Marketplace

Search

Friday, November 2, 2007

Listen to the show

What the gas pump's not telling you

A man pumps gas into an SUV

Oil is almost at $100 barrel, but gas prices have yet to rise as substantially. Dan Grech looks into why the cost of unleaded hasn't reflected the price of crude and when that might change.

A man pumps gas into an SUV (Chris Hondros/Getty Images)

More on The Economy, Travel

TEXT OF STORY

Lisa Napoli: Meanwhile, the $100 barrel of oil is looming large, as oil prices hit 96 bucks a barrel this week. Dan Grech looks at why we haven't seen that cascade to the pumps just yet.


Dan Grech: The main ingredient of gasoline is light, sweet crude. So with oil at record highs, you'd expect gas prices to be way up as well.

But that hasn't happened. Analysts estimate that regular, unleaded gasoline is a good 15 cents cheaper than the price of crude would suggest.

Oil analyst Jim Burkhard is with Cambridge Energy Research Associates. He says this discrepancy has to do with the amount of money refiners make on each barrel of oil, also known as the refining margin.

Buckhard: The refining margin has declined quite a bit from the spring up until now, so that has mitigated some of the increase in the gasoline price.

Refining margins plunged from $37 a barrel in May to under $3 a barrel last month. The good news for drivers ends there.

Buckhard: If crude oil prices continue to rise, over the next several weeks we're likely to see higher gasoline prices as well.

I'm Dan Grech for Marketplace.

Music From This Show

  • Ray of Light Madonna Buy
  • Sea Song Doves Buy
  • Working for Vacation Cibo Matto Buy
  • Our House Madness Buy
  • Clocks Coldplay Buy

The Specials

GAME: Budget Hero

Budget Hero

Think you could balance the federal budget? Play the game.

Conversations from the Corner OfficeTM

Conversations From the Corner Office

Marketplace goes one-on-one with CEOs, company founders, head honchos...

Sit in

Working

Working

Intimate profiles of workers in the global economy.

Meet them

Marketplace on iTunes U

iTunes U

Marketplace is on Apple's online education platform, iTunesU. Get free downloads in subjects like History, Science, Business and more. Study up

American Public Media © |   Terms and Conditions   |   Privacy Policy