Oil Slick Stuff

There is such an easy fix to this BS. Pay the OPEC countries in food for Oil.

1 bushel of corn for one barrel of oil.

They either play the game or they eat oil.

I know this is oversimplification, but if our government would stand it's ground we could work it out and there would be next to no speculation.
 
There is such an easy fix to this BS. Pay the OPEC countries in food for Oil.

1 bushel of corn for one barrel of oil.

They either play the game or they eat oil.

I know this is oversimplification, but if our government would stand it's ground we could work it out and there would be next to no speculation.

I can see it now, $118 dollars per bushel of Corn :nuts:
 
There is such an easy fix to this BS. Pay the OPEC countries in food for Oil.

1 bushel of corn for one barrel of oil.

They either play the game or they eat oil.

I know this is oversimplification, but if our government would stand it's ground we could work it out and there would be next to no speculation.


I agree with the concept. Let them eat an oil and sand sandwich. Sounds yummy doesn't it. :D

Unfortunately our government won't take a stand like that. With $4 diesel, all of our foods prices are going to continue and rise. No relief in sight.
 
OK. I'll bring the first ear I had in mind.
science%20biofuel%20giant%20ear%20of%20corn%20tractor%20pulling%20ripe%20farm%20train%20coal%20car%20bin%202007%20News%20White%20House%20com.jpg
 
Gouging myth out of gas

When you're paying more at the pump, don't blame the station owner. He feels your pain.

By Aaron Smith, CNNMoney.com staff writer
April 24, 2008: 10:00 AM EDT


daris_gaines.03.jpg

As gas prices continued to hit record highs, Brooklyn motorist Daris Garnes assumed that the gas station was getting the lion's share of profits.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- If you think you're getting gouged at the pump - think again.
Like many other motorists, Daris Garnes thought she may be getting ripped off by her gas station when she filled up her Honda Accord in Brooklyn, N.Y., on Wednesday, a day that gasoline prices hit a new record.
"When I pull up, I don't even want to look at it sometimes," said Garnes, a speech therapist, as she paid $3.59 for a gallon of unleaded. That's more that the nationwide gas average, but it was the cheapest choice she had.
Garnes said she figured the gas stations's take was about $1.25 per gallon. Another motorist, construction worker Thomas Anthony, guessed 65 cents. But several other drivers estimated the station's take was less than a dime, and it turned out they were right.
Abby Razaque, manager of the BP station where Garnes filled up, said the owner's take was 8 cents per gallon, and that the lion's share of the proceeds go to BP.
"I get a lot of complaints," said Razaque. "I tell them I have nothing to do with the price. The [oil companies] are taking all the money that I am putting in my pocket."
For every gallon of gas, about 72% of the price goes to the producers of the crude oil from which it's made, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration - producers like Chevron (CVX, Fortune 500), ConocoPhillips (COP, Fortune 500) and BP (BP). Exxon Mobil (XOM, Fortune 500) recently made history by reporting the highest annual profit ever for a U.S. company when it reported 2007 results.
13% of the remaining price of a gallon of gas goes to taxes, while 8% goes to the refiners, and another 8% goes to distribution and marketing, which includes gas stations.
"They're not getting gouged by the gas stations," said Peter Beutel, energy analyst for Cameron Hanover. Beutel said that 90% of all pumps are privately owned, and those owners make anywhere from 7 to 15 cents per gallon, so that a relatively petty expense, like a pump-and-run theft, can throw off their earnings for a whole day.
"Just because you're seeing the street prices go up, doesn't mean our profit has gone up," said Tom McSweeney, a co-owner of a Shell station in Jericho, Long Island. He said his former profit margin of 12 to 14 cents has dwindled to nothing.
"I bet the average person would say we were making 40 to 50 cents a gallon," said McSweeney, adding, "I wish that were the case."
Energy experts said that price gouging at the pump is a rare occurrence, largely because there is so much competitive pressure to keep the prices low.
"I don't think it's occurring at all," said Sara Banaszak, senior economist at the American Petroleum Institute. "The biggest factor in the price of gasoline is the price of crude oil."
Where gas stations make their money is off retail goods like candy bars, tires and frozen burritos, as well as services, like oil changes and auto repairs.
"A lot of times, the gas stations are making more on the coffee and donuts than on the gasoline they're selling," said Robert Sinclair, Jr., spokesman for AAA. "Sometimes the profit on a gallon of gas for the retailer is less than a penny a gallon."
Fadel Gheit, senior energy analyst for Oppenheimer, said retailers face even lower profit margins, as rising oil prices outpace gasoline. "It doesn't matter how high prices are at the pump," said Gheit. "If oil prices rise faster, you get margin squeeze."
How is the economy affecting your everyday life? Tell us about how your money situation has changed - or stayed the same - in the last few months. What's your biggest economic worry? Send us your photos and videos, or email us and share your story.
http://money.cnn.com/2008/04/24/news/economy/gas_gouge/index.htm?postversion=2008042410
 
Oil bounces back

Nigerian pipeline explosion sends crude back above $116; strengthening dollar limits rise.

