Umm, cool, but are you planning on taking advantage of potentially much lower prices to stock up for the future?
Umm, cool, but are you planning on taking advantage of potentially much lower prices to stock up for the future?
Let's do some calculations.
First, we have to estimate the bottom price? Let's be stupid optimistic and say $2 p/gallon savings.
Second, how much fuel do we want to hoard? Let's be stupid and say 500 gallons. So we are assuming we are going to save $1000. It might take us two years to recoup the investment? That's assuming 250 gallons per year??
Third, how much will it cost us to purchase the necessary equipment to do this venture? Probably going to pay $500 for a storage tank. Another $100 to rig it up with a hand pump? So we invested $600.
Fourth, our potential profit is $400. It will take us 24 months to realize this profit. So for the next 24 months we will potentially save $17 p/month.
Fifth, would we borrow the money to do this venture? Probably not because the payback is so low. So why would we do it?
If fuel that has been in the $2.50/g range drops to $1.50 or less, why would you not buy as much as you can safely store knowing it will go to back to $2.50 or higher?
They call that: Paralysis by Analysis; a person talking themselves right out of doing something. Then they break it down into tiny numbers to make it seem like it is insignificant savings. It gets kind of silly because if a person saw a $20 bill on the ground, who would not pick it up? Yet, they will deduce reasons why saving $17 a month is not worth it? Really? if you found (20) $20 bills on the ground you would not pick any of them up?
My local school board does this: takes 1.5 million in potential savings, divides that number by the number of tax payers and says, saving them $15 per year does not mean anything. Really, what part of saving 1.5 million did they miss?
Your deductions are amiss because it need not be that complicated because a person can figure out how to lower their initial costs. A person does not need an expensive new tank for instance. Here in Maine you can get used 275 gallon oil tanks for almost nothing since so many people are going to mini-splits. Just tee the two tanks together and you have 550 gallons of diesel fuel in storage.
I am all set up because I have been getting that Genset set up, so I will do this.
I can see no reason why storing something a person will eventually use is a bad idea. It would be like heating with firewood and telling someone to go out and cut dead trees as they needed them instead of having a year or two of firewood in storage.
If fuel that has been in the $2.50/g range drops to $1.50 or less, why would you not buy as much as you can safely store knowing it will go to back to $2.50 or higher?
Anybody seeing any drops yet?
So how much diesel do you have in storage?
Bulk supplier just quoted me $1.64 gallon, delivered. Wonder what it will be next week?