Gas Prices Continue to Drop Ahead of Summer Travel Season
By: Chris Isidore @CNNMoney
Updated: May 10, 2012
(New York, NY) -- Just in time for the start of the summer driving
season,
Early May is typically about the time of year that gas prices hit their peak, as refineries switch over to start making the summer blend required after Memorial Day. In 2008, the record high price for gas of $4.114, didn't come until July 17.
But this year the average national price for a gallon of
unleaded has already been declining slowly but steadily for just over a month,
shaving about 20 cents off a gallon of unleaded in that time. And with oil
prices also falling, more declines at the pump are expected.
"You have seen an early peak in gasoline prices, and
barring any headlines from
In Springfield, the average price is $3.36 a gallon. Click here to find the cheapest gas in town.
The
Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst for OPIS, said that supplies of
crude oil and gasoline are at their highest level since just before Saddam
Hussien invaded
That is helping to drive the price down in most parts of the country except for the West Coast, where supplies are still tight and prices are not yet falling.
Kloza thinks gasoline is unlikely to get significantly cheaper -- prices are only 5% below the high of the year. But he thinks they should keep moving in the right direction for most motorists.
"There are a lot of folks who were predicting $5 a gallon when prices were heading up, now they're predicting less than $3 a gallon. Neither is going to happen," he said. "I'd say that $3.50 for a national average is probably as good as it's going to get."
Kloza said that part of the decline is that there has been an easing in the so-called "fear premium" associated with worries about Western sanctions and possible military action against Iran. He believes that was adding about $25 a barrel to the cost of crude oil earlier this year, now it's more like $10 to $15.
"Iran has a sort of slipped from the radar screen," he said.
Oil rig workers making close to $100K a year
But much of what is bringing good news at the pump is bad economic news.
Fitzpatrick said oil has been selling off this month on concerns by traders about demand out of Europe, with about a dozen European countries there falling into recession, and recent French and Greek electionsraising new worries of a meltdown in European sovereign debt.
Signs of slower growth in China and some recent signs of weakness in the U.S. job market is also pushing oil prices down, he said, since both can cut into demand for oil and gasoline.

