Since you are TDY near San Fransisco I hope you made sure to keep the poop map on your phone. You never know.I’m tdy near San Francisco and saw $7.xx at one gas station. I almost threw up
Since you are TDY near San Fransisco I hope you made sure to keep the poop map on your phone. You never know.I’m tdy near San Francisco and saw $7.xx at one gas station. I almost threw up
Should even ask what that isSince you are TDY near San Fransisco I hope you made sure to keep the poop map on your phone. You never know.
Not sure how it's done in other areas but gasoline prices change in my area as the market changes, not affected by delivery or loads received. If the markets drop they will slooooooowly drop but if the market goes up those prices will jump like a cat in a bath tub of hot water! With this last drop in crude it finally dropped to $2.31 (and I filled up) but just a little increase in the markets and the next day it was $2.59. The fuel market has a lot of caveats.Some of that depends on the delivery , and if the price went up or down with the next load compared to what's already in the ground .
So if they have gas in the ground that they paid $4.00 a gallon for , and the market goes to $2.50 a gallon , they sell $4.00 a gallon gas for $2.50 ?in my area as the market changes, not affected by delivery or loads received.
Yeah I'm familiar with rack pricing from my work in the drilling industry. I was under the impression that retail fluctuations were based on market and that would include daily changes regardless of delivery. It would be hard to keep up with large price swings if your a retailer paying rack prices but I guess they figure it out.So if they have gas in the ground that they paid $4.00 a gallon for , and the market goes to $2.50 a gallon , they sell $4.00 a gallon gas for $2.50 ?
I bet they don't . Maybe it's different now , but when I worked in a full service gas station , you changed that sign as soon as the new load hit the ground .
Maybe it's a factor of when the retailer pays for the load . When I was working there , he paid up front , and he owned what was in the ground . That was a Texaco station .
I remember Amoco paid after the fuel was sold . So I could see the market controlling the pricing .
Yeah I'm familiar with rack pricing from my work in the drilling industry. I was under the impression that retail fluctuations were based on market and that would include daily changes regardless of delivery. It would be hard to keep up with large price swings if your a retailer paying rack prices but I guess they figure it out.
On another note, One of the biggest things nobody notices? Gas is priced by 9/10 of a gallon, not a whole gallon. That is something that's always made me scratch my head. Deceptive marketing by the oil industry.