Gas prices end 54-day streak
The pain at the pump eases ever so slightly as gas prices fall three-tenths of a cent.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The price of a gallon of gas dipped Monday, snapping a 54-day run-up.
Nationwide, the average price for a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline edged down to $2.69, shaving just three-tenths of a cent from the previous day's average of $2.693, according to motorist group AAA.
The single day turnaround in prices does not promise a trend, but after a relentless climb in recent weeks, any pull back is welcome.
Prices have risen since the end of April, when the national average was $2.05 a gallon.
Two states still have gasoline above $3 a gallon. In California, the price of a gallon of gas averaged $3.027; in Hawaii, the average was $3.057.
"Father's Day might have represented the highest price you will pay for the next few months or so," said Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Information Service, which provides the information for AAA.
Kloza expects to see gas prices decrease between 5 to 15 cents in the upcoming weeks, as prices historically start deckling around July 4.
Retail gas prices follow wholesale gas prices and wholesale gas prices move off of crude oil, which is the main ingredient in retail gasoline. Wholesale gas prices fell between 10 and 20 cents last week, and that decline is working its way into the retail market.
Crude oil has more than doubled in price since mid-December, when it reached as low as $33.87 a barrel. At 9:30 a.m. ET on Monday, oil was trading under $68 a barrel.
But Kloza said the spike from December lows may have been a bit over-exuberant. Investors "probably got too enthusiastic" about the possibility of economic recovery and sent oil prices up too quickly.
He added that the fact that the tension in Iran did not send oil prices soaring "tells you that the market was mature."
Oil prices and gas prices need to recalibrate in the face of the reality of a long, slow recovery. A surge in gas prices threatens to derail any economic recovery. With consumers having to pour more dollars into their gas tank, the they will have to cut back in other areas.
Furthermore, consumers are already on edge with unemployment rates continuing to inch up. Friday, the government reported that jobless rates increased in forty-eight states and the District of Columbia.
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