Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Originally posted by: 3chordcharlie
If this is the way they act, they are not acting competitively, and I will have to rethink my current position, which is that there is not a market failure in refining and distribution of gasoline.
My original statement, if you recall, was actually that this formulation change has never been used as a reason before, and it just stinks of convenient fabrication. Oil companies are in the interesting position now of having to convince people they aren't crooks, when the fact of the matter is they were crooks for decades (OPEC), but are not any longer.
I've long said that oil companies are in cahoots. They have little reason to compete when collaboration allows them to maximize profits. This is true even on a local level and is readily observable. If you go out early in the morning and see one gas station jack up their prices, the rest of the stations in the area will raise their price in a similar fashion. This is true whether or not the station receives gas that day, at least in my (anecdotal) experience. It benefits every gas station if they can come to an agreement on price.
This is what I perceive as the problem: oil companies are not beholden to the market in the way that other companies are. The startup cost for any competitive oil company now would be in the hundreds of billions of dollars. Further, virtually all drilling rights are owned by an existing company - even those spots that cannot yet be tapped due to technological limitations (e.g. >4000 ft (or whatever it is) depth in the oceans). In other words - no new competition can arise. They have achieved this position over more than 100 years of existence by buying up other oil companies, monopolizing drilling rights, and essentially hording a resource that is perceived increasingly as very finite. They developed insane technologies to allow them to predict exactly where oil is and where it will pop up, even where they can't actually see it yet, then they bought up all of the rights to these places. Now, even though there is a ridiculous amount of oil left, they are jacking up the prices by artificially decreasing demand. They have found the price that the market will sustain without immediately pressing for alternatives and are now exploring that a little more by perturbing the prices. It's all a game for them to see how much money they can squeeze out of their known holdings before they have to invest in deeper drilling technologies. By holding off on developing these technologies, it gives them room to claim that there is indeed an oil shortage even though we are far from such a shortage. They are essentially feeling out the elasticity of the demand to allow themselves higher profit margins.