Im prepared for the cost of NEW gas going up but somehow Im forced to accept the current gas prices being raised BECAUSE the new gas is going to cost more.You cannot disregard insurance costs
NO I wouldnt HAVE to sell it at the higher cost. An honorable seller who continued to sell at the "current" price and then who was forced to charge more as his costs rose, would be remembered by his customersExcept that you're not reselling the meat in your freezer. If you were, you would have to sell it at the price it's now going to cost you to replace it
Im prepared for the cost of NEW gas going up but somehow Im forced to accept the current gas prices being raised BECAUSE the new gas is going to cost more.
Mt analogy of the food in my freezer IS applicable. YES new food will cost more but the only reason to raise current gas is because they can. The mindset that its OK to do it and the buyers will just accept it is criminal, maybe not prosecutable but criminal.
The problem is I cant buy gas when its cheap and store it so I'll always have it. The gas companies know that so they just get to smile at us as they count our money
The "insurance" thing is just smoke. Any increased cost is for NEW gas.
With respect, that has NOTHING to due with the price of the gas already at the pumps. On the morning of 9-11-01 if you rushed to the gun shop, how would you have felt if you watched the employees adding a zero to the cost of everything on the shelf?There is not a finite amount of finished gasoline product supplied in the US daily.
OK lets take a look at your farm analogy, customers dont pay for your produce and beef UNTIL you sell it, so you price it accordingly at the time you sell it.I get what you say but I don't think the economics work that way. I don't like it either.
I look at it from the theoretical farm perspective. If the cost of hay and corn or transport for cattle goes up today, I am raising the price of beef on the hoof tomorrow. It may be months before that steer is steaks in your grocery store, but that increase will show up in the grocery store right away. It's a pretty short lead time from farm to table.
Where "new" or "old" gasoline is concerned, on any given day in the U.S. we have about 3-4 weeks of gasoline on hand. We are approaching halfway through that since hostilities started.
I expect costs to fall pretty quickly once the Gulf is secured
It has always been that way, nothing new. i agree it ain't right but it's always went up regardless of what they paid for it in the tanks.Im prepared for the cost of NEW gas going up but somehow Im forced to accept the current gas prices being raised BECAUSE the new gas is going to cost more.
Sounds like you're complaining of price gouging while not considering supply and demand. Let's take your 9/11 example and tease that out.With respect, that has NOTHING to due with the price of the gas already at the pumps. On the morning of 9-11-01 if you rushed to the gun shop, how would you have felt if you watched the employees adding a zero to the cost of everything on the shelf?
Once again, I get, and I bet everyone accepts, the price of NEW incoming gas going up, just not the stuff already at the pumps. There is NO justification for THAT
Fair enoughIt is what it is
"The problem here is that this is all the gas stations" ... yep, all the gas stations have to buy gas from the same suppliers, and all at the same price. Gasoline, and other crude refined products are a world-wide commodity, not a local one.When ammo prices went up during the riots and covid, some shops raised their prices to as much as $100 a box for 9mm. Thats price gouging One shop in the area kept their regular mark up, sure a box went from $14 to maybe $19 but not $99. Buyers remembered, some of those $199 shops resorted to radio advertising (who pays for that...), they advertised a sale on ammo "Now only $75 a box"
When the crisis was over customers remembered. Some of those shops went out of business when customers realized they were cheated.
The problem here is that this is all the gas stations
Ahhh, that's just wrong. Wrong but true!Ah, gas. My dog is a refinery. If you give your pooch too many Bully Sticks, have a lighter ready. There's your organic flame thrower. Gawd the stink!
Anway, if you want your company to leave, give Fido lots of Bully Sticks and keep her in the dining room during dinner.