Last Updated: April 25, 2008: 7:16 AM EDT

SINGAPORE (AP) -- Oil prices rebounded Friday from the previous session's steep drop, fueled by supply concerns after a Nigerian militant group reported that it sabotaged another oil pipeline.
Oil prices had initially extended Thursday's decline of more than $2 a barrel, with a stronger U.S. dollar prompting investors to book profits. But after oil dipped below $115 a barrel, news of the new threat to supplies put it back on the upward track.
U.S. crude for June delivery rose 80 cents to $116.86 a barrel in electronic trading by late afternoon in Singapore. It fell as low as $114.51 a barrel during Asian hours.
With the dollar still strengthening, though, it remains to be seen if oil will resume its march toward $120 a barrel. Investors see commodities such as oil as a less effective hedge against inflation when the dollar strengthens. A stronger greenback also makes oil more expensive to investors overseas. [more]
http://money.cnn.com/2008/04/25/markets/oil.ap/index.htm?postversion=2008042507
 
Big Oil Companies Raking it in and no is Bit&^%$# about it.:mad:

So a barrel of crude goes up in price on Monday, Tuesday the price at the pump goes up. Wait one stinkin minute, that barrel is weeks if not months from hitting the States let alone the Service Station. The cost of that gallon in the ground of your local filling staion is still at an older cost..... C'mon Now Please! Gimme a break!

Where is the Outrage?:confused:
 
Big Oil Companies Raking it in and no is Bit&^%$# about it.:mad:

So a barrel of crude goes up in price on Monday, Tuesday the price at the pump goes up. Wait one stinkin minute, that barrel is weeks if not months from hitting the States let alone the Service Station. The cost of that gallon in the ground of your local filling staion is still at an older cost..... C'mon Now Please! Gimme a break!
Where is the Outrage?:confused:

I'll pitch the first B^%$#
I just stole a neighbors tricycle if the crude & gas bubble don't burst.
:blink:
 
Big Oil Companies Raking it in and no is Bit&^%$# about it.:mad:

So a barrel of crude goes up in price on Monday, Tuesday the price at the pump goes up. Wait one stinkin minute, that barrel is weeks if not months from hitting the States let alone the Service Station. The cost of that gallon in the ground of your local filling staion is still at an older cost..... C'mon Now Please! Gimme a break!

Where is the Outrage?:confused:

I'll pitch the first B^%$#
I just stole a neighbors tricycle if the crude & gas bubble don't burst.
:blink:
?=CROOKS!!:cool:
 
Oil tops $119

Crude prices bounce back after new Nigerian pipeline explosion; strengthening dollar limits rise.

Last Updated: April 25, 2008: 11:29 AM EDT

NEW YORK (AP) -- Oil prices rose sharply Friday as investors refocused their attention on supply concerns -- buying on a pipeline attack in Nigeria and a looming refinery strike in Scotland -- and ignored the strengthening dollar. Retail gas prices, as expected, rose further into record territory, nearing $3.60 a gallon.
Light, sweet crude for June delivery rose $3.04 to $119.10 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
In Nigeria, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, or MEND, said its fighters hit an oil pipeline late Thursday, the fourth conduit the group has attacked in the past week. MEND said the pipeline belongs to a Royal Dutch Shell PLC (RDS.A) joint venture. A Shell spokesman confirmed one of its pipelines had been hit, but provided no additional details.
MEND is the main militant group behind a series of recent attacks in Nigeria's southern oil region. Earlier this week, Shell said an earlier attack cut its Nigerian oil production by about 170,000 barrels a day.[more]
http://money.cnn.com/2008/04/25/markets/oil.ap/index.htm?postversion=2008042511
 
A little far fetched, but interesting read nonetheless. Oil markets are way too big to be manipulated, even by Gazprom. I'm sure there's some corrupt trading going on in the Oil markets but what else is new?

Organized Crime Responsible for $119 Oil?
http://www.dailyreckoning.us/blog/?p=793
Yes, organized crime is very powerful in Russia, and they are probably in the oil market, but I'd be more worried if the U.S. was in their distribution system and/or a big direct customer. I agree Gazprom can't control oil prices though the cream and caviar must be good these days over there. The fact that Russian gangs are most likely making money off of the cream is problematic to us only because that gives them more cash and they can mess with their direct (pipeline) customer, who these days are often our allies.
 
Big Oil Companies Raking it in and no is Bit&^%$# about it.:mad:

So a barrel of crude goes up in price on Monday, Tuesday the price at the pump goes up. Wait one stinkin minute, that barrel is weeks if not months from hitting the States let alone the Service Station. The cost of that gallon in the ground of your local filling staion is still at an older cost..... C'mon Now Please! Gimme a break!

Where is the Outrage?:confused:

I don't remember the details of it. I understand the reason is, a retail outlet can charge more for the fuel already in their tanks, is to be able to pay for the increase in cost of that more expensive shipment that is yet to come. Most stations only make a couple of cents per gallon, and when you take out their business overhead, they don't have much left to buy higher priced fuel from the shipper.
 
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