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Re: Gas prices keep soaring.. 4.89 per gallon [Re: foxkidd44] #8608831
Yesterday at 09:52 AM
Yesterday at 09:52 AM
Joined: Mar 2007
McGrath, AK
W
white17 Offline

"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
white17  Offline

"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
W

Joined: Mar 2007
McGrath, AK
I flew into Anchorage yesterday.

Unleaded is about 5.49 and diesel is 6.29


Mean As Nails
Re: Gas prices keep soaring.. 4.89 per gallon [Re: white17] #8608853
Yesterday at 10:31 AM
Yesterday at 10:31 AM
Joined: Dec 2010
Armpit, ak
D
Dirt Offline
trapper
Dirt  Offline
trapper
D

Joined: Dec 2010
Armpit, ak
Originally Posted by white17
I flew into Anchorage yesterday.

Unleaded is about 5.49 and diesel is 6.29

Need some stickers for sticker shock?

Stay away from the beef aisle. A moose is worth about 4 thousand dollars in meat now.

Last edited by Dirt; Yesterday at 10:38 AM.

Who is John Galt?
Re: Gas prices keep soaring.. 4.89 per gallon [Re: foxkidd44] #8608871
Yesterday at 11:06 AM
Yesterday at 11:06 AM
Joined: Mar 2007
McGrath, AK
W
white17 Offline

"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
white17  Offline

"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
W

Joined: Mar 2007
McGrath, AK
I do my best to stay away from everything in this place )))


Mean As Nails
Re: Gas prices keep soaring.. 4.89 per gallon [Re: foxkidd44] #8609011
Yesterday at 05:35 PM
Yesterday at 05:35 PM
Joined: Apr 2012
Northern Mn
rick olson Offline
trapper
rick olson  Offline
trapper

Joined: Apr 2012
Northern Mn
Dropped .40 today $3.69 now

Re: Gas prices keep soaring.. 4.89 per gallon [Re: foxkidd44] #8609147
Yesterday at 10:08 PM
Yesterday at 10:08 PM
Joined: May 2011
Oakland, MS
yotetrapper30 Offline
trapper
yotetrapper30  Offline
trapper

Joined: May 2011
Oakland, MS
Quote
Even if peace breaks out in the Middle East, it will be months before the oil market returns to anything resembling normal—and much of the industry may never be the same. The lag in restoring operations after the largest supply disruption in history will keep oil prices elevated for months, and will likely add a smaller premium for well over a year, experts say. On Wednesday, oil prices were falling on news that the U.S. and Iran were close to agreeing to the framework of a peace deal. Brent crude futures , the international benchmark, settled down 7.8% to $101.27. The State Street Energy Select Sector SPDR exchange-traded fund fell 4.1%, with Exxon Mobil dropping 4%.

But investors shouldn’t expect oil prices to drop much more in the near-term, analysts said. Gasoline too, could stay elevated. Average prices hit a multiyear high on Wednesday of $4.54 per gallon.

In recent days, analysts have been hiking their oil price estimates for the rest of 2026 to over $100 per barrel. Raymond James analyst John Freeman sees Brent prices at $110 in the third quarter and $100 in the fourth, he wrote in a note on Monday. Elevated prices could last into 2027. His average Brent price estimate is at $90 in the second quarter of next year.

“Predicting prices in the hyper-volatile world of war, jawboning, and social media posts is nearly impossible, but we’re confident in this: Physical market impacts are extreme, and the consequences for the oil market will be very long-lasting regardless of how soon the conflict may end,” he wrote. The news about a possible deal between the U.S. and Iran doesn’t change his price expectations, Freeman wrote in an email on Wednesday.

Noah Barrett, lead energy and utilities analyst at Janus Henderson, said in an interview that he considers Wednesday’s drop in oil stocks to be a buying opportunity. “I would be a buyer on the weakness today or continued weakness,” he said. Barrett said he’d focus on companies without much exposure to the Middle East, who drill in places like the U.S., Canada, and Latin America.

If the war does in fact wind down, the oil industry will still be stuck in deficit for a while. About 20% of the world’s oil normally flows through the Strait of Hormuz, but the Iranian and U.S. blockades have stopped almost all of it from flowing. About 5 million barrels of oil from Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E. have been rerouted to other pipelines away from the Strait, but that’s only a partial release valve.

