The author says that “It’s not because we have fewer barrels of oil. It’s not because demand is up.”
Crude is traded on a world market. World demand for crude is up.
The price depends on what world investors think the price of oil will be in the future. When world traders think oil will be high, they bid it up even higher. Traders around the world know demand for gasoline rises in the summer. They therefore start buying oil futures contracts in the spring in anticipation of that price rise.
There are costs differences in the different blends of gasoline at certain times of the year…The author write like he doesn’t believe so.
Refinery’s shut downs have a significant impact on price particularly when there are unscheduled shut downs.
The author says “that oil refineries have been running at or near capacity.” The current refinery utilization rate is at 88.0%. But it’s been as low as 81% this spring… That’s not near capacity.
The author says that “Oil company profits have not slumped during the nation’s Great Recession.”
While they have come back, it totally false to say they did not go down during parts of the “nation’s Great Recession”
Furthermore most of the major integrated oil companies profit margins that are close to the averages of many other major companies.
The author makes several inaccurate statements. The author lacks specific information and engages in way to many broad generality’s. Its lazy journalism and a low information article that only a low information reader would find acceptable.
There are many shorter term reasons that have helped cause the current price spike in the USA and around the world.
But the 2 biggest long term reasons why prices are rising in my view is the increases of world crude demand, and in the USA the drop in value of the dollar that was caused by the decision to massively increase federal government spending and borrow the money.
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