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Market Close: Dec 28 Up, Diesel Up 2.41 cents, Gasoline up $.0027 cents

Fueling Strategy: Diesel Users, Please, tonight before 23:00 CST have tanks completely full of fuel, Thursday prices will jump UP 8 cents then Friday look for prices to go up another 2.5 cents  ~ Be Safe

Gasoline UsersPlease have tanks full of fuel is possible, Thursday prices will remain unchanged – Be Safe

 

NMEX Crude     $ 78.96 DN $.5700

NYMEX ULSD    $3.3778 UP $.0241

NYMEX Gas      $2.3629 UP $.0027

Market Conditions 2022 Overview 

Oil prices have increased significantly from their pandemic lows and are substantially higher than 2019 levels. They don’t match the pre-fracking era of $100 oil, but they may get up there. The outlook for oil prices is driven largely by global economic growth, but it’s a complicated relationship. Gasoline prices to consumers, of course, will respond with oil prices.

Oil prices fluctuate more than most consumer prices. Big gains are often followed by large declines, and vice versa, so the recent uptick or downticks cannot be projected into the distant future.

The most crucial fact about oil is that new supply cannot be brought to market quickly. In many parts of the economy, a rise in leads prices many businesses to increase production. When cotton prices rise, for example, it takes about one growing season for them to drop again.

Oil companies can usually get a little more production from their current wells. They can be a more aggressive in pumping, though that sometimes sacrifices long-term production for short-term gains. Oil companies can also accelerate new development and keep open wells that might have been shut down at lower prices. Oil can also be sold out of inventory. These are all minor changes, though.

Large increases in oil supply take about a decade, though the timeline varies greatly from project to project. Geological surveys are reviewed to identify good prospects. Exploratory wells are drilled, and the results evaluated. Some exploration proves fruitless. On the successful discoveries, production wells are drilled, and local infrastructure is installed to get the oil to market. New refining capacity may be needed, which also takes time.

When demand increases beyond the supply that is quickly available, prices rise while the world waits for new supply to come to market.

When demand slows down, due to global economic recession or deceleration of growth, all that supply capacity is still there. Much of the cost of bringing oil to market is borne up front, with low production costs once all the wells are drilled and infrastructure is in place. And more production may come online from projects that were begun in the high-price days. So, companies keep pumping oil even after prices drop, driving prices lower.

OPEC and other political supply decisions are relatively small compared to these huge forces at work pushing prices up and down.

Current oil prices reflect not only current supply and demand, but also long-term issues. Traders can stock up on oil if they anticipate higher demand—and thus higher prices—in the future. Or they can dump their inventory if they get pessimistic. Thus, the current prices reflect current opinion about the long-term supply-demand balance in the market. The recent run-up, which doubled prices in 12 months, reflects a global economy switching from pandemic-induced recession to long-term growth.

The Covid Effect

If the world continues to make progress on keeping Covid-19 infection and death rates low, the current price of about $80 a barrel is reasonable. Actual growth that matches expectations would not push prices higher.

The greatest upside opportunity for economic growth is in Asia, which continues to limit economic activity to fight Covid. Improvement in either their infections or their policies could boost economic activity enough to justify prices at $100 for a couple of years.

On the downside, another Covid variant with high infectiousness or mortality would set back the global economy and push prices down, though probably not to their pandemic low under $20.

Conclusion

The range of possibilities is quite wide, reflecting both our uncertainty about the global economy as well as the high sensitivity of current prices to expectations for the economy. The current price of about $80 a barrel is a good guess for the next few years, but with wide uncertainty.

Retail gasoline and diesel prices will stabilize around current levels if this oil forecast proves true. The price in any state reflects not only general oil prices but also state and local taxes as well as the location of the gas station.

Have a Great Day,

Loren R Bailey, President

Office: 479-846-2761

Cell: 479-790-5581

 

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As always, thank you so much for being a part of the Fuel Manager Services, Inc. family, and we look forward to making this the best year yet!

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Categories: Fuel News
loren: Fuel Manager Services Inc. "Serving the trucking industry since 1992" I've been in and around the trucking industry for 45-years beginning in owner operator operations at Willis Shaw Express. I bought a small trucking company that I ran for 6-years then sold and went to work for J.B. Hunt Transport in 1982. After 10-years with Hunt, I started Fuel Manager Services, Inc., we are in our 29th year of serving the American trucking companies. Our simple goal was and is to bridge the gap between the trucking companies and the fuel suppliers.