Canada Gas Prices Could Hit $1.60 Soon: BMO

Posted: Updated: 05/15/2012 2:18 pm

Canadians already hit with gas price shock could soon be paying even more at the pumps due to supply problems and the possibility of conflict in the Middle East, the Bank of Montreal says.

Gas prices across Canada jumped from an average of $1.20 in January to around $1.40 this week. That was the average pump price in Toronto this week, and in Montreal prices are hovering around $1.47. They are now 8 per cent higher than they were at this time last year, even though oil prices are slightly lower than they were in April of 2011.

The risk of gas prices hitting $1.60 per litre are “not insignificant,” BMO Capital Markets senior economist Sal Gualtieri wrote in a note Thursday.

"Although crude oil prices are expected to hover near $100 a barrel in the year ahead, the risk of a near-term spike is elevated due to potential supply disruptions," he wrote.

At the same time, oil speculators -- investors who buy oil in order to sell it at a higher price later -- are driving up oil prices beyond what the market would normally sustain.

Oil trading analyst Jim Ritterbusch told the Globe and Mail there is a near-record number of speculative contracts on the oil market right now, who are trying to cash in on supply problems caused by struggling U.S. refineries.

Chief among these is a Sunoco refinery in Philadelphia that is faltering under lagging demand in the eastern U.S. and foreign competition, and can’t find a buyer.

“The Sunoco situation is significant and the market has priced in a closure of that facility by July,” Ritterbusch told the Globe. “This is a real sweet spot in terms of speculative interest in the gasoline market.”

Then there is the problem of the Middle East. If open conflict between Iran and the U.S. or Israel were to break out, and Iran blockaded the Strait of Hormuz, as it has threatened, oil prices could spike to crisis levels.

"The Iranian situation could disrupt oil shipments in the Strait of Hormuz, a key route for one-fifth of globally traded oil,” BMO’s Gualtieri wrote. “This would likely push crude prices back to 2008's high of $147 a barrel."

At those price levels, it’s unlikely Canada could avoid an economic slowdown.

Under that scenario our economy would slow meaningfully and our unemployment rate would go up,” Gualtieri told the Financial Post.

Some economists blame the high gas prices in the summer of 2008 -- which were also blamed in part on speculators -- for pushing the U.S. into an economic slowdown that tipped its major banks into a financial crisis.

On Wednesday Gualtieri modeled what the Canadian economy would look like with $1.70 gas, and, as the Globe reported, “it’s not pretty.”

A sustained 30-per-cent increase in the price of gas would shave a full percentage point off Canada’s economic growth, Gualtieri predicted. (He did not suggest that gas prices would actually hit $1.70.)

"This would lift unemployment in both [the U.S. and Canada], halt the equity rally, and possibly spur additional monetary easing," Gualtieri said.

Yet so far, rising gas prices have not visibly had an effect on employment levels. Canada posted a surprising increase of 82,000 jobs in March, far above expectations and the highest monthly increase in four years.

Faced with painful pump prices, some people are pushing for a gas station boycott, with one online campaign urging drivers to stop buying gas at Canada’s two largest gas retailers -- Esso and Suncor-owned Petro-Canada -- as of May 1.

But critics say a boycott would have little effect on gas prices unless Canadians were to actually reduce the total amount of gas they consume.

There was some good news for gas consumers on Thursday, though. The website TomorrowsGasPriceToday.com, run by former Liberal MP Dan McTeague, predicts that gas prices would drop just in time for the long weekend. The site predicted gas prices below $1.30 for Toronto.

Get gas tomorrow!!” the website urged Thursday.

How high will the average Canadian gas price get by the Friday of the August long weekend?

  • $0.90-$0.99

  • $1.00-$1.09

  • $1.10-$1.19

  • $1.20-$1.29

  • $1.30-$1.39

  • $1.40-$1.49

  • $1.50-$1.59

  • $1.60-$1.69

  • $1.70-$1.79

  • $1.80 and up

Predict it!
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WHAT'S BEHIND THE PRICE OF GAS?
Loading Slideshow...
  • 1. Crude Oil Prices

    It starts with crude oil. Although Canada may produce more oil than it consumes, the country is at the mercy of global markets for the commodity. Increased Middle East instability, sparked by popular uprisings, has lead to concerns about supply. Better-than-expected economic growth, especially in developing nations such as China and India, has also increased demand. (AP Photo/Hasan Jamali)

