Falling Oil Prices Means More Cash for Leisure

ByABC News
January 17, 2007, 3:45 PM

Jan. 17, 2007 — -- Remember watching and worrying as oil prices climbed higher and higher last summer, with predictions hitting $100 a barrel? Well, the momentum has shifted 180 degrees in the oil market, and the oil producers and dealers are about the only ones complaining now.

"December, we were off by 40 percent," said Scott MacFarlane of MacFarlane Oil, a heating oil company based in Boston. "We could have the weather [at] 10 degrees for the rest of the winter, and we still wouldn't catch up what we lost."

The recent drop in oil prices means a windfall for Northeasterners who filled their furnaces with heating oil and paid record prices for it last year. And the mild winter weather has certainly done its part to bring prices down.

But analysts say warm weather does not account for the pace of the plunge -- a 16 percent drop to $51.35 a barrel for light, sweet crude in the past two weeks.

That is the work of market speculators, such as large hedge funds, which buy and sell oil for quick profit and wield growing influence over the prices consumers pay.

"The speculators were very involved in the market, helping to drive the price up and similarly they've been very involved in helping to drive the price down," said Addison Armstrong, an oil analyst at TFS Energy.

Some analysts believe prices could fall even further. According to Wachovia chief economist John Silvia, "$40 to $45 a barrel is not out of the range of possibility."

And the more they fall, the more consumers benefit -- particularly at the gas pump.

The 34 percent decline in the price of crude oil from its peak in July has fueled a 27 percent decline in gasoline prices. The government said the national average for regular unleaded is now $2.23 a gallon, down from more than $3 a gallon last summer.

Boston homeowner Susan Yanofsky said the savings on fuel bills adds up. "It's a few hundred dollars each month, which is substantial," she said. Yanofsky planned to spend some of those savings by eating out more often.