Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Gasoline prices expected to fall.

Demand for crude oil falling as supplies high

- By JONATHAN FAHEY

New York — A slew of global economic and geopolitic­al factors are working to pummel the price of oil and set up U.S. drivers for very low gasoline prices later this year.

The price of U.S. crude dropped 7.7% Monday to close at $52.53 a barrel and is now down nearly 15% from the high for the year set on June 10.

Gasoline prices in the U.S. will likely slide somewhat from a national average of $2.77 over the next few weeks. Experts then expect a substantia­l decline in late summer and fall, pushing average gasoline prices in some low-price states below $2 a gallon again.

“We’re going back to some of those low numbers we saw over the winter,” said Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Informatio­n Service. “In some places (gas) prices starting with a ‘1’ should come back by football season.”

There are several signs around the world that point to falling demand for crude and fuels at a time when supplies are high and possibly rising:

The Greek financial crisis could slow economic activity in Europe, which would reduce demand for gasoline and diesel.

China’s oil imports have already slipped this year and a plummeting Chinese stock market could mean even weaker demand in the world's second largest oil consumer.

Oil production in OPEC, driven by strong production from Saudi Arabia and Iraq, is helping to keep the world’s supplies high. OPEC’s June production rose to 31.3 million barrels per day, according to a report Monday from Platts. That’s 1.3 million barrels per day more than the cartel’s official target and the highest level since 2012.

U.S. oil production remained strong even after drillers slowed their activity in the face of low oil prices — and now some drillers are ramping up production again.

“All signs point south for oil prices,” wrote Thomas Pugh, commoditie­s economist at Capital Economics, in a report Monday. Pugh reduced his forecast for oil prices at the end of this year by $5 to $50 a barrel.

After hitting a six-year low of $43.46 in mid-March, oil rose to nearly $60 in late April as refiners processed enormous amounts of crude for the summer driving season. Oil then stayed remarkably stable around $60 until the middle of last week.

Pump prices are unlikely to drop sharply right away because driving season is in full swing and U.S. gasoline demand is higher than it’s been since 2007, Kloza said. But unless a hurricane disrupts gasoline production on the Gulf Coast or elsewhere, gasoline prices should begin to plunge later this summer as refiners switch to winter blends of fuel.

 ??  ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS Lucy Perez pumps gas at a station in Matthews, N.C. Experts are predicting very low gas prices later this year as oil prices fall.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Lucy Perez pumps gas at a station in Matthews, N.C. Experts are predicting very low gas prices later this year as oil prices fall.

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