Simpler math:
$120 per barrel divided by 42 gallons per barrel = $2.86/gal. for unprocessed oil.
The tar at the bottom of the barrel is now worth $2.86 per gallon.
Gasoline has to cost more than that with processing and additives.
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/stor...30F12F2C764%7D
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aht7tOuNn1G4
#35
The Man... keeping you down.
Joined: August 15, 2004
Posts: 823
Likes: 1
From: Stealin' ur internetz
Whatever. Take the chip off of your shoulder if your going to talk at the big kids table.
So you're telling me that if 10 million barrels of oil, per day, were to suddenly reappear on the market the price would not fall? You'll probably say that China would consume that excess. But China has only posted a 7% growth in oil consumption per year which means it would take them 10 more years to even begin to touch that number. We could ramp our production of oil by double within 5 years which would make us the number one single country producer, but still surpassed by OPEC as a whole. At 21.76 billion proved Oil reserves under our control that means we could pretty much meet our own demand. Since, on average, 60% of OPEC countries economy depends on the oil dollar how are they going to allow one of the biggest consumers to cut their revenues? Jack up prices everywhere else? Do you thing China can afford it? They are so overextended its just a matter of time before that deck of cards falls.
We're not even addressing the other reason oil prices have been climbing. When the Dollar and Euro is weak, investors hedge their money by investing in oil futures. When the Dollar is strong oil falls.
Yeah, you're math works in a vacuum. But you're ignoring the reasons why it's climbing. If you take away those reasons it falls.
The world is bigger than the USA. Everyone has to cut consumption.
The USA may use @20million barrels of oil a day
The rest of the world uses more than 3 times that amount.
Simple math:
If last year oil was $60 a barrel and gas was $2.60 a gallon,
then this year with oil at $120 a barrel shouldn't gas go higher than $4 a gallon?
Simpler math:
$120 per barrel divided by 42 gallons per barrel = $2.86/gal. for unprocessed oil.
The tar at the bottom of the barrel is now worth $2.86 per gallon.
Gasoline has to cost more than that with processing and additives.
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/stor...30F12F2C764%7D
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aht7tOuNn1G4
The USA may use @20million barrels of oil a day
The rest of the world uses more than 3 times that amount.
Simple math:
If last year oil was $60 a barrel and gas was $2.60 a gallon,
then this year with oil at $120 a barrel shouldn't gas go higher than $4 a gallon?
Simpler math:
$120 per barrel divided by 42 gallons per barrel = $2.86/gal. for unprocessed oil.
The tar at the bottom of the barrel is now worth $2.86 per gallon.
Gasoline has to cost more than that with processing and additives.
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/stor...30F12F2C764%7D
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aht7tOuNn1G4
We're not even addressing the other reason oil prices have been climbing. When the Dollar and Euro is weak, investors hedge their money by investing in oil futures. When the Dollar is strong oil falls.
Originally Posted by MarketWatch
Crude-oil futures fell Thursday, extending their decline from the previous session, as strength in the U.S. dollar pressured energy prices. Crude oil for June delivery dropped 78 cents to $112.67 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The dollar index, which tracks the performance of the greenback against a basket of other major currencies, rose 0.8% to 73.12.
Originally Posted by CNN Money
Crude-oil futures declined for a third day Thursday as strength in the dollar reduced commodities' appeal as an investment alternative.
Crude for June delivery dropped 94 cents, or 0.8 percent, to settle at 112.52 dollars a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
As the dollar has gained strength this week, oil futures have declined more than 7 dollars from their highs to their lowest levels since April 14.
Meanwhile, a strike that cut production at an Exxon Mobil Corp. facility in Nigeria ended Thursday, giving investors another reason to sell.
Analysts warned that the drop in oil might be temporary as the dollar could gain strength any time. The dollar's protracted decline has been a major factor boosting oil prices from about 64 dollars a year ago, and dollar's further weakening could easily drive high prices of crude futures.
Crude for June delivery dropped 94 cents, or 0.8 percent, to settle at 112.52 dollars a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
As the dollar has gained strength this week, oil futures have declined more than 7 dollars from their highs to their lowest levels since April 14.
Meanwhile, a strike that cut production at an Exxon Mobil Corp. facility in Nigeria ended Thursday, giving investors another reason to sell.
Analysts warned that the drop in oil might be temporary as the dollar could gain strength any time. The dollar's protracted decline has been a major factor boosting oil prices from about 64 dollars a year ago, and dollar's further weakening could easily drive high prices of crude futures.
#38
#39
Thanks John.This is actually my 3rd bike. had a katana750 back in the late 80's and just traded in honda shadow 600