Gas Prices
I know, right.......I'm so scared to put anything lower then 93 in my car. I'm scared it might explode.
The highest price I have paid for gas was when I ran out while on Lake Tahoe. $4.50 at a marina!!
I wonder how well the new Hawaii gas price cap will work. Seems a little anti-american to limit the free market like that. Since the cap changes each week and the new cap will be known before it goes into effect, will people wait to buy gas if they know on Sunday the cap will drop? Or rush to the pump if they know it will go up?
A little of topic, but why doesn't anyone (i.e. the media) seem to be focusing on the fact that the oil companies have had RECORD PROFITS during the past couple years!!! If the price of a barrel of crude is the problem, then their costs would be higher as well! Obviously, they are increasing the price of gas well beyond their increase in costs to produce gas. So the problem is not with OPEC or the daily price of a barrel of oil, as the media seems to focus on, but rather with the oil companies taking advantage of the situation and price-gouging in order to get higher profits!
Sorry, I just spent $60 to fill up my GX and am a little tweaked right now...
The highest price I have paid for gas was when I ran out while on Lake Tahoe. $4.50 at a marina!!
I wonder how well the new Hawaii gas price cap will work. Seems a little anti-american to limit the free market like that. Since the cap changes each week and the new cap will be known before it goes into effect, will people wait to buy gas if they know on Sunday the cap will drop? Or rush to the pump if they know it will go up?
A little of topic, but why doesn't anyone (i.e. the media) seem to be focusing on the fact that the oil companies have had RECORD PROFITS during the past couple years!!! If the price of a barrel of crude is the problem, then their costs would be higher as well! Obviously, they are increasing the price of gas well beyond their increase in costs to produce gas. So the problem is not with OPEC or the daily price of a barrel of oil, as the media seems to focus on, but rather with the oil companies taking advantage of the situation and price-gouging in order to get higher profits!
Sorry, I just spent $60 to fill up my GX and am a little tweaked right now...
You're certainly correct though.
Sorry, I just spent $60 to fill up my GX and am a little tweaked right now...
Price controls don't work. Even if all the governments world wide put price controls on gas all that would happen would be MASSIVE corruption of politicians and lobbying for special exemptions, variations, and bribes to get allocations.
In a market where everything produced can be consumed prices rise. Until a more widely available alternative comes about or supply increases, prices will continue to rise. Is it a major threat to the world economy? No. If people are suddenly crushed by gas prices, companies will permit more car pooling, telecommuting, governments like the U.S. will eventually allow more nuclear power plants (as they should have decades ago), etc.
Celebrating Lexus & Toyota from Around the Globe
I see what you are saying about the increase in profit being simply due to an increase in units sold. If they had a fixed profit per gallon, and they sold, say, 30% more fuel, then you would expect that profit would increase by 30% (not counting neglible cost cutting measures they might have implemented during the year, etc). In the past couple years, profit has increased significantly more than their increase in product sold. As an example, take a look at Chevron's 2004 Annual Report:
http://www.chevron.com/investor/annual/2004/financials/
In their words:
"Net income rose sharply on the strength of upstream operations and much-improved results from the downstream businesses in 2004. Special-item charges in 2002 reduced earnings more than $3 billion" (which means they actually banked $3 billion more, but thanks to carry-over write-offs from 2002, the number looks lower on paper)
Sales increased 24%. Net profit increased 84%. If you look at the 5-yr Operating Summary, actual amount of product manufactured and sold was near the lowest in 5-years... yet they still nearly doubled their profit. So the assumption that they made and sold more product is not the reason for improved downstream businesses... which to me translates to, "We charged more for our stuff so we made more money selling the same amount of stuff!"
It will be interesting to see what the 2005 Annual Reports say

"Full service premium"?? There are still stations that have full service? What does that price translate to in "folks that pump their own gas" dollars?
*Sorry, edited the wrong message DOH!
Last edited by genearch; Aug 25, 2005 at 09:49 PM.