  • 2. Refining Oil into Gas

    The next link in the supply chain is refining. In order to turn thick, black crude oil into useful products such as gasoline, diesel, heating oil and jet fuel, it must be sent through a mind-boggling array of pipes and tanks, heaters and condensers to sort the components of the substance from lightest to heaviest. This is a complex and costly process, and is paid for by what is known as the "crack spread," or refining margin. This represents the difference between prices fetched for the products produced, and the cost of crude oil inputs.. (AP File Photo)

  • 3. Transportation to Retailers

    Once the oil has been refined into gasoline, it must be transported to retail outlets across the country. This is accomplished through a network of 23 terminals - from St. John's to Nanaimo, B.C. -- forming the backbone of the distribution network. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

  • 4. Retail Mark-Up

    The retail mark-up averaged 7.6 cents per litre in April. This national average masks wide variation, from lows of 4.6 cents in Calgary up to highs of 25.8 cents in Whitehorse, according to Kent Marketing Services, an industry consulting group. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner)

  • 5.Taxes at the Pump

    Emily Corbett of Mechanicville, N.Y., pump gas at a station in Mechanicville, on Wednesday, May 11, 2011. New York, Indiana, Illinois and New Hampshire are among the first states talking about temporarily suspending part or all of the state and local taxes that can add 14 cents to nearly 50 cents to a gallon of gas. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

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Newfoundlander
I'm a pessimist, an optimist with experience!
03:47 PM on 05/15/2012
swarf maker
10:30 AM on 04/06/2012
...Canadian oil companies know they have a government in power that will not react to their price fixing.

Absolutely! Our toothless competition watchdog claims there is no evidence of price-fixing only because they can't find in oil companies' files a document that reads "We, the undersigned oil companies, do hereby agree that we will conspire to fix gas prices." The prices at the pumps speak for themselves! When oil prices take a jump, gas prices increase immediately, but if oil prices decline, "the decrease has to work its way through the system."

Remember, the attachment at the end of a gas hose is not shaped like a gun only by coincidence.
03:12 PM on 05/15/2012
yet Starbucks coffee is $4.75 per liter...why arent we going after the Cons and Big Coffee!!
02:49 PM on 05/15/2012
''It starts with crude oil. Although Canada may produce more oil than it consumes, the country is at the mercy of global markets for the commodity.''

if we produce more then we consume then where is all of it going??

perhaps another commenter has some knowledge or links they could educate me with.??
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wolf 123
Cheering daily for the asteroid
02:39 PM on 05/15/2012
Why is oil speculation still being allowed. In fact, why is any speculation on any market being allowed. In a world hanging on from financial disaster to financial disaster do we really need the greed of financial markets helping to push us along to road to insolvency, just for the pleasure of watching them get ever richer?
09:09 PM on 04/13/2012
Stop buying from Shell, Petro and Esso and watch it all go down! Still buy gas but not from any of these three giants, that's what Gas War is calling for and if everyone would just do this simple thing, they'd have no choice. Buy it from the independants until it crashes down. Francis Fuels, Econo, MacEwen, etc...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steve Lives
The Venus Project ... look it up
03:13 PM on 05/15/2012
I wonder where the independents, as you call them, get their fuel? I don't know, so I'm asking.
compro01
Conservatism : Policy-based evidence making
03:30 PM on 05/15/2012
Depends on the independent. For example, Co-ops here in Saskatchewan get their fuel from the Federated Co-operatives refinery.
10:02 PM on 04/08/2012
what i don't understand is where are the new electric or solar powered cars. We send ppl to outer SPACE and to the moon, explore new universes, and yet we can not come up with a battery that refills itself?? give me a break. we got the technology to fly and sustain a space station - how do they get their power?? they aint havin no gas station or hydro waterdam anywhere near them yet they stay there 6 months and longer. HOW? How is that possible?? and we can not build an electric car on earth?!? Give me a BREAK - that is all BS - initiated by the big oil companies, greedy beyond intelligence. and of course government trots right along with the saboteurs. we little ppl are too stupid to understand and need to be kept in the dark, so GREED and CORRUPTION can flourish
10:25 AM on 04/09/2012
The problem with electric cars at least in Ontario is we supposedly have a shortage of electricity too due to the closing of the coal fired plants to appease the environmentalists.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wolf 123
Cheering daily for the asteroid
02:46 PM on 05/15/2012
Actually, with regards to powering the space station.. there's a couple of important points to remember...

The space station lies outside most of our atmosphere, there's a lot more solar radiation falling on those solar panels than falls to the surface of the earth.

