View Single Post
  #15   Report Post  
Edwin Pawlowski
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Charlie Self" wrote in message

AFAIK, it's unusual for a profit percentage to increase, or drop, by a
whole lot. What usually happens is more of an item is sold, at the same
percentage of profit, so that there is a gain in profitability. There
are numerous tactics for increasing profits that include dropping the
profit per unit sold, in order to increase the number of units sold.

I read somewhere that one major oil company had a 40% increase in
profits, while another had a 60% increase. There was no way to tell
what method was used,


Percentages can be mis-leading also. If Mobil had sales last year of $1
billion and made $1 profit and this year they sold $2 billion but the profit
was $1.60, you could report a 60% increase in earnings.


but I do know that distributors who are attaching
what appears to be 6-8 cents a day to gasoline prices are not doing it
because the refinery is passing that along. When a barrel of oil goes
up, the price of the gasoline goes up, and the price of the gasoline to
the refinery/distributor has not yet risen, and may not for a week or
two. Thus, the public is getting gouged rather nicely. One local outfit
priced their gas at $2.39.9 when the truck filled their tanks. That
price increased to $2.47.9 today, though no truck has been near the
place. What happened? I think the owner drove through town and realized
he was a dime under anyone else, so he tacked most of that on.


The dealers are told (not requsted) by the distributor to change prices. I
know of an instance last year by a local dealer that did not want to
increase for the second time the same day. He was politely told he may not
get any more deliveries if he did not raise them.

I got lucky last week. Prices went up 9¢ and they were getting a delivery
and changing the signs while I was pumping. Five minutes later . . . .


Profiteering is not at all unusual in such situations. I don't know
whether it is moral or not, but I do know that I'd rather pay more for
gas with a dealer who prices it honestly from the start than I would
from one who pops the price based on what he discovers the market will
bear after he has set his normal profit percentage.


I'd like to know who is making the money. Dealer? Distributor? Refiner?
Arabs? All of the above?