http://money.cnn.com/2007/10/18/markets/oil/index.htm?postversion=2007101818NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Oil prices finished at an all-time high above $89 a barrel Thursday, while the cost of a gallon of gasoline jerked higher.Light, sweet crude for the November contract jumped $2.07 to settle at $89.47 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, shattering the previous record of $87.61 a barrel reached two days earlier.Gasoline prices climbed nearly two cents Thursday as crude oil finished at an all-time high above $89 a barrel. Gasoline prices climbed nearly two cents Thursday as crude oil finished at an all-time high above $89 a barrel. In after-hours electronic trading light, sweet crude for November delivery went even higher, hitting $90.02 a barrel, according to the Associated Press. Earlier in the day, crude prices scrambled to an all-time trading high of $89.55 a barrel.Prices at the pump have been slow to respond to rising crude prices recently, but that may be changing. On Thursday, gas prices gained nearly 2 cents to a national average of $2.79 a gallon for regular-grade gasoline, according to AAA. They are up 4 cents since Monday."There's almost an inevitability here now that we are going to get to $100 a barrel," said John Kilduff, an energy analyst at Man Financial in New York.Helping to lift crude prices higher was a decline in the dollar, which fell to an all-time low versus the euro and also dipped versus the yen.Since oil is priced in dollars, a declining greenback makes oil less expensive for consumers outside the United States, encouraging more consumption.Wednesday's news that Turkey had authorized military action in Northern Iraq also helped prop up crude prices.Conflict along the Turkey-Iraq border could disrupt oil supplies coming out of the region and drive crude prices even higher."It's just a round robin of geopolitical and macroeconomic issues," said Kilduff. Despite the recent gains in crude prices, when adjusted for inflation, oil is still slightly cheaper than the $95 a barrel or so it would have been in the early 1980s.[Edited on October 18, 2007 at 10:13 PM. Reason : .]
10/18/2007 10:12:09 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gEZsuuOf3Ao&mode=related&search=
10/18/2007 11:10:36 PM
what middle school kid wrote this shit...
10/18/2007 11:10:52 PM
SandSanta still owes me $100.
10/18/2007 11:49:06 PM
Maybe the ripple effect of higher fuel prices (and a devaluing dollar) are why its $10 for a Quiznos sub and some chips and a drink (for the regular size).
10/18/2007 11:54:17 PM
It is not.
10/19/2007 8:44:18 AM
Just in time for the holidays, folks! The gas price bugaboo! Look forward to hearing another round of stupid and redundant stories on "How will $100 oil effect your Christmas (which is under attack)?".
10/19/2007 10:31:27 AM
10/19/2007 11:02:02 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2o-G_s_uKlo
10/19/2007 11:08:35 AM
Interesting how the $90 barrel of oil seems to translate to nearly the same price at the pump when compared with what we were paying when it was $70 a barrel.
10/19/2007 12:21:45 PM
^ It is a bit interesting. Sometimes it's refinery capacity and sometimes it's not. The correlation with barrel price seems very loose though, all the while, oil companies are making record profits.
10/19/2007 12:29:04 PM
wow, us going into the middle east to secure cheap oil has really paid off hasn't it. am i the only one who recalls 25 dollar barrels of oil during clinton?
10/19/2007 12:34:49 PM
I was reading an article yesterday (can't remember where, I'll link it if I can find it) that said that half of the last $60 increase was due to the falling value of the American dollar.
10/19/2007 12:44:35 PM
but but, isnt that the reason we went to war, for cheap oil? Or was it bc Sadam tried to kill his daddy, or now its because he takes pleasure when people's heads blow off?Anyway, we need to get this country off this shit. We have enough smart people to develop the next step, we just need big oil dollars and the govt to step aside.If the prices keep going up and the market is allowed to work, LONG term the greedy will be put out of business. Short term is a bitch though.
