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Forbes Editorial: America Produces The Most Oil. So Why Are Gas Prices Surging?

Posted on 3/24/26 at 7:42 am
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
28865 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 7:42 am
quote:

Gasoline prices continue to surge. Drivers saw increases of roughly 50 cents per gallon almost overnight following the outbreak of hostilities with Iran. According to AAA, the national average price of gasoline has climbed by nearly $1.00 per gallon over the past month—one of the fastest increases in decades.

It feels like a ripoff, and for many Americans, the same questions come up every time.

If the United States is the world’s largest oil producer—in fact, if we are energy independent—then why are we still at the mercy of global events? And how can prices spike instantly when the gasoline in the tank was made from cheaper oil weeks ago?

People like easy answers, such as “corporate greed.” That is emotionally satisfying, but it doesn’t tell the full story. What’s happening is a function of global markets, supply chain realities, and predictable patterns in consumer behavior. In fact, much of what we’re seeing is exactly how the system is designed to work.

The U.S. leads the world in oil production, but oil isn’t priced locally, nor are prices set by oil companies. Because the U.S. exports oil to the global markets, it’s priced globally by traders bidding for oil. That is a distinction many people do not realize.

Think of the oil market as a single, interconnected system. When supply is threatened anywhere, prices respond everywhere. And few places matter more than the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow passage through which ~20% of the world’s oil flows. When that chokepoint is at risk, traders price in the risk immediately.

That’s why a barrel of oil in Texas suddenly becomes more expensive even if nothing has changed domestically. U.S. producers sell into global markets, so American refiners have to match those prices or lose supply. Being the largest producer doesn’t shield us, it simply means we are deeply embedded in the same global system.


quote:

Gas stations aren’t pricing what’s already in their tanks; they’re pricing what it will cost to replace it. Retail fuel is a low-margin business, and station owners have to think about their next delivery, not their last one. If wholesale prices surge and they keep selling at yesterday’s levels, they risk not having enough cash to refill their tanks.


quote:

It’s also important to distinguish between different parts of the oil industry, because not all companies benefit equally from rising prices.

Producers—the companies that extract crude oil—generally see a windfall when prices spike. Their costs don’t rise nearly as fast as the price of oil, so higher prices tend to flow directly to the bottom line.

Refiners operate under a different set of constraints. Their profitability depends on the “crack spread,” or the margin between the cost of crude oil and the price of refined products like gasoline. When crude prices surge quickly, refiners often can’t pass those costs through immediately, and their margins can shrink.


quote:

Rapid increases in gasoline prices aren’t evidence that the system is broken. They are the result of global pricing, forward-looking markets, and predictable human behavior all interacting at once.

That doesn’t make the pain at the pump any easier to accept. But it does explain why more domestic production alone won’t prevent these spikes—and why the same pattern keeps repeating.

As long as global supply can be threatened in critical chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz, price shocks will remain part of the landscape. And when that supply is actually disrupted, prices will move fast.


LINK
Posted by jizzle6609
Houston
Member since Jul 2009
19668 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 7:46 am to
To subsidize the counties where the fuel would be extremely high per gallon.

Again the USA helping everyone
Posted by RanchoLaPuerto
Jena
Member since Aug 2023
2115 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 7:55 am to
California is importing huge amounts of gasoline from overseas.

It is losing refineries. There is almost pipeline capacity in. And you can’t ship direct from the Gulf Coast because of the Jones Act.
Posted by SallysHuman
Lady Palmetto Bug
Member since Jan 2025
19709 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 7:58 am to
quote:

That’s why a barrel of oil in Texas suddenly becomes more expensive even if nothing has changed domestically. U.S. producers sell into global markets, so American refiners have to match those prices or lose supply. Being the largest producer doesn’t shield us, it simply means we are deeply embedded in the same global system.


I still don't get it.

I'm going to need a more dumbed down explanation.
Posted by zuluboudreaux
God’s country USA
Member since Jan 2008
1135 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:01 am to
Screw California. They do it to themselves and are happy to re-elect the idiots they put in office.
No sympathy from this guy!
Posted by faraway
Member since Nov 2022
3718 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:02 am to
greed fueled by selfishness
Posted by Techdave
Laffy
Member since Apr 2014
405 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:02 am to
quote:

I still don't get it. I'm going to need a more dumbed down explanation.


However they wanna say it, the true goal of an oil company(or any company ) is profit. If prices rise worldwide, US companies aren’t gonna keep the price low here out of the goodness of their hearts.
Posted by AUFANATL
Member since Dec 2007
5258 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:04 am to

quote:

Gas stations aren’t pricing what’s already in their tanks; they’re pricing what it will cost to replace it. Retail fuel is a low-margin business, and station owners have to think about their next delivery, not their last one. If wholesale prices surge and they keep selling at yesterday’s levels, they risk not having enough cash to refill their tanks.


I would be more sympathetic to this argument if the inverse worked the same way. But when market prices plummet it takes them a long damn time to change the prices on their pumps. When the prices jump, we see it the next day. They want to have their cake and eat it to.

Posted by HeadSlash
TEAM LIVE BADASS - St. GEORGE
Member since Aug 2006
55618 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:05 am to
Oil companies are fricking us
Posted by Wayne Campbell
Aurora, IL
Member since Oct 2011
7280 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:05 am to
quote:

Gas stations aren’t pricing what’s already in their tanks; they’re pricing what it will cost to replace it. Retail fuel is a low-margin business, and station owners have to think about their next delivery, not their last one. If wholesale prices surge and they keep selling at yesterday’s levels, they risk not having enough cash to refill their tanks.


