U.S. gasoline average price tops $5 per gallon in historic first
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[June 11, 2022] By
Laura Sanicola
(Reuters) -The price of U.S. gasoline
averaged more than $5 a gallon for the first time on Saturday, data from
the AAA showed, extending a surge in fuel costs that is driving rising
inflation.
The national average price for regular unleaded gas rose to $5.004 a
gallon on June 11 from $4.986 a day earlier, AAA data showed.
High gasoline prices are a headache for President Joe Biden and
congressional Democrats as they struggle to maintain their slim control
of Congress with midterm elections coming up in November.
Biden has pulled on numerous levers to try to lower prices, including a
record release of barrels from U.S. strategic reserves, waivers on rules
for producing summer gasoline, and leaning on major OPEC countries to
boost output.
Yet fuel prices have been surging around the world due to a combination
of rebounding demand, sanctions on oil producer Russia after its
invasion of Ukraine and a squeeze on refining capacity.
DEMAND DESTRUCTIONU.S. road travel, however, has remained relatively
strong, just a couple of percentage points below pre-pandemic levels,
even as prices have risen.
Still, economists expect demand may start to decline if prices remain
above $5 a barrel for a sustained period.
"The $5 level is where we could see very heavy amounts of gasoline
demand destruction," said Reid L'Anson, senior economist at Kpler.
Adjusting for inflation, the U.S. gasoline average is still
approximately 8% below June 2008 highs around $5.41 a gallon, according
to U.S. Energy Department figures.
Consumer spending has so far remained resilient even with inflation
running at its highest level in more than four decades, with household
balance sheets shored up by pandemic relief programs and a tight job
market that has fueled strong wage gains, especially for lower-income
workers.
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A customer refuels their vehicle at a Mobil gas station in Beverly
Boulevard in West Hollywood, California, U.S., March 10, 2022.
Picture taken March 10, 2022. REUTERS/Bing Guan
Gasoline product supplied, a proxy for demand, was 9.2 million barrels per day
last week, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, broadly in
line with five-year seasonal averages.
The high prices for drivers come as major oil-and-gas companies post bumper
profits. Shell reported a record quarter in May and Chevron Corp and BP have
posted their best numbers in a decade.
Other majors, including Exxon Mobil and TotalEnergies, as well as U.S.
independent shale operators, reported strong figures that have spurred share
repurchases and dividend investments.
Numerous companies have said they will avoid excessive investment to boost
output due to investors’ desires to hold the line on spending, rather than
respond to $100-plus barrel prices that have persisted for months.
Refiners have been struggling to rebuild inventories which have dwindled,
especially on the U.S. East Coast, reflecting exports to Europe where buyers are
weaning themselves off of Russian oil.
Currently, refiners are utilizing about 94% of their capacity, but overall U.S.
refining capacity has fallen, with at least five oil-processing plants shutting
during the pandemic.
That has left the United States structurally short of refining capacity for the
first time in decades, analysts said.
(Reporting by Laura Sanicola and Shivani Tanna; editing by David Clarke and
Jason Neely)
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