Gas supply and demand hitting prices, not ‘pandemic profiteers,’ as Biden claims

Biden participates in an economic forum on energy and climate

President Biden participates in an economic forum on energy and climate.

Gasoline prices have been surging since President Biden came into office, and angry voters want to know why. 

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
GAS n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a.

Could it be record-breaking gasoline demand, or perhaps energy policies by the Biden administration that discourage the production of fossil fuels, or could it be those nasty "pandemic profiteers"? The president thinks it's the latter. 

NAT GAS PRICE SURGE MEANS HIGHER WINTER HEATING BILLS

"We’re also going after the bad actors and pandemic profiteers on our economy. There's lots of evidence that gas prices should be going down but they haven't,"  he said during a briefing on Thursday. "We’re taking a close look at that."

WHITE HOUSE SCRAMBLES TO COMBAT RISING PRICES

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
BNO UNITED STS BRENT OIL FD LP UNIT 19.67 -0.08 -0.41%

Energy experts are eager to see what he finds, because the majority, including me, with 30 years of experience following commodities, doubt there is any evidence at all. 

Before I get into the nitty-gritty statistics, the one thing you have to remember about gasoline prices is that they are driven mainly by supply and demand. Since Joe Biden has been president, the gasoline demand has gone up faster than the supply. The other thing you have to remember about gasoline prices is that they are heavily influenced by the cost of crude oil, which is the biggest component that goes into gasoline prices. The Energy Information Administration says that 55% of what you pay for gasoline is whatever the cost of crude oil happens to be. 

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
USO UNITED STATES OIL FUND L.P. 50.32 -0.38 -0.75%

So… if the president, for example, cancels a pipeline or puts a drilling moratorium for oil on federal lands, there will be less oil available. Less supply translates to higher gasoline prices, especially if demand is rising. When Biden took office on Jan. 20, the price of West Texas Intermediate crude was $53.24 a barrel, this week it hit the $73- per-barrel level before pulling back marginally to the $71-per-barrel level as of Friday. 

$3+ GASOLINE PRICES THEME OF 2021

And gasoline demand did rise. U.S. gasoline demand hit a record high on the Fourth of July holiday weekend, which is the traditional peak of the summer driving season.  That drove gasoline prices to a seven-year high of $3.13 a gallon, which was a dollar higher than it was the day Biden took office. Today it is sitting at $3.19 per gallon, per AAA. 

Additionally, after Labor Day, we phase out the so-called summer blends of gasoline, which are more expensive. When you get to the fall, the blends of gasoline are cheaper and the gasoline demand normally drops after Labor Day. That usually will lower prices at the pump. 

Yet this year that is not happening, largely due to the impact from Hurricane Ida and Tropical Storm Nicholas, both of which have taken a big toll on the US  oil production and refiners that make gasoline. The EIA has reported that Ida caused nine refineries to shut down and reduce production as well as sidelining 96% of all crude oil production in the Gulf of Mexico that is desperately needed to produce gasoline. So if you can't produce as much gasoline or you can't get your hands on the crude oil you need to make gasoline, then prices will be more expensive.

The other reason why gasoline prices have gone up so dramatically is that Biden, as leader of the free world, has actively discouraged investment in fossil fuels. Even the International Energy Agency that just a few months ago stated that the world needed to stop all investment in fossil fuels if Biden's climate targets for the world were to be met now admits that the lack of investment in traditional fossil fuels is already being felt in higher prices. 

Biden making climate change one of his key issues as president is sending a signal to global energy producers to hang on to their dollars and not invest in fossil fuels and many other investors are listening. 

U.S. oil production is a big part of the global shortage issue as our crude production is 3 million barrels a day lower than it was in 2020. Those numbers would have risen more quickly if were not for the Biden administration’s fossil fuel investment stance. 

The lack of fossil fuel investment is going to get much worse if The Fossil Free Finance Act becomes law. The bill was introduced By Rep. Mondaire Jones, D-N.Y., with Democratic Reps. Ayanna Pressley, Mass., and Rashida Tlaib, Mich., which will amend the Bank Holding Companies Act to require the Federal Reserve to mandate, via regulation or guidance, that all bank holding companies with more than $50 billion in assets align their financing of greenhouse gas emissions and deforestation risk commodities with science-based emissions targets.

READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS BY CLICKING HERE

Phil Flynn is senior energy analyst at The PRICE Futures Group and a Fox Business Network contributor. He is one of the world's leading market analysts, providing individual investors, professional traders, and institutions with up-to-the-minute investment and risk management insight into global petroleum, gasoline, and energy markets. His precise and timely forecasts have come to be in great demand by industry and media worldwide and his impressive career goes back almost three decades, gaining attention with his market calls and energetic personality as writer of The Energy Report. You can contact Phil by phone at (888) 264-5665 or by email at [email protected].

Source: Read Full Article