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Data provided by Oil
Price Information Service
Media
are encouraged to localize fuel price stories by contacting their local
AAA club media representative.
AAA Fuel Gauge Report Overview
By Geoff Sundstrom
Director, AAA Public Relations
Monday, March 9, 2009
(A podcast of this commentary is available at www.aaanewsroom.net)
Oil’s slippery nature is on display again this week as the
price slid to the upside today, closing at its highest level in two
months. Today’s price of $47.16 per barrel was supported by
comments from China that it is considering purchasing strategic assets
such as oil and gold with some of it nearly $2 trillion in foreign-exchange.
The news was considered significant because it came in the form of
an editorial by the head of China’s energy ministry and was
published in a paper owned by the government. China is one of the
world’s largest buyers of U.S. government debt, so the possibility
of a move by that nation into other asset classes has the ability
to move markets world-wide.
Also roiling the barrel today was news that OPEC may agree to additional
production cuts when it meets on March 15. OPEC says it has already
cut production by more than 4 million barrels per day since last September.
Whether the Cartel will follow through with additional production
cuts remains to be seen, however, since some analysts say existing
quotas are being violated by member nations trying to raise more revenues
at their partners’ expense. Earlier this month, Iran said it
would not support a reduction in oil output.
With regard to retail gasoline, the nationwide average price of self-serve
regular gas remains near $1.95 per gallon this week. It seems the
industry isn’t ready to breech the $2 per gallon level, even
though wholesale gasoline numbers suggest higher prices could be around
the corner. Reformulated (RBOB) gasoline traded today near $1.33 per
gallon. That’s about 10 cents per gallon higher than where the
wholesale price spent a lot of time the last few weeks.
Interestingly, ongoing and emerging global security issues –
including a planned missile launch by North Korea, a near skirmish
between the U.S. and Chinese Navies, more reports that Iran is closer
to achieving a nuclear weapon and the election of a harder-line regime
in Israel – have not been able to rattle the oil markets as
they have in the past. Instead, the market seems to shrug away each
new possible threat as it keeps scanning the horizon for the return
of the long-lost American motorist.
AAA's Daily Fuel
Gauge Report is the most comprehensive retail gasoline survey available.
Everyday over 60,000 self-serve stations are surveyed.
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