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Business Title: Gasoline’s Drop Toward $3 Provides Obama a Lift U.S. gasoline prices at the pump, headed to $4 a gallon in April, are dropping toward $3 as the July Fourth holiday approaches, giving consumers relief and a boost to President Barack Obamas re-election campaign. Retail prices have fallen 15 percent to $3.329 from a peak of $3.936 on April 4, according to Heathrow, Florida-based AAA, the largest U.S. motoring group. Theyre also 6.6 percent lower than a year ago, underscoring how slowing economies are sapping demand even as an embargo on Iranian oil starts. Republican criticism of Obamas energy policies has faded as oil fell as much as 29 percent from this years high in February and stockpiles ballooned to the most in 22 years. Americans bought less gasoline in the four weeks ended June 26 than a year earlier even as prices dropped, MasterCard Inc. (MA) data show. Last month, the Federal Reserve cut its estimate for U.S. growth, Spain became the fourth euro-region country to seek an international bailout and Chinas manufacturing shrank. Two months ago, the Republicans in Congress were trying to place blame on the administration for the high energy prices, and, boy, you havent heard that in a month now, Bruce Oppenheimer, a Nashville, Tennessee-based Vanderbilt University professor who has studied energy and politics, said in a June 29 telephone interview. All of a sudden, it went from the front burner, to the back burner, to off the burner. August gasoline futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange dropped 0.79 cent to $2.6239 a gallon yesterday, down 23 percent from the March 26 high for the year. Prices were as much as 4.1 percent higher today at $2.7317. Crude for August delivery rose as much as 5.1 percent today to $88.04 a barrel after sliding to an eight-month low of $77.69 on June 28. Oil futures surged to $109.77 on Feb. 24, highest settlement price since May 3, 2011. Gasoline at the pump, averaged nationwide, was last below $3 a gallon in December 2010. Prices would need to drop a further 9.9 percent to reach that level, based on AAA data. There is about a 27 percent chance that retail prices will be below $3 in September, the Energy Department said in its June 12 Short-Term Energy Outlook. Pump prices are down from $3.565 a gallon a year ago, AAA data show. Prices declined 8 percent during the second half of 2011 to end the year at $3.278. Mitt Romney, Obamas Republican challenger, said in a March 18 Fox News Sunday interview that theres no question Obama was to blame for rising gasoline prices. In a Gallup poll taken June 22-28, Obama led Romney 48 percent to 43 percent. On April 12-16, Romney led Obama 48 percent to 43 percent. Relief at the pump isnt being shared equally. The average retail price in California is $3.741 a gallon after rising to $4.231 a month ago, according to AAA. Gasoline in Alaska and Hawaii is still above $4, while at the other extreme a gallon in South Carolina will set motorists back $2.915. The selloff has been driven by the crude market, David Greely, head of energy research at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in New York, said in a June 27 telephone interview. Oils down because of concerns about global growth. The U.S. and Chinese economies appear to be slowing, the European debt crisis continues. Crude in New York reached its 2012 peak as tension flared between Iran and Western nations over the Islamic republics nuclear program. In April, representatives from the U.S., Russia, China, the U.K., France and Germany held their first talks with Iran on its atomic program in 15 months. Brent oil for August settlement fell 46 cents, or 0.5 percent, to $97.34 a barrel yesterday on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange, down 13 percent from a year earlier. The grade was up $3.39, or 3.5 percent, to $100.73 at 10:26 a.m. New York time today. The contract is used to price more than half the worlds oil, including crude from Europe and West Africa refined on the U.S. East and Gulf Coasts. Crude output from Saudi Arabia, the worlds biggest oil exporter, surged this year before the July 1 implementation of European Union sanctions on Iran. The desert kingdom pumped 9.9 million barrels a day in May, the highest level since at least January 1989, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Iran was the big deal, Bill OGrady, chief market strategist at Confluence Investment Management in St. Louis, which oversees $1.3 billion, said in a June 25 telephone interview. We peaked out a month early because what happened with crude. The Fed estimated on June 20 that U.S. gross domestic product will grow between 1.9 percent and 2.4 percent this year, down from 2.4 percent to 2.9 percent forecast in April. Spain on June 25 requested 100 billion euros ($127 billion) in loans for its ailing bank industry, while an index of Chinese manufacturing slipped to 48.2 last month from 48.4 in May, HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics said yesterday. Rising domestic and Canadian oil production from shale and tar sands boosted U.S. crude inventories to 387.3 million barrels in mid-June, the highest level since July 1990, according to the Energy Department. U.S. refiners operated at 92.6 percent of capacity in the week ended June 22, the most since July 2007. Gasoline demand averaged 8.83 million barrels a day in the four weeks ended June 22, down 4.8 percent from the same period last year. The fall in gasoline is a side effect of the diminished economic outlook, John Kilduff, a partner at Again Capital LLC, a New York-based energy hedge fund, said in a June 26 telephone interview. The relief should continue given that refineries are operating at more than 90 percent of capacity even though demand is weak. U.S. gasoline consumption typically peaks between the Memorial Day holiday in late May and Labor Day in early September, when Americans traditionally take vacations. Weve already seen the peak gasoline price for 2012, unless there is some geopolitical event, Guy Caruso, a senior adviser for energy and national security at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, said in a June 26 telephone interview. The gasoline market in New York, the delivery point for Nymex futures, remains vulnerable to price increases because of refinery shutdowns, Kilduff said. The region, which lost about 700,000 barrels a day of capacity on the East Coast and in the Caribbean, was in danger of losing its largest fuel producer as Sunoco Inc. (SUN) sought a buyer for its Philadelphia plant. Sunoco and Carlyle Group agreed yesterday to form a joint venture to keep the 330,000 barrel-a-day refinery open. Delta Air Lines Inc. bought the idled Trainer refinery April 30, which will bring back 185,000 barrels a day of capacity to the region. April was a combination of factors that dont exist in the current market, Sander Cohan, a global transportation- fuels analyst and principal with Energy Security Analysis Inc. in Wakefield, Massachusetts, said in a June 25 telephone interview. You had a lot of capacity offline and fear that the East Coast wasnt going to get supplies it needed. For all the forecasts for price declines, cheaper gasoline may spur a revival in demand, said Bill Compitello, managing director of retail fuels, supply and trading at Pennsylvania- based Wawa Inc., a gasoline retailer with 312 outlets. Were seeing an uptick in demand from where we were and I think that is price-driven, Compitello said. The Energy Department increased its forecast for consumption this year by 0.2 percent on June 12. Oil in New York is forecast to average $102 a barrel in the third quarter, according to the median of 34 analysts estimates compiled by Bloomberg over the past year. The crude oil bear market is ending and with it the drop in motor fuel prices, said Mike Wittner, head of oil-market research at Societe Generale SA in New York. We expect crude prices to stabilize and I dont expect much of a change in the profit refiners make from producing motor fuel, Wittner said. So gasoline should stabilize as well.
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#1. To: Brian S (#0)
You WISH. When people don't have jobs, it doesn't matter if the price of gas drops from "outrageous" to "extremely expensive." One can sympathize with your plight, though... when it comes to o'Bungler,
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