Oil below $98/barrel in trading today
Oil below $98/barrel in trading today
Just like I predicted. Except unlike Dave I won't pretend it was because I am prescient but because every damn economist who can spell the word has worried this will happen, as it has happened many times before.$96.95. CNBC stated it is because the economy has already turned sour. I would suspect that the high oil/gas prices are a MAJOR reason that the economy has turned sour, pulling huge amounts of our GDP out in the form of higher prices across the board.
$96.95. CNBC stated it is because the economy has already turned sour. I would suspect that the high oil/gas prices are a MAJOR reason that the economy has turned sour, pulling huge amounts of our GDP out in the form of higher prices across the board.
Jobs are not being added back fast enough, but there are some encouraging signs like this if you look..
QFTThe problem is not merely that jobs are not being added back fast enough, but that job growth is lower than the needs of population growth! In other words, we're losing jobs relative to the population growth of working-aged people. For example, if a month has 54,000 new jobs and the nation needs 150,000 merely to keep pace with population growth, then we've really lost about 96,000 jobs for that month.
there was a $0.20 gallon increase in prices today in midwest
You pay $.50/more than the rest of the US. Stop being retarded.Getting a little bit of a break. Gas dropped 10 cents last night to $4.44
Oil dropped quite a bit today so hopefully these city stations start dropping more since we are paying a dollar plus more than the rest of the country.
6-15-2011
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Oil-r...1.html?x=0&sec=topStories&pos=4&asset=&ccode=
Oil tumbles nearly 5 percent on stronger dollar
The financial crisis in Europe is sending oil prices back to where they were four months ago.
Oil prices fell more than 4 percent Wednesday on worries that a financial crisis in Greece could spread, with European banks getting burned if the country defaults on its debt. That sent the dollar surging against the euro, another negative for oil. And the Europe news comes on the heels of recent U.S. economic weakness and signs of declining demand for oil and gasoline.
"Things are very unsettled right now," Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research, said. Three years after the banking meltdown in the U.S., investors remain skittish about banks, Lynch said.
"Just a whiff of a crisis, and everyone's ready to bolt."
Benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude plunged $4.56, or 4.6 percent, on Wednesday to settle at $94.81 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. That's the lowest level since late February, when a rebellion in Libya closed off that country's oil exports.
Retail gasoline prices continued to fall, although they're still about $1 per gallon higher than a year ago.
Pump prices are expected to continue to drift lower this month, perhaps to a national average of $3.50 a gallon. Wednesday's big drop in oil, however, will not immediately be reflected at the pump since retail gas prices tend to trail oil by about two weeks.
Too bad, for the rest of the country it's been falling for weeks.The price in my area seems to be locked at $3.80. It hasn't moved for weeks.
Not so sure the economy has turned sour, but I will agree that higher gas are a problem.
Jobs are not being added back fast enough, but there are some encouraging signs like this if you look..
http://mjperry.blogspot.com/2011/06/more-on-strong-big-truck-sales-in-may.html
The early morning market analysis is so ridiculous, its always wrong. Oil down below $95 at the moment, just barely.Oil climbing on the very same reason they said it was going down yesterday
6-16-2011
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110616...jY29yZGlvbl9idXNpbmVzcwRzbGsDb2lsY2xpbWJzYWJv
Oil climbs above $95 amid Greece debt fears
Oil prices inched above $95 a barrel Thursday, recovering slightly as investors bought back into the market after big losses sparked by Europe's deepening debt crisis and a stronger U.S. dollar.
"Given the growing crisis in Greece, risk aversion is likely to remain high," said analysts at Commerzbank in Frankfurt. "The Greek crisis appears to have been the trigger of (Wednesday's) price slide, but the actual reason is the exaggerated level of prices before."