Gasoline becomes more affordable, just when Americans
don't need it
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[March 16, 2020] By
Stephanie Kelly and Jessica Resnick-Ault
NEW YORK (Reuters) - At two gasoline
stations in Scarsdale, a wealthy suburb of New York City not far from
one of the nation's worst outbreaks of coronavirus, attendants whiled
away the minutes on a rainy Friday morning at what would normally be
their busiest time of day.
"We've had one or two customers - that's it," said Julio Barrios as he
sat under an umbrella at the full-service Shell station in downtown
Scarsdale. "For more than a week, business has been slow."
The coronavirus has infected at least 156,000 people worldwide and
killed more than 5,800, rocking the global economy.
As cases steadily grow across the United States, Americans are
cancelling road trips, running fewer errands and finding they do not
have to drop their children off at school following widespread closings.
The irony is that drivers are parking their cars at a time when gasoline
is more affordable, which usually spurs more driving. The average price
for a gallon of gasoline is $2.26 as of Saturday, lowest since 2017,
according to the American Automobile Association.
The United States consumes more than 20 million barrels of oil and
petroleum products daily, the most worldwide, and motor gasoline
accounts for nearly half of that, at about 9 million barrels a day. But
the coronavirus outbreak's effect on driving activity is expected to be
drastic.
"We would estimate commuting and leisure driving will be down up to 50%,
with most impact in the northern states where the virus spreads faster
now," said Per Magnus Nysveen, senior partner at Oslo, Norway-based
energy research firm Rystad Energy.
That could sap fuel demand by roughly 2 million to 2.5 million barrels
per day, he said, and for 2020, that would cut demand by roughly 300,000
to 400,000 bpd. Worldwide, overall oil demand is set to fall in 2020 for
the first time since 2009, the International Energy Agency said last
week.
The reasons for the sharp fall in prices are not just due to the
coronavirus. A week ago, an oil price war erupted between Saudi Arabia
and Russia after those nations were unable to come to a deal to cut
supplies in response to the anticipated drop in demand due to the virus.
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A cab driver wears plastic gloves after fueling his car in a gas
station while gasoline price has been declined due to coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) in New York, U.S., March 14, 2020.
REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
Instead of curbing supply, Saudi Arabia and other nations are flooding global
markets with barrels of crude oil. U.S. crude oil prices <CLc1>, which account
for about half of the price of retail gasoline, dropped to about $31 per barrel
this week, lowest since 2016.
Some U.S. states have seen average gasoline prices fall by more than 10 cents in
the last week. Savings on low gasoline prices are usually referred to by
lawmakers as "like a tax cut," but for the moment, Americans are seeing they can
pocket savings just by not driving at all.
"I will have zero driving requirements for two weeks (minimum) now that
everything is shutting down," said Cathy Martin, of Potomac, Maryland. "For me,
my average weekly work and kid activity driving is 150 miles."
That shift has not yet shown up in official U.S. Energy Department figures,
where motor gasoline demand is up 1.7% for the past four weeks when compared
with the year-ago period.
Industry analysts said consumers can expect cheaper gasoline prices for the
foreseeable future, even with the approach of the summer driving season, when
prices tend to climb along with demand. U.S. gasoline futures <RBc1> fell to
85.36 cents a gallon on Friday, lowest seasonally since at least 2005, Refinitiv
Eikon data showed.
The average American's motor gasoline expenditures were $1,072 in 2017, the
latest data available, according to the U.S. Energy Department. That total
varies by state, from as little as $708 in New York to a high of $1,441 in
Wyoming.
But some Americans spend much more than that due to lengthy commutes, like Jamie
Niederkohr of Toledo, Ohio, who normally drives up to 200 miles a day related to
work as a data collector. Her husband has a 71-mile per day commute.
"I figure we could save over $200 a week (on gasoline)," she said.
(Reporting by Stephanie Kelly and Jessica Resnick-Ault; Editing by Chizu
Nomiyama and Lisa Shumaker)
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