Motorists in the Pacific Northwest continue to pay the nation’s highest averages, with five of the six states with averages above $3 per gallon located in this region. California ($3.47) leads the market, and is followed by regional neighbors Alaska ($3.43), Nevada ($3.18), Hawaii ($3.17) and Washington ($3.04) as the nation’s most expensive markets for retail gasoline. Drivers in South Carolina ($2.11) are paying the lowest average at the pump.
Weekly price comparisons continue to reflect volatile fluctuations in the balance between regional supply and demand. Just a week after Midwestern drivers were reeling from sharply higher pump prices, motorists in these same states have seen prices plummet week-over-week: Indiana (-19 cents), Ohio (-19 cents), Michigan (-19 cents), and Illinois (-13 cents). Consumers in 30 states are experiencing weekly savings of at least a nickel per gallon at the pump and a total of seven states are posting double-digit savings over this same period. Prices in every state are lower today than one week ago.
Retail averages are down in 44 states and Washington, D.C. month-over-month. The largest discounts in the price of retail gasoline were in California (-36 cents) and New Jersey (-25 cents). Consumers in 33 states and Washington, D.C. are enjoying monthly savings of a dime or more per gallon at the pump. On the other end of the spectrum, retail averages have moved higher in six states over this same period. Prices are double-digits higher in five Midwestern states compared to one month ago: Indiana (+30 cents), Illinois (+26 cents), Michigan (+17 cents), Ohio (+16 cents), and Wisconsin (+16 cents).
Year-over-year discounts in the price of retail gasoline persist, largely due to the price of crude being significantly discounted from this date in 2014. Pump prices in nearly every state (48 and Washington, D.C.) are more than 50 cents per gallon lower than this same date last year. Motorists in 12 states are saving $1 or more per gallon in the average price to refuel their vehicles.
Crude oil prices have continued to sag, due to persisting global oversupply and concerns about the health of the Chinese economy. China is one of the world’s largest and most rapidly growing economies. Evidence of slower than projected growth in the Chinese economy is rippling through global markets and has put additional downward pressure on the price of crude. Both crude oil benchmarks (Brent and West Texas Intermediate) ended last week at their lowest levels since March 2009, and the market is expected to remain volatile in the near term. At the close of Friday’s formal trading on the NYMEX, WTI settled at its lowest close since March 2, 2009 down 87 cents at $40.45 per barrel. These losses accelerated today as WTI opened the week trading $1.50 per barrel lower, well below the $40 per barrel threshold.