Gas prices drop more than 60 days in a row

By Matt Egan | CNN

New York — In a gift to American shoppers this holiday season, gasoline prices have dropped for 61 consecutive days after getting dangerously close to $4 a gallon in September.

The average price for a gallon of regular gas stood at $3.25 a gallon on Tuesday, according to AAA. That’s down five cents from a week ago and 26 cents from a month ago.

Gas prices have now fallen every day since the peak on September 18, AAA data shows. The streak is a victory for consumers, saving them extra cash just in time for the crucial holiday shopping season.

Americans are particularly sensitive to shifts in prices at the pump as they are highly visible and largely unavoidable.

“Gasoline prices are so in-your-face. This is a clear tailwind for consumer spending,” said Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis at the Oil Price Information Service.

Millions of Americans hitting the road on Thanksgiving Day were greeted by the cheapest gas price for the holiday since 2020, when many people couldn’t take advantage of them because of Covid-19.

However, it’s normal for gas prices to cool off once the summer driving season ends because demand drops. There was an even longer streak of 98 days of falling prices last year after gasoline hit a record of $5.02 a gallon in June 2022. That was the second-longest streak on record going back to 2005.

But what’s significant today is the magnitude of the drop — and how it comes in the face of a series of threats that suggested the opposite could happen.

Gas prices are now down 63 cents since hitting $3.88 in September. That’s despite the Israel-Hamas war, which raised the specter of a regional conflict that could disrupt the flow of oil from the Strait of Hormuz or interrupt supply from Iran. And that’s not to mention Russia’s protracted war on Ukraine and its aggressive supply cuts alongside Saudi Arabia.

Yet oil prices — the main driver of retail pump prices — also have tumbled about 20% since briefly topping $95 a barrel on September 28. US crude fell nearly 1% on Monday to close at $74.86 a barrel before rebounding to nearly $76 on Tuesday.

Fears of supply disruptions in the Middle East have not borne out, forcing the oil market to focus instead on signs of oversupply and weak demand in China.

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