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On May 16, 6:21 am, wrote:
On 16 May 2007 01:27:04 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: http://www.fuelgaugereport.com/WAmetro.asp Throughout nearly every major market in my home state, retail prices for refined products were off a fraction of a cent or so on Monday when compared to the previous day. By the way, this is an interesting site. You can look up your own state and track fuel pricing. On the home page of the fuel gauge report there's a chart tracking the retail and wholesale prices of refined products, as well as the cost of a bbl of oil at the wellhead. There are fairly parallel lines in the retail and wholesale prices, (although the fact that the margin between retail and wholesale is currently below recent averages tends to dampen any optimism fostered by a partial cent drop in retail pricing). Looking at the very flat line on the bottom of the chart, it's easy to visualize that the price of crude oil has next to zero effect on the price of refined products. I likehttp://www.gasbuddy.com/ -- Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. Homepagehttp://pamandgene.idleplay.net/ Rec.boats at Lee Yeaton's Bayguidehttp://www.thebayguide.com/rec.boats -----------------www.Newsgroup-Binaries.com- *Completion*Retention*Speed* Access your favorite newsgroups from home or on the road ------------------ Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - That's a good site as well. And most of the trend lines reported there say "level", with a few individual areas headed down and only Louisiana headed up. Maybe I'm too optimistic, but I think we may be at or near the top for this year. Doesn't cost anythng to be hopeful, and we know that gas pricing will change. Whether we're paying 15-20 cents more in a couple of weeks or 15-20 cents less that will be a change and if there are indicators that prices are beginning to level off or even drop the change could be for the better. |