The cost of that power self sufficiency is staggering. Fully loaded the space station can't manage more than 10 humans at a time. Additionally all the waste must be shipped out, there's no facility to deal with garbage or sewage. Everything that goes up MUST come back down...

Most North Americans wouldn't be willing to adjust their life styles to meet the low power reality of life on the space station.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Capital Ottawa
10:14 AM on 04/06/2012
"The risk of gas prices hitting $1.60 per litre are “not insignificant,” BMO Capital Markets senior economist Sal Gualtieri wrote in a note Thursday."

Not significant for Sal Gualtieri who probable makes six figures, for anyone making a working wage who commutes, $1.60 a litre is a major increase. All household costs are going up but wages have been stagnant for 10 years. Sal is out of touch with the economic reality of the middle class.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
yishai ettebe
10:02 AM on 04/06/2012
I am already paying that because of premium.
01:35 AM on 04/06/2012
Another catch 22 for us. Stagnant wages keep us driving less efficient older, and cheaper cars. Fuel cost goes up. Public transit stagnates with government cost cutting, fares increase. We get laid off and seek jobs at lower wages with longer commutes because we can't sell the house we bought at high price. But the money goes somewhere.....1% continue to gain ever higher percentage of everything.
01:41 AM on 04/06/2012
Disclaimer:
I work in the fossil fuel sector. And I am not happy about it. I got laid off a couple years ago and it took two years to get back to just under that wage again. The sector I am in, is doomed sooner than some other fossil fuel sectors. I see my demise on the horizon. It is there for us all. Every penny of royalties and taxes on fossil fuels should be invested in alternate, renewable energy production. Not one cent should go to anything else.
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12:26 PM on 04/09/2012
You are the second member I have seen today point out how quickly the end of this industry is approaching. I agree we need to seriously re-evaluate where are resource revenues are spent and soon. The good times are coming to an end. I hope you manage to secure your future income requirements before things go belly up.
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north of 60
Quando Omni Flunkus Moritati
10:44 PM on 04/05/2012
The money I spend on fuel makes jobs in Canada, and fellow Canadians can put food on their table with a roof over their heads. It doesn't go to some sweatshop on the other side of the world.

Be aware of where the stuff you consume was made and who benefits.
10:28 AM on 04/09/2012
No the money you spend on gas goes to the provincial and federal government to be wasted away on who knows what.
10:38 PM on 04/05/2012
at some point economy will choke as any money left in a home budget will go towards gas. in essence, the society will have to change - people living closer to work, local economies - no more long haul for california straberries in a winter, etc. actually that could be a good thing. on top of that auto manufacturer''s at some point will develop a vehicle that won't need gas and all the petro jerks will have to go where they came from .
09:00 PM on 04/05/2012
The BMO Spokeshole suggests a new round of monetary easing if Oil hits a new high. Monetary easing is a huge reason for this spike, In inflationary times, money goes into commodities. Especially free money the banks and their hedge funds are getting, Could this be a planned assault on the U,S dollar and both the U.S and Canadian economies to usher in the Amero, seems like it.
10:30 AM on 04/06/2012
Bulls eye!

That and Canadian oil companies know they have a government in power that will not react to their price fixing. Prices are set at the whim of the oil companies. There is no free market in petroleum products in Canada.
08:46 PM on 04/05/2012
It is a well known fact that in the US, the Koch brothers have a huge stake in petrolium, and they are very successful in pocketing almost all the GOP leaders, including the Fox news. This is why all the republican law makers are deadly against the Hybrid/ Electric cars - which would eventually replace the gas engines, and blowing the Koch brothers out.
08:41 PM on 04/05/2012
BMO must have a huge stake in oil business to make predictions like that. The Alberta tar oil sands claims they have more gas than the Saudis, and they are extracting over a million barrels a day. It is speculators like the BMO are raising the gas prices in Canada and the US.

The Alberta tar sands barons, while making billions of dollars each month are trying to rob the Albertans and depriving them from their crucial needs. The tar sands exploits are damaging the pristine landscape and destroying the environment. Tens of thousands of hectars of land have been destroyed, wells are poisoned, people are getting sick, but the corrupt conservative government is only interested in the mighty dollar - the contribution from the oil barons to the Tory campaigns.
The Albertans have been patient with the price increase, but seeing that they are systematically robbed again and again, they are asking the world scientists to intervene in the production of tar sands oil and shut them down for good.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
piceaglauca
The picture says it all....
07:36 PM on 04/05/2012
No problem with that. This product has never been in line with other consumer goods. Let it seek its own level. Many other products relying on gas will also have to be adjusted.