Originally posted by: bctbct
Originally posted by: rgwalt
Originally posted by: bctbct
Originally posted by: rgwalt
Two weeks ago the price of WTI crude was higher than the price of unleaded gasoline on a per volume basis on the Chicago commodities exchange. At those prices,
refiners lost money in the Chicago market by refining crude oil and turning it into gasoline. That is a fact. The same situation persisted for *years* back in the 1990's and early 2000's.
Refiners did well to turn a profit. Oil production companies are doing fine, always have, and always will as long as there is demand for crude.
Go back and read my first post in this thread. Really read it, and then I'll be happy to debate with you more.
R
Thats a lot like saying a jewlery store is losing money because they bought gold when it was $700 an ounce and sold it 2 wks later in the shape of a ring when it was $710 per ounce.
If Oil Companies are losing money, its not reflected in their earnings.
No, it is like saying that the jeweler bought gold at $700 per ounce, turned into a ring, and sold the ring for $650 per ounce. That happens some times when you are a petroleum refiner. Sometimes you run crude that costs more than the products it produces are worth. Refining is a different business than crude oil production.
Exxon, BP, Shell, etc are both producers and refiners. Exxon made the majority (probably greater than 90%) of their money on petroleum production. The idea that they are throttling production to increase prices and demand is illogical. At $90+ per barrel oil, they are producing as much as they possibly can. The real money isn't in the price of the oil itself, but in the volume sold. I won't argue that oil companies are making profits, that much is obvious. However, it isn't their fault that gas is expensive. If you want to blame someone, blame the traders on the NYMEX.
Exxon doesn't produce crude oil to put gasoline in your tank. They produce crude to sell to refineries around the world. Exxon refineries buy crude from whomever in order to process it into salable products so you can buy it and put it in your car. Exxon wants to get the best price for the crude they can. If we put price controls on crude oil in the US, it won't get sold here. The volume will simply not be available to us. Europe, Asia, and the rest of the world will get their fill before we get a sip. This will result in a supply shortage in the US. Sure, the gas may be cheap, but when you pull up to the station there will be signs saying "Pumps are dry". Cheap gas doesn't do anyone any good if you can't buy it.
R