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Oil Plunges To Lowest Price Of The Year Following Downgrade

Oil Prices Down

SANDY SHORE   08/ 8/11 07:56 PM ET   AP

Oil's plunge to its lowest price of the year should provide Americans with some relief at the pump. But that may not be enough to calm their fears about the economy.

Benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude fell 6.4 percent, to settle at $81.31 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange Monday. That was the lowest settlement price of the year for crude, which is down about 30 percent from its high in April.

Crude's falling price means lower costs in many parts of the U.S. economy. Airlines pay less for fuel, the price of plastics can fall and motorists see pump prices ease. But when the economy looks weak, consumers keep a tighter grip on the wallets, and won't necessarily spend more, even when energy costs are falling.

Worries about jobs, incomes and home values will overshadow falling gas prices, for example. Some analysts believe consumers and businesses will tuck money they don't spend on gas and diesel into savings until there is more clarity about where the economy is headed.

And the economy's outlook is cloudy for now. Ratings agency Standard & Poor's on Friday said it no longer considered U.S. Treasury debt one of safest investments in the world. The news followed a number of gloomy reports that showed growth in the U.S. was faltering, which means less demand for energy.

Energy analyst Jim Ritterbusch believes that uncertainty will take months to resolve, prompting Americans to remain careful about how much they spend.

"Right now, the consumer has just been overloaded with bad employment numbers, frustration over the debt ceiling issue, wondering what the downgrade of the U.S. debt really means to them, just a bunch of uncertainty out there," he said.

"Whether you're talking an individual or a business, people are just kind of running for cover here these days."

Even before S&P's downgrade, the U.S. economy looked frail. It grew only 1.3 percent in the second quarter. Although it added 117,000 jobs in July, manufacturing and consumer spending are getting weaker. Meanwhile, Europe continues to struggles with enormous debt.

PFGBest analyst Phil Flynn believes prices at the pump will drop as much as a quarter fairly quickly. Consumers may spend more on gas once they see some stabilization in the global financial markets. But, he added, "if confidence is so badly shattered, not even sharply lower oil prices are going to help."

MasterCard SpendingPulse's most recent weekly survey of gas stations found that drivers bought less gas for the 19th consecutive week.

Analysts think oil, which is refined into gasoline, will remain volatile this week as traders look for some clarity on where the economy and demand are headed. On Tuesday, the U.S. government and OPEC will both issue an updated forecast for global oil consumption.

Some analysts believe that global oil demand, particularly in emerging markets like China, will continue to support prices. The share of global oil demand in emerging markets has risen from 44 percent in 2008 to 48 percent this year, Barclays Capital said in a report for clients. China's share of global oil demand has increased more than 2 percent in the same period.

Goldman Sachs analysts also believe oil prices will rise next year. They told clients in a note published Friday that the risk of a U.S. recession has risen, but their revised U.S. economic outlook remains consistent with a recovery at a slower pace, "which is typical following a housing bust."

In addition Goldman said the outlook for economic growth in China and other emerging markets is positive.

Oil is still higher than the $71.63 per barrel low of the past 12 months. Oil hit that on Aug. 24 of last year, when a combination of disappointing economic news and abundant supplies drove down prices.

Gasoline futures, meanwhile, have fallen between 35 cents and 40 cents in the last two weeks.

That will translate into a savings at the pump of about $140 million to $160 million a day for motorists, according to Cameron Hanover energy consultancy.

The national average price for retail gas was $3.663 a gallon Monday, according to AAA, Wright Express and the Oil Price Information Service. That's down 4.2 cents in the past week but still 88.7 cents more than a year ago.

Brent crude, used to price many international varieties of crude, on Monday fell $5.63, or 5.2 percent, to settle at $103.74 per barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

In other Nymex trading for September contracts, heating oil fell 14 cents to settle at $2.8017 per gallon, gasoline futures dropped 11.36 cents to settle at $2.6916 per gallon and natural gas rose 0.6 cent to settle at $3.935 per 1,000 cubic feet.

