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Despite drilling, gas prices still march upward

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“It’s speculators who are moving markets,” said Bart Chilton, a commissioner at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. “They are almost exclusively the entire market at certain periods of time.”

Chilton led the charge in seeking limits that reduced how much of the market for crude oil any single trader or company could control. Armed with the 2010 revamp of financial regulation, the commission sought to establish hard limits, but that effort is now bogged down in the courts.

“The more textured view would show you that at certain times it is not a question to whether or not speculators are moving the market. Speculators are the market,” he said.

Other forces are at work as well.

Nearly 1 million barrels a day of capacity has been turned off, with eight refinery closures or announced closures on the U.S. East Coast and the Caribbean over the past year.

“What the market is really pricing in is potentially a new era of tighter gasoline supplies that are heavily reliant on imports,” said John Kilduff, a partner in the energy trading firm Again Capital in New York. “We might not ever turn back from these high prices. This isn’t episodic.”

Another factor is that refiners that turn oil into gasoline have chosen to switch to their summer blends much earlier than normal. This switch, which stops or slows production for a period of time, usually happens closer to the spring break driving season in mid- to late March.

Last year, gasoline prices peaked on April 5 and 6, so AAA is hoping that an early switchover may also mean an early peak to gasoline prices and that they may tumble later in the year.

The trade association for refiners, the American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers, is unaware of any large-scale early switch away from winter fuels, said Joanne Shore, the group’s chief industry analyst.

“We don’t have information on that explicitly,” she said, noting that the association doesn’t keep real-time production data. California, Shore said, switches to summer fuels earlier than the rest of the nation, adding that some California refiners are undergoing maintenance and it’s been “one of the factors that has tightened (up) the Southern California market a bit.”

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