USA TODAY International Edition

Gas prices inching back up

Some analysts say there’s hope for another dip toward end of year.

- Gary Strauss @ gbstrauss USA TODAY

After plummeting to their lowest levels in nearly three years, gas prices may be close to hitting a 2013 low.

Nationally, the average price has inched up to $ 3.20 a gallon after bottoming at about $ 3.17 earlier this week. Behind the gains is a three- day spike in wholesale prices, including a 5% jump Thursday. That’s pushed pump prices in some states, such as Michigan, 11 cents higher this week. Benchmark West Texas crude traded at a five- month low Thursday, to about $ 92.50 a barrel, before rebounding to close at nearly $ 94.

Rising wholesale and crude prices may have dashed hopes that retail gas prices could dip below $ 3 nationally for the first time since 2010. Eight states — including Missouri, with a national low of $ 2.86 — currently have average prices below $ 3. But those numbers may be fleeting. More than 20 states reported retail prices rising Thursday.

“There’s still a potential for overall prices to move lower, but I don’t see a whole lot of downward movement, and we may have already seen the bottom,” says Patrick DeHaan, senior energy analyst with GasBuddy. com, a price- tracker which had forecast the national average to fall to about $ 3.15 a gallon by year’s end.

Pump prices had fallen 10 straight weeks, and by mid- October, prices averaged $ 3.47 a gallon. Slumping crude oil prices, a decline in seasonal demand and rising crude oil and and gasoline inventorie­s pushed prices down nearly 9% in the past month.

Gas prices typically bottom in December, and some industry watchers say they could still inch a bit lower.

Ryan Mossman, general manager of Fuel Quest, which helps corporate fleets such as UPS and FedEx manage energy use, says overall pump prices might dip to $ 3.10. “A lot of it has to do with the supply situation, and we’re already oversuppli­ed,” Mossman says. Rising production, slow growth here and abroad, and easing tensions in the Mideast could keep prices in check in 2014, he says.

The Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion reported this week that U. S. crude production hit a 24- year high in October and exceeded imports for the first time since February 1995. It expects 2014 gas prices to average $ 3.39 a gallon, vs. $ 3.50 this year.

Even if consumers have seen 2013 lows, they may still feel a bit more flush for the holiday shopping season. “You definitely see a shift in consumer sentiment when prices go down,” says Jeff Lenard of the National Associatio­n of Convenienc­e Stores, whose members sell about 80% of the nation’s gas. “It feels good to see prices lower than what they were. You may see more buying of affordable luxuries.”

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