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Oil's plunge to its lowest price of the year should provide Americans with some relief at the pump. But that may not be enough to calm their fears about the economy. Benchmark West Texas Intermediate...
Oil's plunge to its lowest price of the year should provide Americans with some relief at the pump. But that may not be enough to calm their fears about the economy. Benchmark West Texas Intermediate...
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11:44 AM on 08/10/2011
i dont see any drop at the pump anywhere near where i live. If anything i think they price just went up a couple of hours ago. Funny how oil is the cheapest its ever been yet gas still is high. What happened to the price of oil drives the cost of gas up but when oil goes down its something else causing the gas price to go up. . . Make up ur darn minds!
01:49 AM on 08/10/2011
Oil economics is really amazing, ain't it? The artile states that oil has dropped, and if that is the case, then how come gasoline in my area (Central California) has gone up six cents per gallon in the last 7 days? The again, everybody knows that California taxes the shi* out of the consumer for gas (approximately 40-45%). Leave it to Governor Jerry Brown.......Likes to spend California's money on garbage (like, the Dream Act?)
08:20 AM on 08/10/2011
Brown will tax anything he can in CA to make budget balance.
09:34 PM on 08/09/2011
AOL-thanks for posting my comment. You usually don't post anything I write. You are not out to get coffee or lunch, are you?
09:28 PM on 08/09/2011
"Oil down 30%", but where I live gas has only dropped 5.26%. Wonder why?
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thetxsndn
Man Plans. God laughs.
09:22 PM on 08/09/2011
Soooooooooo....why aren't we seeing it on the pumps ?
09:20 PM on 08/09/2011
Pay the price what ever a barrel of oil costs. This is America the land of the free your all living in.
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larryvnyrd
Left wing, long haired, trade unionist, liberal
08:11 PM on 08/09/2011
does this mean we have to give the oil companies another $400 billion like Cheney did?
ccsysglf
question the question
09:08 PM on 08/09/2011
$450 billion inflation
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larryvnyrd
Left wing, long haired, trade unionist, liberal
08:07 PM on 08/09/2011
Oil was 140 and gas was $4 oil hits 85 and gas is $3.60? I bet gas won't drop more than 10 or 15 cents.
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se72748
05:56 PM on 08/09/2011
Don't get excited folks.Its just the rachet action of the oil company's.Drop the price a nickle,raise it a dime.They have been doing this sence gas was 22 cents a gallon.It won't be long you will be paying higher gas praices then you have ever imagined possible.It won't be long.Enjoy it while you can.
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Susan Lenard
04:57 PM on 08/09/2011
This would be great news if we had a different president! Last time gas prices went down this president immediately sent it soaring again. We just can't win for losing with all his CHANGE!
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Shawn Wolfe
A clear conscience is the sign of a fuzzy memory
05:33 PM on 08/09/2011
How did he send it soaring ? There is no better example of Capitalism and a free market than publicly traded oil.

But if you want to play the blame game ..When Bush went in to office oil was averaging $24 a barrel that year. .By 2008 We were averaging $94 a Barrel.. Obama has yet to sit in office with an average of higher than $92.

Unless Obama somehow passed a 50cent a gallon gas tax without us noticing I would have about a good a chance of driving up gas prices as he does.. Which is practically no chance.
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se72748
05:57 PM on 08/09/2011
Its called capitalism,not politics
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Ron Weaver
Whatever it takes
05:39 PM on 08/09/2011
LOL ignorance is bliss but I can't believe anyone is THIS ignorant.
04:51 PM on 08/09/2011
I got an idea! All you old hippies ought to use the money spent on butts, beer and dope to buy futures when the price on oil tanks. Noooo its easier to bit8h about the Man holding the poor dude back. Go to it censors.
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larryvnyrd
Left wing, long haired, trade unionist, liberal
08:09 PM on 08/09/2011
Did and old hi[ppie drop you on your head when you were a baby? What's wrong with old hippies?
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Donald Scott
04:51 PM on 08/09/2011
Last time this happend was short lived where Obama says ok, inflation is down, and took away cost of living allowance for 2 years from old folks social security and military retired pay (don't know about other folks retired pay), and immediately price went back up by over $1 gallon. The 2 year mark is expiring this December and already Obama has figured how not to take a cut in the cola paid out to individuals next January. Seems like the old folks and retirees really have to suffer for Obama's needs. Oil companues really know how to mess with people's minds. Ever notice the price is always .99 which is one tenth of a penny from the next price, but people always say the lower price. Price always jumps up high, back down just a little and people think they are getting a great deal and a couple months later same again.
04:47 PM on 08/09/2011
We will pay more and more even if the barrel hits $15.00. It is a Wall Street thing.

Read:

http://www.propagandamatrix.com/index.html
07:08 PM on 08/09/2011
DON'T BELEIVE EVERYTHING YOU READ , INCLUDING ME . WALL STREET HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH THIS . O P E C DOES NOT SET THE RATE AMERICA PAYS FOR OIL . PRICE AT THE PUMP IS MOSTLY TAXES . SAME WITH TOBACCO AND BEER . ....AMERICAN COMMERCE DEPARTMENT SETS AMERICAN COST OF LIVING FOR ALL PRODUCTS COMMODITIES .......HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH ANYTHING ELSE . HIGHER THE PRICE MORE SALES TAX ......ON ANY PRODUCT . BARREL OF OIL USED TO MEASURE 5 5 Gallon , TODAY IT IS 4 2 GALON ...HOW MUCH MORE TAX INCOME IS THAT . My name is T i m
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Ron Weaver
Whatever it takes
04:42 PM on 08/09/2011
Could this upset the oil-party
baej
They call us "right" for a reason
04:40 PM on 08/09/2011
So does this mean it's going down a nickel in a week or so?