BillyP
Veteran Member
<font color="blue"> What a gas station paid for their gas in the ground has no bearing on what they charge per gallon. Usually they charge what the expect to pay for the NEXT delivery. </font>
I have tried to explain this very thing more times than I can count. Very few seem to get it. I'm going to try here and see what happens.
To start out with, most gas stations (all in my area) are privately owned. They are under contract with another privately owned company called ABC Co, to sell fuel supplied by them. In return, the gas stations are supplied with fuel pumps, fuel storage tanks, maintenance..ect...ect. All the gas station is required to do is take in the cash for gas sales.
ABC Co is under contract with XYZ Co (Exxon, Shell or whoever), for their supplier.
ABC Co buys 100,000 gallons of fuel for $2.00, from XYZ Co. That's a cost of $200,000. Say for instance, fuel goes up 25 cents a gallon and ABC Co needs another 100,000 gallons. This 100,000 gallons will cost ABC Co $225,000. If they keep selling the first 100,000 gallons at the old price, they would lose $25,000.
You have to mark up the price on what it will cost you to replace it or you'll go broke.
Another thing and this is in my area so I don't know about yours. Don't blame the gas stations for the price of fuel. I know for a fact that here, the stations make a nickle a gallon. That nickle a gallon is whether fuel is $2 or $10 per gallon.
As far as XYZ Co, I'm pretty sure we, as consumers, are getting fleeced. What other reason could they go up just because a hurricane just might come their way. If that was the case and they did go up, why the hay don't they go down, when this hurricane didn't affect them????
I have tried to explain this very thing more times than I can count. Very few seem to get it. I'm going to try here and see what happens.
To start out with, most gas stations (all in my area) are privately owned. They are under contract with another privately owned company called ABC Co, to sell fuel supplied by them. In return, the gas stations are supplied with fuel pumps, fuel storage tanks, maintenance..ect...ect. All the gas station is required to do is take in the cash for gas sales.
ABC Co is under contract with XYZ Co (Exxon, Shell or whoever), for their supplier.
ABC Co buys 100,000 gallons of fuel for $2.00, from XYZ Co. That's a cost of $200,000. Say for instance, fuel goes up 25 cents a gallon and ABC Co needs another 100,000 gallons. This 100,000 gallons will cost ABC Co $225,000. If they keep selling the first 100,000 gallons at the old price, they would lose $25,000.
You have to mark up the price on what it will cost you to replace it or you'll go broke.
Another thing and this is in my area so I don't know about yours. Don't blame the gas stations for the price of fuel. I know for a fact that here, the stations make a nickle a gallon. That nickle a gallon is whether fuel is $2 or $10 per gallon.
As far as XYZ Co, I'm pretty sure we, as consumers, are getting fleeced. What other reason could they go up just because a hurricane just might come their way. If that was the case and they did go up, why the hay don't they go down, when this hurricane didn't affect them????