I see a lot of gripes about oil company profits lately on this site and in the media.
While, I hate paying what I am paying for fuel ($3. 05) I don't sit around gripping about it. I try to conserve as much as possible.
The issue is, oil/fuel/gas are traded in the commonities market just like corn, wheat, soy beans, and hogs.
If some weather condition causes a general crop failure the price of these items skyrockets (lack of supply, continued demand). If you're a lucky farmer and you have an bumper crop when everyone else's crop failed, you make more money.
example:
If it costs the farmer $1. 00/bussel to create this bumper crop and the trading price increases from, $2. 00/bussel to $5. 00/bussel. The farmer will net a $4. 00/bussel profit on the crop instead of a $1. 00 profit. That's a good thing for the farmer who was lucky enough to have a product people wanted. The cost of producing the crop is the same whether the trading price is $2. 00 or $5. 00. Unfortunately for farmers the more likely scenerio is it costs $1. 00 to produce the crop but the trading price is $0. 50.
Now look at oil companies. It costs them $X to drill, ship or otherwise "produce thier crop". The production costs don't necessarily raise propotionately to the trading price $Y. With the product trading at such record high levels the "producing companies" make more money (profit).
Until traders think oil is a bad investment (remember buy low, sell high) the producing companies will continue to make more money.
Profit envy is not productive in a capitalist society.
Reduce demand and their profits will go down.
While, I hate paying what I am paying for fuel ($3. 05) I don't sit around gripping about it. I try to conserve as much as possible.
The issue is, oil/fuel/gas are traded in the commonities market just like corn, wheat, soy beans, and hogs.
If some weather condition causes a general crop failure the price of these items skyrockets (lack of supply, continued demand). If you're a lucky farmer and you have an bumper crop when everyone else's crop failed, you make more money.
example:
If it costs the farmer $1. 00/bussel to create this bumper crop and the trading price increases from, $2. 00/bussel to $5. 00/bussel. The farmer will net a $4. 00/bussel profit on the crop instead of a $1. 00 profit. That's a good thing for the farmer who was lucky enough to have a product people wanted. The cost of producing the crop is the same whether the trading price is $2. 00 or $5. 00. Unfortunately for farmers the more likely scenerio is it costs $1. 00 to produce the crop but the trading price is $0. 50.
Now look at oil companies. It costs them $X to drill, ship or otherwise "produce thier crop". The production costs don't necessarily raise propotionately to the trading price $Y. With the product trading at such record high levels the "producing companies" make more money (profit).
Until traders think oil is a bad investment (remember buy low, sell high) the producing companies will continue to make more money.
Profit envy is not productive in a capitalist society.
Reduce demand and their profits will go down.