I saw it done on only fools and horses too on xmas day
Prices are pretty mint compared to what they used to be I recall about $2.40 ish for 98 not that long ago!
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Stott69 wrote:wishihadaTE27 wrote:2jayzgte wrote:Completely agree they could give a shite about us as consumers I can't believe people think oil companies are doing us a favour,yeah right quoting a Tui add basically there legalised criminals the price's they charge on petrol its just criminal.
Criminal ?? So you're saying that if YOU had a company spending billions to get oil out of the earth you'd just give it away ? Don't be ridiculous. Its a business yes, and due to its nature it is susceptible to outside pressures ( government, terrorist activity etc ) and while we would love for petrol companies to make fuel cheaper they wont. Why would they ? Its a business, just like selling water. People pay up to $3 for half a litre of water ... THATS criminal.
yea, i agree there. Exspecialy when the bottled water is bottled from a local tap, sealed then sold to tourists for $3 a 500ml. yes i have seen this done
Adamal wrote:People have a choice in that situation though. They can buy expensive water, or get it from the tap at home.
sh*t, I wish I could get gas from a tap at home for free!
Adamal wrote:Stott69 wrote:wishihadaTE27 wrote:2jayzgte wrote:Completely agree they could give a shite about us as consumers I can't believe people think oil companies are doing us a favour,yeah right quoting a Tui add basically there legalised criminals the price's they charge on petrol its just criminal.
Criminal ?? So you're saying that if YOU had a company spending billions to get oil out of the earth you'd just give it away ? Don't be ridiculous. Its a business yes, and due to its nature it is susceptible to outside pressures ( government, terrorist activity etc ) and while we would love for petrol companies to make fuel cheaper they wont. Why would they ? Its a business, just like selling water. People pay up to $3 for half a litre of water ... THATS criminal.
yea, i agree there. Exspecialy when the bottled water is bottled from a local tap, sealed then sold to tourists for $3 a 500ml. yes i have seen this done
People have a choice in that situation though. They can buy expensive water, or get it from the tap at home.
sh*t, I wish I could get gas from a tap at home for free!
2008 oil recap. and what is next by Steve Austin - 2009/01/05
It took only 5 months for the price of oil to plummet from $150 to under $40 in the second part of the year. Meanwhile oil consumption did not even decrease 10%, so what is the real cause of this collapse you may ask?
Hedge funds. Let me explain.
During the first part of 2008, Western economies were already slowing down noticeably and hedge funds gradually pulled trillions of dollars out of the market and parked them in energy ETFs. At the time Chindia's insatiable thirst for oil and the "decoupling" of east/west economies had many believe commodities were a "sure thing", a sound enough tangible insurance to protect overinflated assets scavenged from made-up bubbles. On top of that, by using leverage, profits were multiplied as oil went up, not a bad deal in a recession.
But when the banking industry collapsed, hedge funds had to raise cash by "deleveraging", liquidating their leveraged energy ETF positions sending the price of oil tumbling. Anecdotally shorting of banking ETFs was suspended by the US Securities Commission during that time but not shorting of energy prices, and the leverage mania soon found an escape route in utrashort oil ETFs, compounding the speed of this downward spiral. By December 2008 the oil price had collapsed 75% and frankly, who would complain about cheap gas these days?
As we enter 2009 the oil landscape has reversed dramatically from a year ago.
The price of oil is lower than production costs and new exploration projects are being cancelled.
China flush with cash is currently buying all the oil it can get its hands on to pump into its strategic reserves. Once arrogant OPEC countries are willing to sell oil at any price to fund government programs and prevent political instability.
One constant however is the depletion of major oil fields, worse than predicted at 9.1% year over year as we close 2008. It's a matter of when not if the economy recovers and when it does, expect a strong bounce back in the price of oil.
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