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$5 a Gallon Gas May be Considered Cheap Gas this Summer

We got a little break in gas prices this week. I paid 25 cents less a gallon on Monday than what I did the previous week. Unfortunately, prices have shot right back up to where they were before nearing $4. Guess what, the summer driving season which sees peak demand doesn't even get started for another six weeks. What once seemed like a $5 a gallon summer could see gasoline hit over $6 a gallon, either or would be dangerous to the fragile US economy thanks to Washington's restrictions on domestic oil.

Gas prices are nearing $5 a gallon in California, which is accompanied by the praise of the radical left environmentalists. Working families in California already struggling to survive will be hit hard, especially if this trend continues as the United States walks in the world without an energy policy that breaks foreign dependence.

From CNBC:

A dollar plumbing three-year lows is hitting Americans squarely in the gas tank, and one economist thinks it could drive prices as high as $6 a gallon or more by summertime under the right conditions.

With the greenback coming under increased pressure from Federal Reserve policies and investor appetite for more risk, there seems little direction but up for commodity prices, in particular energy and metals.

Weakness in the US currency feeds upward pressure on commodities, which are priced in dollars and thus come at a discount on the foreign markets.

One result has been a surge higher in gasoline prices to nearly $4 a gallon before the summer driving season even starts, a trend that economists say will be aggravated as demand increases and the summer storm season threatens to disrupt oil supplies.

"All we have to have is a couple badly placed hurricanes which could constrain some of the refinery output capacity in some key locations," says Richard Hastings, strategist at Global Hunter Securities in Charlotte, N.C. "If you get weakness in the dollar concurrent with the strong driving season concurrent with the impact of one or two hurricanes in the wrong place, prices could go up in a quasi-exponential manner."