Why does the price of premium gas rise at the same time regular gas does? Gasoline, as much as we in the industry hate to admit, is a commodity. Commodities have value that applies to all of that commodity, no matter where it is. Consider gold. If you buy a one ounce gold piece for $200, then gold increases in value to $700/ounce, your gold piece is worth $700.Gasoline is the same. If a station owner buys gasoline at $3/gallon, then it rises to $4/gallon, the inventory he has in the groun is now worth $4/gallon. If it drops to $2/gallon, he's lost money. This is why station owners struggle to make a profit on gasoline. Premium gasoline is more expensive to produce and has higher detergency levels than lower grades of gasoline, but ultimately, it is gasoline and subject to the same commodity principles. |