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The prices of oil has skyrocketed across the past week. Popular oil ETFs are skyrocketing with the United States Oil Fund (USO) up 57% year-to-date, ProShares Ultra Bloomberg Crude Oil (UCO) up 74%, and Invesco DB Oil Fund (DBO) up 50%. Overall, the price of WTI Crude has jumped from $66 per barrel on February 20th to $90.90 today.
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We take a look at how the surging price of oil in financial markets is impacting consumers. Our finding: gas prices soared 16% across America last week alone. We find that if prediction markets prove accurate, the price of gas could soar past $7 per gallon in California by the end of March.
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The conflict in Iran is sending shockwaves through global energy markets, and American consumers are about to feel it at the pump. Oil prices are surging fast, and the question is no longer whether gas prices will hurt: it’s how badly.
Nate Silver, who is famous for ‘calling’ the 2008 election, published an article today detailing why gas prices are ‘set to go vertical.’
Let’s dive into just how bad the price of gas could get in the coming weeks and compare it to historical extremes.
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According to AAA, the national average gas price has jumped to $3.45 per gallon today. One week ago, the average was $2.98 per gallon — a 16% spike in a single week. For context, the all-time record average was $5.016 per gallon, set on June 22, 2022.
How high could prices go? Nate Silver cites Polymarket data putting the odds of gas prices exceeding $4.50 by the end of March at 63%, with a 34% chance prices breach $5.00. Put another way, that’s a 34% chance oil prices tie the AAA’s all-time high.
One note of caution, while prediction markets have generally been very good at predicting future outcomes, there is still just $40,000 bet on the price of gas by the end of March. That is to say, this is a pretty small market and could be skewed by smaller bets.
Right now, the price of gas ranges dramatically across America.
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In California, the average is $5.159 per gallon.
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On the other end of the spectrum, Kansas’ price per gallon is just $2.911.
The skew to more expensive states is more extreme. Kansas is 16% cheaper than the national average. California is 50% more expensive. Washington state, Oregon, Nevada, and Hawaii are the only other states where gas prices average more than $4 per gallon.