Middle Eastern countries have shut in more than 11 million barrels of daily oil production. Those operations don’t simply turn back on immediately. In March, Shaikh Nawaf Al-Sabah, the CEO of Kuwait Petroleum Corporation, told a Houston energy conference that some production would likely take months to restore.

Even in an optimistic scenario, “meaningful” amounts of oil won’t move through the Strait until June, with volumes climbing back to 80% to 90% of normal by July, wrote Paola Rodriguez-Masiu, Rystad Energy’s chief oil analyst. “The physical market does not run on political timelines,” she says.

The cumulative size of the oil market’s deficit has ballooned. About 1 billion barrels of oil that would normally have been produced and sent to customers between the start of the war and today never made it to their end destination. To make up for the shortfall, countries are on pace to empty their oil storage tanks at a rate of about 5.5 million barrels a day this quarter—the most ever, according to S&P Global Energy. Once production is restored, they’ll need to replenish those stockpiles, boosting demand and elevating prices even more.

What’s more, the war has done long-lasting damage to infrastructure, and some facilities could take years to come back—if they come back at all.

Oil equipment company NOV said on its earnings call last week that between 500,000 and 2.5 million barrels of oil production may be permanently lost because of the war. Shutting in wells in a hurry can damage them, or make the restart process too difficult. Barrett said he’s not sure that the wells have actually sustained that much damage, but it’s one of many unknowns that could impede the oil market’s comeback.

“There’s some optimism today that we’re closer to the war ending,” he said. “I don’t think you can snap your fingers and magically things go back to normal.”



https://www.barrons.com/articles/oi...n1&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink


Gotta find a way, a better way, I'd better wait

Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not after you
Re: Gas prices keep soaring.. 4.89 per gallon [Re: foxkidd44] #8609148
Yesterday at 10:10 PM
Yesterday at 10:10 PM
Joined: Aug 2013
Louisville, Nebraska
jabNE Offline
trapper
jabNE  Offline
trapper

Joined: Aug 2013
Louisville, Nebraska
Took this in Lincoln this morning for you. Diesel was over $5 at this pump too.
Jim


[Linked Image]


Money cannot buy you happiness, but it can buy you a trapping license and that's pretty close.
Re: Gas prices keep soaring.. 4.89 per gallon [Re: foxkidd44] #8609169
Yesterday at 11:09 PM
Yesterday at 11:09 PM
Joined: Apr 2007
ohio
Ohio Wolverine Offline
trapper
Ohio Wolverine  Offline
trapper

Joined: Apr 2007
ohio
LOL Typical , just wait it out!
Always darkest before the dawn!


We have met the enemy and the enemy is us!
Re: Gas prices keep soaring.. 4.89 per gallon [Re: Ohio Wolverine] #8609213
32 minutes ago
32 minutes ago
Joined: Feb 2015
Iowa
T
trapdog1 Online content
trapper
trapdog1  Online Content
trapper
T

Joined: Feb 2015
Iowa
Originally Posted by Ohio Wolverine
LOL Typical , just wait it out!
Always darkest before the dawn!

Be happy you're getting screwed!


American Karens - not a fan
Re: Gas prices keep soaring.. 4.89 per gallon [Re: foxkidd44] #8609216
16 minutes ago
16 minutes ago
Joined: Aug 2013
Louisville, Nebraska
jabNE Offline
trapper
jabNE  Offline
trapper

Joined: Aug 2013
Louisville, Nebraska
In the entire history of the Middle Eastern conflicts, were any of them truly “won” and over with “quickly?”
My concern is we have a lot more pain coming.
Jim


Money cannot buy you happiness, but it can buy you a trapping license and that's pretty close.
Re: Gas prices keep soaring.. 4.89 per gallon [Re: foxkidd44] #8609227
2 minutes ago
2 minutes ago
Joined: Dec 2006
Northern Maine
Bruce T Online content
trapper
Bruce T  Online Content
trapper

Joined: Dec 2006
Northern Maine
$4.19 when I filled up yesterday.


NRA,NTA,MTA,FTA

Proud member of NTA
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