Originally posted by: HardcoreRobot
where is their funding coming from? can they pay out if gas hits $8 a gallon? $6?
*Cost of annual membership is $29.95 if you enroll in the auto-refill program. Cost of annual membership is $39.95 if you enroll in the manual refill program.
Originally posted by: JLee
Originally posted by: HardcoreRobot
where is their funding coming from? can they pay out if gas hits $8 a gallon? $6?
A small portion would come from here:
*Cost of annual membership is $29.95 if you enroll in the auto-refill program. Cost of annual membership is $39.95 if you enroll in the manual refill program.
I've never heard about it before, though- possible scam..?
Originally posted by: IHateMyJob2004
If it is legitimit, you are basically buying gasoline futures. Do you think you are smart enough to do this?
Originally posted by: ViviTheMage
Originally posted by: IHateMyJob2004
If it is legitimit, you are basically buying gasoline futures. Do you think you are smart enough to do this?
...What kind of remark is that?
Originally posted by: IHateMyJob2004
If it is legitimit, you are basically buying gasoline futures. Do you think you are smart enough to do this?
Originally posted by: SSSnail
Originally posted by: ViviTheMage
Originally posted by: IHateMyJob2004
If it is legitimit, you are basically buying gasoline futures. Do you think you are smart enough to do this?
...What kind of remark is that?
He's saying are you smart enough to predict the prices of commodities? If you are then why don't you invest in the stock markets instead of contemplating a scam?
Originally posted by: CPA
As stated this is commodity futures buying. A heard of a co-op up in Minnesota that does this. People were paying under a $1/gallon when prices were near $2 (couple years ago) because they had bought futures through the co-op.
Originally posted by: Mark R
Buying a future contract allows you to lock in the price for a specified number of gallons. If the price at the pump rises, the future contract makes a profit which offsets your loss at the pump. If the price falls, you save at the pump, which covers your loss on the market.
Originally posted by: ViviTheMage
Originally posted by: SSSnail
Originally posted by: ViviTheMage
Originally posted by: IHateMyJob2004
If it is legitimit, you are basically buying gasoline futures. Do you think you are smart enough to do this?
...What kind of remark is that?
He's saying are you smart enough to predict the prices of commodities? If you are then why don't you invest in the stock markets instead of contemplating a scam?
I am not contemplating it, but yeah, it directly relates to stocks--as in there is a chance the price will go down, and you will be SOL.
Originally posted by: CPA
As stated this is commodity futures buying. A heard of a co-op up in Minnesota that does this. People were paying under a $1/gallon when prices were near $2 (couple years ago) because they had bought futures through the co-op.
I did not know that was multiple people, I thought it was one old guy who got a locked price at 87 cents a gallon.
Originally posted by: ICRS
Screams scam. First they ask you to pay before they even tell you how many gallons you are purchasing. That alone screams scam.
Originally posted by: alkemyst
Originally posted by: Mark R
Buying a future contract allows you to lock in the price for a specified number of gallons. If the price at the pump rises, the future contract makes a profit which offsets your loss at the pump. If the price falls, you save at the pump, which covers your loss on the market.
You just explained a no-lose situation you realize.
It doesn't work like that.
Originally posted by: ViviTheMage
Originally posted by: IHateMyJob2004
If it is legitimit, you are basically buying gasoline futures. Do you think you are smart enough to do this?
...What kind of remark is that?
Originally posted by: aigomorla
its basically making gasoline as a stock.
So basically they work with the gas company to reserve a set amount of gas that the company buys.
The 29 is probably the admin/book keeping fee.
Its not a bad deal, if you do a lot of driving. But i highly doubt you'll see very big returns on it unless you the type to buy in large bulk.
Since the cost of gas wont go down now, since more countrys are using it, You'd need to buy like 1000 gallons, and sit on it. When gas prices went up, you'd be using your reserve until the gas prices fell down again.
Theres a lot of risk involved like any future stock.
Originally posted by: DisgruntledVirus
Originally posted by: aigomorla
its basically making gasoline as a stock.
So basically they work with the gas company to reserve a set amount of gas that the company buys.
The 29 is probably the admin/book keeping fee.
Its not a bad deal, if you do a lot of driving. But i highly doubt you'll see very big returns on it unless you the type to buy in large bulk.
Since the cost of gas wont go down now, since more countrys are using it, You'd need to buy like 1000 gallons, and sit on it. When gas prices went up, you'd be using your reserve until the gas prices fell down again.
Theres a lot of risk involved like any future stock.
What qualifies large bulk?
15 gallons? 20 gallons? 50 gallons?
Is it like bulk beef? Can I buy it online? I want it to come in an alternator sized gas can also.