Gonna nitpick this one because it’s annoying and I hate the argument. While it is true that they have to maintain cash flow, it’s an oversimplification. Otherwise prices would fall just as rapidly, but we know that’s not true.
Posted by Techdave
Laffy
Member since Apr 2014
405 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:09 am to
quote:

Gonna nitpick this one because it’s annoying and I hate the argument. While it is true that they have to maintain cash flow, it’s an oversimplification. Otherwise prices would fall just as rapidly, but we know that’s not true.


The whole article seems sympathetic to oil companies and distributors. Even though I work in O&G, this price gouging nonsense can F right off.
Posted by SDVTiger
Cabo San Lucas
Member since Nov 2011
96716 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:10 am to
quote:

Oil companies are fricking us
Posted by SallysHuman
Lady Palmetto Bug
Member since Jan 2025
19709 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:10 am to
quote:

If prices rise worldwide, US companies aren’t gonna keep the price low here out of the goodness of their hearts.


Ok, I get it... because the market is intertwined, it doesn't matter that domestically everything is fine- our producers are enjoying the benefits of international turbulence. They aren't going to have a different domestic "sales price" because that would be dumb if they could sell the barrel for twice as much to someone else.

Concept grasped... but my triggering is intensifying.
Posted by Bjorn Cyborg
Member since Sep 2016
35146 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:11 am to
quote:

I still don't get it.

I'm going to need a more dumbed down explanation.


Oil is a commodity that is priced on the international market.

Even if we are energy independent, the producers still have the option to sell to foreign markets, so the worldwide price affects the local price.

I will dumb it down for you:

Let's say for example we are talking about pecans and Louisiana is "pecan independent" meaning that Louisiana makes enough pecans for it's citizens and never has to buy pecans from other countries, or even other states.

Pecans are $10 per pound. But, wildfires in California destroy a large pecan orchard and now California is experiencing a pecan shortage.

That shouldn't effect Louisiana, right? We are "pecan independent."

BUT....now the people who normally buy the California pecans are trying to buy the Louisiana pecans, and are offering more because they are in a bind to fill orders.

So now Louisiana pecan suppliers are selling for $15 per pound, even to their local customers in Louisiana, because that is now the market.






Posted by SallysHuman
Lady Palmetto Bug
Member since Jan 2025
19709 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:13 am to
quote:

Bjorn Cyborg


Thank you, that makes it make sense.
Posted by fightin tigers
Downtown Prairieville
Member since Mar 2008
77951 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:14 am to
Thanks to Obama for removing the crude oil export ban.
Posted by Bjorn Cyborg
Member since Sep 2016
35146 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:16 am to
quote:

Otherwise prices would fall just as rapidly, but we know that’s not true.


You are looking at oil as if it some benevolent utility, rather than a for-profit product for sale. It is no different than any other product that is being sold for profit.

If my moving average cost is $2 per gallon, and I know I can replenish for $1.80 per gallon, I am not selling my current stock for $1.90. That would show as a loss on the books.

By the same token, if would be dumb to sell my current stock for $2.10, if my replenish costs are going to be $2.20.
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
28865 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:19 am to
quote:

Oil companies are fricking us


All of them?
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
28865 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:23 am to
quote:

I would be more sympathetic to this argument if the inverse worked the same way. But when market prices plummet it takes them a long damn time to change the prices on their pumps. When the prices jump, we see it the next day.


The below was also in the piece. I just couldn’t simply post the whole thing because admins don’t like it when I do that. But here is how this author tries to explain the fall side:

quote:

While the rise in prices is fast, the decline is usually frustratingly slow. This isn’t just perception. It’s a well-documented economic phenomenon known as “rockets and feathers,” studied extensively by economists like Severin Borenstein.

The idea is simple: prices shoot up like rockets when costs rise but fall like feathers when costs decline. Part of that dynamic comes from the structure of the market, but consumer behavior plays a surprisingly important role.

When prices are rising rapidly—sometimes by 10 cents a day—consumers become highly sensitive. They search aggressively for the cheapest station and often rush to fill up before prices climb further. That surge in demand and heightened competition forces retailers to move prices up quickly to keep pace with rising replacement costs.

When prices begin to fall, however, that urgency fades. A few cents’ difference between stations no longer feels worth the effort, and consumers become less aggressive about price shopping. With less competitive pressure, retailers lower prices more gradually. The result is the same pattern drivers have noticed for years: sharp increases followed by slow, uneven declines.


I have no idea how much of this is valid, as I’m not in the business of running a gas station.
Posted by lostinbr
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Oct 2017
12778 posts
Posted on 3/24/26 at 8:42 am to
quote:

I have no idea how much of this is valid, as I’m not in the business of running a gas station.

It’s been studied for years and it seems pretty intuitive, IMO.

Wholesale cost sets a price floor for retailers, then competitive pressure sets the price somewhere above that floor. When the wholesale cost rises, the price floor rises and retailers react immediately because they aren’t going to take a loss. But when the wholesale price falls, the competitive pressure to bring the retail price back down (driven by consumers shopping for lowest price) is a much slower process.
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