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View Full Version : Hit by high prices and fees, some gas station owners stop selling fuel



sws4420
05-24-2007, 09:31 AM
As gas prices hit another record last Friday, Jeff Curro couldn't take it anymore.

After owning the Shell gas station at 3075 N. 124th St. in Brookfield for 20 years, Jeff Curro has stopped selling gas. As gas prices rose, his profit margin dropped.

He wasn't a motorist at the pump fed up by the blur of numbers spinning higher as he filled his tank.

Curro is a gas station owner who has stopped selling gas to his own customers.

After selling gas at N. 124th and W. Burleigh streets for 20 years, Curro turned off his pumps at his Shell station in Brookfield when the price he was being asked to pay was just too much.

Including the wholesale cost of gas and other taxes and charges, he was being asked to pay $3.44 a gallon Friday, a day when the competing stations down the street were selling gasoline for $3.47.

"Three cents a gallon doesn't cut it," Curro said. "It doesn't pay the bills."

Add to that the money he loses every time a motorist uses a credit card at the pump, and there was no reason to keep selling gas, Curro said.

Credit card companies and banks get an average of 2.75% on every gallon of gas sold, and credit card processing fees now rank as the second-biggest expense for gas station operators, according to the National Association of Convenience Stores.

"The way I see it is, I'm doing all the work of providing the labor, the wages, the electricity, the lighting, the maintenance of the pumps, the repairs and the insurance, which is quite substantial," Curro said. "I'm doing all the work, and somebody else is getting fat on me."

Curro isn't alone in deciding to not sell gas anymore. Casey O'Gorman did the same thing. In business for 25 years near State Fair Park, his West Allis service station is now doing business exclusively as Auto Analyzers. The Shell name came down a few months back.

"I finally had to just pull the plug on it and say, 'I can't afford to do it anymore,' " O'Gorman said.

High wholesale prices
Curro and O'Gorman are leaving a relatively small and disappearing group of service station owners who both sell gas and repair cars.

Independent auto-repair shops face competition from car dealerships and quick-lube repair shops, and in the sale of gasoline, they compete against full-line convenience stores.

Most gas stations today double as convenience stores, and although they generate more than two-thirds of sales from gas, two-thirds of profit comes from in-store sales of cigarettes, drinks and food, according to the convenience store association.

When drivers are paying more, they think that means higher profits for the filling station, said Bob Bartlett, executive vice president of the Wisconsin Petroleum Marketers & Convenience Stores Association.

The case of the two Shell stations stopping sales of gas illustrates the challenges faced by independent station owners across the state, Bartlett said. Nine of 10 stations in the state are independently owned and run, he said.

Between Feb. 1 and Monday, Bartlett said, the average wholesale price paid by service stations in Milwaukee to buy gasoline rose from $1.66 to $2.94. Add in taxes paid to the federal and state governments, as well as transportation costs, and the average service station had to cover $3.47 on Monday, without charging any profit. On that day, stations were charging their customers $3.47 on average in Milwaukee, according to AAA's Daily Fuel Gauge Report.

"People are upset about oil and gas prices, but it's not this guy right here," Bartlett said of the independent gas station owner. "He's not OPEC. He's not refining it. He's buying it kind of like I am, right at the end of the line here."

Sales up, profit down
Curro has been thinking about shutting down his gas pumps for about a year, and he has complained to his supplier about prices.

When he shut down his pumps, he was charging $3.59 a gallon, 12 cents higher than the competing stations nearby.

"Even at $3.59, I was making 15 cents, but I was still giving 10 of those cents to MasterCard," he said.

Nationally, the Association of Convenience Stores estimates that sales rose 12% but profit fell 23% industrywide last year, and for the first time, credit card fees were higher than the industry's profit.

Lower margins on the sale of fuel and credit card fees were the two main factors behind the drop in profit, the association said, as profit margins on the sale of fuel dipped to their lowest point since 1983.

Until January, O'Gorman and the predecessors at S. 84th St. and W. Greenfield Ave. sold gasoline on that corner since 1938.

He says he never made much money selling gas but started seeing margins nosedive last year when gas prices rose.

"More and more, it was crowding out my real form of income," O'Gorman said, referring to car repairs.

"Then you listen to the public, and they say we're gouging them. Who needs to listen to that? I'd need to have my head examined."


http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=610122

MedicCook
05-24-2007, 10:09 AM
And the sheiks are laughing all the way to the bank.

trojanmiro
05-24-2007, 10:41 AM
alot of it has to do with our own refineries too. everyone wants to blame opec, meanwhile exon and everyone else are still recording record high profits. the 4 major companies in america have monopolized the market. 10 years ago we had enough gas in storage to run the entire country without cutting back for like 3 years. im sure its more by now. there is no reason why every single little excuse should hike up gas prices as drastically and as fast as they do.

MedicCook
05-24-2007, 10:49 AM
It seems like most of the US oil has been sold over seas instead of kept in the US over the years also.

sws4420
05-24-2007, 01:30 PM
Oil companies have no incentive to build refineries. It's an nightmare for any company to have to follow all the guidelines and implement all of the technology that the EPA would require to be in place in a new refinery. That's like saying that after you spend a whole year's salary on making your house perfect, that it causes your wages to be lower. Nobody in their right mind would do that.

schmidt
05-24-2007, 02:14 PM
It the people who are all the nay sayers who make oil go up and dwon. They have no clue whasty going on and say , were going to war or there will be lots of hurricanes this year, so then next thing you know gas sky rockets up more. Im telling you its the nay sayers for these oil companys, Its illegal and should be prosecuted

sws4420
05-24-2007, 02:35 PM
I can't really agree with that statement. Profits aren't a crime, not even for large companies.

trojanmiro
05-24-2007, 07:38 PM
I can't really agree with that statement. Profits aren't a crime, not even for large companies.

monopoly is though. 4 large companies can create that also.

sws4420
05-24-2007, 07:48 PM
If it's four different companies, that isn't techinically a monopoly. If it were all one company, that'd be a monopoly.

Cartel is more like it.

MedicCook
05-24-2007, 08:38 PM
It is if all 4 companies have planned to raise prices the same to gouge the public and increase their profits.

sws4420
05-24-2007, 08:55 PM
Just think how much more profit could be made by the one company that decided to undercut the other three.

trojanmiro
05-25-2007, 08:30 AM
Just think how much more profit could be made by the one company that decided to undercut the other three.

there would be more volume sold, and perhaps they may make more then the other companies would, but the actual margin of profit would go down. i actually saw a story on this on like dateline or some shit. they had some major former oil exec on. he basically said he blamed it on the people. after the katrina season and such, when these companies released record high profits at the next quarter, they raised prices gradually over the next week to see what the reaction of the public would be. when the american public still continued to pay it, they knew they could charge whatever they wanted at that point and people would still pay it.

i mostly believe its a selfish and lazy society of people that we have today. it would be extremely difficult to boycott gas altogether, since its nearly the only means of fuel available. but if people car pooled more and strategically planned what companies they bought gas from, it could possibly make a difference. i would say even use public tranportation but outside a major metro city such as boston or ny its too unreliable. people are lazy and dont want the effort to car pool. i wouldnt be shocked either if the oil companies were lining the pockets of auto makers execs to ensure that technology doesnt advance too fast.

sws4420
05-25-2007, 09:55 AM
Well, sure the margin would go down, but overall the company who'd be undercutting would be making more in the longrun.

I should start an oil company.

MedicCook
05-25-2007, 12:15 PM
It has been known for years that the oil industry has been paying auto manufacturers to keep the technology slow along with paying off the politicians to keep the laws either stalled or the ones that pass do not really do much.