Crude is falling, gasoline prices keep climbing and refiners are cashing in.
The national average price of gasoline rose 25 cents for a second straight week to $4.56 a gallon, the highest level since the summer of 2022. Meanwhile, crude oil fell more than $7 on Wednesday, settling below $96 a barrel as ceasefire talks aimed at reopening the Strait of Hormuz advanced.
“Gasoline prices continue to face upward pressure from global supply concerns,” the AAA stated.
The 3-2-1 crack spread, the standard proxy for refining profit margins, just printed $56.22 a barrel on Thursday — its highest level since the post-Ukraine energy shock of June 2022.
When crude falls and pump prices keep climbing, refiners pocket the difference on every barrel they process.
According to U.S. Energy Information Administration data, U.S. crude inventories fell by 2.3 million barrels last week to 457.2 million, while gasoline demand softened from 9.1 million barrels per day to 8.81 million.
Demand cooled. Crude eased, but pump prices kept climbing.
The crack spread is the gross margin a refinery captures for converting crude oil into gasoline and diesel.
The industry-standard 3-2-1 formula assumes that three barrels of crude are refined into two barrels of gasoline and one barrel of distillate, then subtracts the cost of crude from the value of the products.
Think of it as a coffee shop’s margin. Beans are the input cost — crude oil. The latte is the output — gasoline and diesel. The crack spread is what the barista keeps after paying for beans.
When wholesale coffee falls, and the price of a latte keeps climbing, the shop is having a very good morning.
That is exactly what is happening now. The chart of the 3-2-1 spread shows a near-vertical climb from roughly $20 a barrel last summer to $56.22 on Thursday — a 180% jump that puts the metric within reach of the all-time peak set during the post-Ukraine fuel shortage of June 2022.
Image: Shutterstock