Flogger
Gold Member
I remember when a gallon of gas was the same price as a can of Skoal………25 cents!In 1970, I delivered diesel for $.12 a gallon, regular gas for $,24 a gallon. Are these or were those "the good ole days"?
I remember when a gallon of gas was the same price as a can of Skoal………25 cents!In 1970, I delivered diesel for $.12 a gallon, regular gas for $,24 a gallon. Are these or were those "the good ole days"?
And annual income was $5,000 at that time.I remember when a gallon of gas was the same price as a can of Skoal………25 cents!
Around here we didn’t see the full impact of low prices. Producers have debt as a rule so as long as the well would run it pumped. When repairs were needed they shut it down. Caused a huge boom in the pulling unit business when prices went back up.It’s connected. The industry doesn’t make profits at $40/barrel.
Of course not it is business after all. Businesses are in business to make a profit last time I checked...The shale oil frackers say that they cannot economically operate when the crude price per barrel is less than $58. And the largest oil field (Permian Basin) is shale bedrock. Producers are not going to increase production to the extent that it drives crude prices below profitability.
That would be close to $11/gal now...I remember when a gallon of gas was the same price as a can of Skoal………25 cents!
Yes. That’s my point. Some people are saying that the industry will continue to increase production and prices will continue to fall. The industry isn’t going to glut the market such that crude prices fall below profitability. Current production is about where they want the profit margins.Of course not it is business after all. Businesses are in business to make a profit last time I checked...
Do you know what price they need to charge per gallon to make drilling worth it? I don’t. For all we know, they may make lots of money at $40/barrel.You don't really want $2/gal gad, as a country. We need a stable full price, that businesses can factor in, while making oil companies enough profit to continue drilling/pumping/exploring/investing.
Until you get the bill for 4,000 gallons.Honestly, I think stable $2.75-3.25/gal is about what the market likes.
But that is only one type of oil production. There’s others that could be far cheaper.The shale oil frackers say that they cannot economically operate when the crude price per barrel is less than $58. And the largest oil field (Permian Basin) is shale bedrock. Producers are not going to increase production to the extent that it drives crude prices below profitability.
I don't really disagree, on a micro economic scale, but on a macro, stabile prices are more important than low prices.Do you know what price they need to charge per gallon to make drilling worth it? I don’t. For all we know, they may make lots of money at $40/barrel.
I know they won’t ever tell us, too.
Until you get the bill for 4,000 gallons.
The $2-$2.50 seems way better.
Only one type of oil production for sure. But the largest oil field in the world and where most U.S. oil is produced. It’s been published in oil journals that $58 is the median price where shale oil production is profitable. Nothing about the gobment. Individual companies have higher or lower price points for profitability, but on average when west Texas crude prices fall below $58/barrel, the drillers start packing it up.But that is only one type of oil production. There’s others that could be far cheaper.
Besides, who would ever divulge what price point they become profitable?
Unlike the gubmit who doesn’t have to show profit, private companies have internal numbers on profitability they keep secret.
You guys in CA are getting screwed.$4.99 diesel today at Chevron San Ramon…
In more ways than one… maybe why 800,000 out migration?You guys in CA are getting screwed.
$2.00 more than I seen in southern ky. last weekend at a Marathon truck stop$4.99 diesel today at Chevron San Ramon…