by phaster » Sun 01 Jun 2008, 00:25:22
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'H')edging is an effective strategy to lock-in costs, but hedging alone cannot lower costs.
Just thought I'd ask if anyone had a pragmatic personal scale hedging strategy for gas that they would like share.
The other day while waiting in line to fuel my old cessna, I got to talking with a few other people and they mentioned if I used a BP credit card instead of my AMEX card, at a BP gas pump at the airport I would get a $0.25 per gal rebate on AvGas. Seemed like a pretty good deal, so I took a credit card application.
Anyway anyone knew of other deals like that?
BTW in your neck of the woods, what the difference in price is between gas and diesel? Here in San Diego, diesel is even more expensive than AvGas. Noticed on my way home from the airport, diesel was $5.20 a gal, AvGas or 100LL for my airplane was $4.95 a gal (but would be $0.25 a gal less after I get a BP credit card), and regular gas ranges from $4.10 a gal for 87 octane to about $4.40 at my local gas station for 91 octane.
BTW anyone know when the teapot refinery are going to go back online? I head that is one reason why diesel prices are higher than historical norms. From what I gather when china institued price levels, the teapot refiners basically closed down production, because they were forced to by raw crude on the open market, but could not pass along increased costs to consumers because china had price controls, so in effect the teapot refiners (small scale operations) did the logical economic thing and close down shop, thus constricting supply even more and drivng up global prices.