Gasoline prices surpass 2009 highs

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Gasoline prices surpass 2009 highs
Motorists dig deeper to pay for gasoline as prices hit 15-month high

Just seven days into the new year, pump prices have surged past 2009 highs as winter storms and a flood of speculative money send oil prices higher.

With the average gallon of gas is now a shade under $2.71, a typical motorist using 50 gallons of fuel a month will pay about $135 a month to fuel up. Last year at this time consumers were paying only about $85 per month.

There are early signs of a recovering economy and job figures due Friday may further that trend, yet consumers have pared way back on energy spending.

It's not clear how much of an energy burden can be carried with unemployment hovering around 10 percent.

Americans are now spending about $1 billion a day on gasoline with most paying 90 cents to a dollar or more per gallon than they did a year ago.

In less than a month, crude prices have jumped 20 percent and yesterday peaked above last year's high. That has dragged pump prices to new 15-month highs.

Gas prices in some coastal cities are already at or close to $3, and many energy experts believe that most of the nation will follow along this spring as refiners switch over to less polluting blends of gas as required by law.

Yet that scenario is heavily dependent on the fiscal health of the country in coming months, said Geoff Sundstrom of auto club AAA.

"With gasoline, much of that is going to depend on the ultimate strength of the economy in the spring and higher demand seasonally for fuel," he said.

Demand for gasoline will come nowhere close to levels just two or three years ago, said Sundstrom.

Still, prices are rising fast; 7 cents in just the past week, according to AAA, Wright Express and Oil Price Information Service.

The run-up in gasoline prices has had nothing to do with demand for gasoline that is so weak that refiners have been shutting down operations and scaling back others. The government said Wednesday that refineries operated at just 79.9 percent capacity for the week ended Friday, well below historical averages.

Valero Energy, the nation's largest independent refiner, has posted consecutive quarterly losses and expects a loss in the fourth quarter as well.

Refiners are paying high prices for the crude that they turn into fuel, but say demand for fuel is so low that they cannot recoup those costs when they bring their products to the market.

"We have to see strongly increased demand, which we're not seeing for both distillates and gasoline," he said.

In fact, winter storms have driven gasoline demand down sharply because people have been unable to drive.

Snow was piled so high in Iowa that drivers couldn't see across intersections. North Dakota saw heavy snow. There were wind chills of 52 below zero in the Midwest Thursday. Temperatures plummeted in the South, threatening fruit crops.

The Energy Information Administration reported Thursday that 153 billion cubic feet of natural gas was pulled from storage last week, in line with estimates. But supplies remain well above average.

Benchmark crude for February delivery fell 43 cents to $82.75 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange as the dollar rebounded.

Money has flooded into oil futures because the dollar has been so weak, making it cheaper for anyone holding stronger currencies to buy crude.

In other Nymex trading in February contracts, heating oil fell 1.7 cents to $2.1858 a gallon and gasoline dropped less than a penny to $2.1334 a gallon. Natural gas futures fell 22.5 cents to $5.784 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, Brent crude for February delivery fell 26 cents to $81.63 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange
 
Actually, technically, it's probably over at this point, though I realize that it doesn't feel that way for millions of Americans. Still, there is reason for optimism....

it might have been over, but in the race to increase their profits, the oil speculators ensure that the recession will now continue. companies will not hire more people if transportation costs are going to rise due to fuel costs.
 
the same oil speculators beat the price way below a fair level during the recession. Now you must pay up.
 
speculators ride the wave, when demand is up they drive the price up even higher. When demand is down they drive it down even lower with excess selling in the market.
Demand is now coming back, hence the higher yet not quit fair price of oil.
 
speculators ride the wave, when demand is up they drive the price up even higher. When demand is down they drive it down even lower with excess selling in the market.
Demand is now coming back, hence the higher yet not quit fair price of oil.

so speculators inflate the actual price of oil in a profiteering scheme?
 
It's called free market capitalism to the educated.

What large Western Industrialized Country has cheaper gas?
 
Gas is slowly moving up.. so is the mortgage rates which are about 75basis higher then they were a month ago. Interest rate hikes are coming in 2010 so lock your variables now.
 
so all the same bubbles are being inflated, those same bubbles that the fed chairmans said would not be an issue in the economy, then when they popped, the feds tried to say they couldn't see it coming.

I say it again, welcome to your new recession. Can we finally call this one Obamas recession?
 
Actually, technically, it's probably over at this point, though I realize that it doesn't feel that way for millions of Americans. Still, there is reason for optimism....

probably true. Let's all hope everyone come to believe it's strong, because at least 50% of our hope and change depends us having faith in ourselves and our future. The other 50% depends on the people in place to make the decisions for us. I hope you know what they're doing with our future at this point, because I gave up trying to find out. If you have any sites that can explain the health plan that's currently getting tossed around, i'd appreciate a link
 
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