10/19/2007 12:44:55 PM
^^ i'm sure a decent amount of it does have to do with the falling dollar. then again, if americans weren't being pushed to consume beyond their means then we wouldn't have a falling dollar to begin with
10/19/2007 12:46:10 PM
10/19/2007 2:53:36 PM
^^ Pushed by who?^ By definition, they have always charged as much as they possibly could, even when all they managed to charge was 89 cents a gallon back in 1998. Back in 1998, they saw a lot of resistance above 89 cents, so they didn't try raising prices above that, even though doing so was absolutely necessary at the time as their margins were occasionally negative. [Edited on October 19, 2007 at 3:32 PM. Reason : .,.]
10/19/2007 3:29:07 PM
10/19/2007 4:44:07 PM
10/19/2007 8:36:25 PM
the Turkey / Iraq / Kurds deal isn't exactly helping either
10/19/2007 9:36:53 PM
i used maple and got that the average price of gas with a democrat voted in office for the next 8 years will be 1.75
10/19/2007 10:46:45 PM
I wonder why after Hurricane Katrina gas was $3.29 a gallon when the price per barrel was $70 but now its $2.79 a gallon and oil is $90 a barrel. Seems like we were profiteered on and of course Bush will never investigate gouging.
10/19/2007 11:02:57 PM
^Is it the presidents job to look into price gouging?Besides those idiots on the hill have thier dog and pony show to appease the public every time gas prices jump.. but it does nothing.i believe the refineries were hit after katrina though.
10/19/2007 11:08:43 PM
wasnt the head of OPEC after the last barrel output increase saying how he couldnt figure why prices were so high and that he didnt think it would last
10/19/2007 11:40:29 PM
barrells of oil are priced in dollars, and the dollar is so weak now when put up against the Euro and just about any other currency...thus, other nations are getting a "deal", i think 1 euro=$1.33
10/19/2007 11:57:12 PM
10/20/2007 2:25:23 AM
i remember back in 2003 i was happy about the iraq war cause i thought our gas would be 40 cents a gallon
10/20/2007 2:26:52 AM
10/20/2007 2:32:59 AM
10/20/2007 7:12:12 AM
10/20/2007 11:51:27 AM
10/20/2007 3:43:39 PM
^what kinda things have made it fall so much?
10/20/2007 4:15:31 PM
The financial situation that drove the creation of America's large trade deficit is unwinding, thus the market is acting to eliminate our trade deficit. As such, we need to export more and import less, so the dollar has dropped against other currencies suffering the reverse problem (Europe exports too much and imports too little). As such, thanks to the exchange adjustment American exporters are kicking everyone else's ass: exports have grown 13% over last year, while imports grew a measily 3%.
10/21/2007 5:32:57 PM
ahahahaahahahahahhahaaI seriously read LoneSnark every time I want to make sure make believe. A magical world you live in, buddy.
10/21/2007 5:50:46 PM
10/21/2007 6:19:56 PM
I was starting to accumulate cash rather than furthur buying into the stock market (in preparation for a potential end of the bull), but i couldn't resist when it shit the bed on friday.
10/21/2007 8:02:16 PM
10/21/2007 9:52:23 PM
^^ Buying the day after a sharp drop is only recommended if you believe the slump was a fluke. If there is a real chance that they economy is sliding and not just equity markets then one day's fall is probably just the beginning. ^ What do you want? Economies are huge and involve millions of people; as such, they do not change dramatically overnight or even over a year (this is the explanation for why exchange rates DO change so dramatically over short periods of time: economies respond very slowly and therefore need a lot of stimulus to change course). 13% is friggin' fast when it comes to changing the behavior of so many people.
10/22/2007 12:31:52 AM
13% is a pretty fast ratethe standard equation 70/x = doubling rate70/13= 5.38 years to double the amount of exportswhere did the 13% number come from (citation)?
10/22/2007 12:41:06 AM
Economist Magazine (last weeks issue)
10/22/2007 10:22:40 AM
http://tinyurl.com/3af3g2
10/22/2007 11:18:37 AM