Gas Prices Fall Again

gas-prices-fall

The fear of a global economic recession is leading to falling pump prices. The price for oil has dropped nearly $20 per barrel recently to the upper $60s, which has spurred the retreat for gas prices.

The national average for a gallon of regular gasoline fell six cents since the previous week to hit $3.57 as of May 4.

“The oil market volatility is leading to lower prices,” said Andrew Gross, AAA spokesperson. “And we are also in a pre-summer driving season lull regarding domestic demand. These two factors should keep pump prices drifting lower for now.”

According to new data from the Energy Information Administration (EIA), gas demand decreased significantly from 9.51 to 8.62 million b/d over the same week. The drop in demand is more in line with what market observers expected. The estimate could be revised when EIA releases final demand measurements for May. Meanwhile, total domestic gasoline stocks increased by 1.8 million bbl to 222.9 million bbl.

Lower demand, alongside an increase in stocks, has contributed to pushing pump prices lower. If demand remains low, drivers will likely continue to see pump prices decline.

The May 4 national average of $3.57 is seven cents more than a month ago but 65 cents less than a year ago.

Since April 27, these 10 states have seen the largest decreases in their averages: Texas (-12 cents), Ohio (-11 cents), Michigan (-11 cents), Delaware (-11 cents), Tennessee (-10 cents), Indiana (-10 cents), Maryland (-9 cents), Iowa (-8 cents), Florida (-8 cents) and North Carolina (-8 cents).

The nation’s top 10 least expensive markets: Mississippi ($3.05), Texas ($3.11), Louisiana ($3.15), Alabama ($3.16), Arkansas ($3.16), Tennessee ($3.17), South Carolina ($3.21), Oklahoma ($3.26), Georgia ($3.28) and Missouri ($3.29).

Source: AAA

Shop & Product Showcase

  • Read testimonials from real collision repair shops about the tools and technologies they use to get the job done.