Gas prices dip, but U.S. drivers wary

Thu Nov 20, 2008 4:12pm EST
 
[-] Text [+]

By Tim Gaynor

PHOENIX (Reuters) - Pumping gas into his hefty Landrover Discovery, Aaron Horton is pleased that U.S. gas prices have fallen to near $2 at the pumps -- but it's not going to change his life.

"If gas is cheaper, I appreciate it ... I guess I can just eat a bit better," said Horton, 29, who drives 400 miles a week for his job as a personal fitness trainer in sprawling Phoenix. "I don't know that I'd call it savings, it's just not burying me as much as it was."

The average U.S. retail price for gasoline dipped to $2.07 a gallon last week, down from a high of $4.11 in July and the lowest since March 2005, but Americans are not exactly celebrating or returning to the roads in droves.

With the economy shedding around 200,000 jobs a month and a deepening housing and financial crisis, other factors are offsetting their savings at the pumps, drivers said in interviews around the country.

"In this economy these prices are a drop in the ocean -- too little," said construction worker Mario Alvarez as he sluiced gas into his Toyota Tacoma truck in downtown Los Angeles, where prices dipped to $2.36 a gallon from highs of over $4.50 in July.

"I have work now, but tomorrow I may not. A few hundred bucks I save now aren't going to see me through that," he added.

In the Midwest, which had the lowest regional gas prices in the country last week at an average of $1.94 per gallon, drivers were also less than thrilled.

"If I was a long-haul trucker driver, maybe it would matter, but if I'm saving 8, 9, 10 dollars that's not significant," said bartender Murray Donovan, 53, who drives a white Buick sedan in Cincinnati.

Some gas station managers were also sanguine, saying lower prices had done little to boost sales as consumers remain cautious.

"It hasn't helped us," said Harold Haywood, manager of a Kansas City, Mo., Quik Trip gas and food store. Haywood said sales remained lower than last year and were flat compared to three months ago when prices were more than $3 a gallon.

Part of the sluggish sales are due to a turn to cold weather and decreased recreational travel, he said, and part of the trend was due to people having less money to spend.

LIMITED RELIEF

In September, the number of miles driven by Americans tumbled 4.4 percent from a year earlier, the government said this week, but despite the pessimism, there were signs that some people are starting to return to the roads.

Demand for gasoline edged up 1.3 percent in early November as fuel prices dropped, according to a survey by MasterCard Advisors, although it was still down 3.9 percent on year-earlier levels.

In the area around Houston -- the Texan city which noted the nation's lowest prices this week at $1.84 a gallon -- some stations reported a bounce at the pumps as drivers took out the thirsty trucks and sport utility vehicles they left at home when gas prices peaked in the summer.  Continued...

 
Photo
Finding the profit prescription

Pharmaceutical companies are striking mega deals, diversifying and cutting costs but Wall Street skepticism persists in many corners of the healthcare industry.   Full Coverage 

Photo

Editor's Choice

A selection of our best photos from the past 24 hours.  Slideshow 

Most Popular on Reuters

  • Articles
  • Video