petrol prices

[TW]Fox;11698580 said:
Takes real skill to say 'Oil will rise' and get it right :D
There's a lot of pretty dumb people around then. Most annalists and all governments including the IEA have been saying prices will fall since the initial jump four years ago.
 
You mention this a lot as speculation as being the cause of the high price. I'm not an economist but this doesn't seem like something you can discount as being something separate from the price.

As a commodity in limited quantity it seems inevitable at some point even before demand exceeds supply that the market will realise that that point exists, and hence the value of it will rapidly climb. Of course its a good place for your investment capital, because from what I have read it seems unlikely that a vast amount of supply is going to come on stream to supply the extra 20m barrels a day we'll need in the next 15 years.

I mean what's the solution to speculation driving the price? Stop people investing in it? Then how do you set the price? That doesn't sounds like healthy capitalism to me.
 
By its very nature it is an “in demand” commodity and therefore a safe place in which to invest money when other such places have become less safe of late. Because of this the chaps in the city are putting their pennies into it and so we have an ever increasing price as production is gobbled up and therefore new product attracts an ever increasing price as people try to get on board.

I simplify the detail but that in essence is why we are all paying so much for it right now.
 
By its very nature it is an “in demand” commodity and therefore a safe place in which to invest money when other such places have become less safe of late. Because of this the chaps in the city are putting their pennies into it and so we have an ever increasing price as production is gobbled up and therefore new product attracts an ever increasing price as people try to get on board.

I simplify the detail but that in essence is why we are all paying so much for it right now.

Could you unsimplify it a bit for the rest of us? How does "the chaps in the city are putting their pennies into it" work? How is production gobbled up?
 
$127bbl today, another high.

GW off to Saudi to beg them to produce more. Apparently they could if they wanted to, just don't feel like it...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7404856.stm

Most interesting part was:

But so far, oil cartel Opec, of which Saudi Arabia is a key member, has refused to increase production, insisting that the price rises have been driven by speculators and not real demand problems.

Capitalism at its best.
 
Could you unsimplify it a bit for the rest of us? How does "the chaps in the city are putting their pennies into it" work? How is production gobbled up?

Chaps in the city = Financial traders
Production gobbled up = Bought by said traders on the markets

They are putting money into oil on the world markets as they can feel secure that the demand will always be there and therefore their investment is not going to devalue overnight. Oil as a commodity is traded, just like gold, and its value is very high right now so the oil companies have to pay more for it, as in turn do we.

Clear?
 
Can anyone explain why the gap in price between diesel and petrol is getting wider?

We've just come out of winter so refineries are now switch back to producing diesel instead of heating oil, with diesel being the new 'in' thing supply and demand comes into play with diesel being a by-product of petrol, it's also taxed more, as it's a heavy polluter (:rolleyes:)
 
We've just come out of winter so refineries are now switch back to producing diesel instead of heating oil, with diesel being the new 'in' thing supply and demand comes into play with diesel being a by-product of petrol, it's also taxed more, as it's a heavy polluter (:rolleyes:)

Yeah but the tax is a fixed amount isn't it? So in that respect the widening of the gap between petrol and diesel isn't anything to do with the Govt. (for a change)
 
Yeah but the tax is a fixed amount isn't it? So in that respect the widening of the gap between petrol and diesel isn't anything to do with the Govt. (for a change)

Something to do with Low Sulphur, which Diesel fails at? I'll see if I can dig up something more specific.

I've always been lead to believe this, mainly as it's "less refined" than petrol.

"Come in Simon, where is your input?"

Aye it's more Crude then refined, hence the black smoke out of old cars :)
 
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