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Third straight decline in benchmark diesel as futures trend higher
Business & Economy

Third straight decline in benchmark diesel as futures trend higher


The weekly benchmark diesel price used for most fuel surcharges recorded its third straight decrease after weeks of higher numbers, but the recent direction of futures prices suggest the pullback may not continue.

The Department of Energy\Energy Information Administration average weekly retail diesel price fell 5.2 cents/gallon to $5.351/g, published Tuesday and effective Monday.

That’s a decline of 29.2 cts/g over the last 3 weeks in the benchmark price used to set most fuel surcharges. But futures prices have turned higher, the AAA price was up today for the first time in more than 2 weeks, and there’s little bearish news out of the Strait of Hormuz. The price released Tuesday could be a bottom for this cycle.

The price has declined 29.2 cts/g over the last three weeks, which means it is that much under the highest price in the cycle since the start of the war in Iran and the broader Middle East. The price published by the DOE/EIA right before the recent downturn was $5.643/g on April 6.

The record high in the DOE/EIA series, which goes back to 1994, is $5.81, set in June 2022.

The settlement price of ultra low sulfur diesel (ULSD) on the CME commodity exchange reached its highest level since the war began on March 27, when it settled at $4.4955/g. It settled slightly below that on April 7, at $4.4744/g.

ULSD plummeted a day later, more than 66 cts/g, on announcement of a ceasefire, settling at $3.8084/g. Prices have made a steady move higher since then, despite a market that has been up and down on any given day’s news on the possible reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.

ULSD crossed the $4/g mark in trading Monday before settling just under that. It exceeded the $4 mark again Tuesday before a slight decline by 11 a.m. Tuesday.

What comes next

There has been enough stability in current markets that extreme talk of an eventual $200/b price for Brent crude, the world’s benchmark, has mostly faded.

But what hasn’t faded are growing concerns that oil prices may be sticking at higher levels for awhile, regardless of whatever developments occur with the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.



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