Retail fuel margins hit high point of the year

According to OPIS, retail fuel margins across the USA are now at the highest average levels of the year.

For the third consecutive week, retail fuel margins increased, this time up $0.028 per gallon to an average of $0.302 per gallon. The increase this week bumped the year to date average retail fuel margin to $0.180 per gallon.

For the past six weeks, the average retail fuel margin stands at $0.227 per gallon.

Oil prices have been on the rise however, so it stands to reason that wholesale prices may soon inch up, putting pressure on retail fuel margins. From a fuel management perspective, it makes sense to use profits from these margins to invest in fuel software in order to keep a close watch on the changing market conditions, and optimize fuels prices to balance margins and volumes.

Retail fuel margins rebound sharply

According to the latest OPIS report, retail fuel margins across the USA had a strong recovery this week, increasing $0.075 gallon to an average of $0.274 per gallon. Average retail fuel margins across the USA are now the highest of the year.

The year to date average retail fuel margin now stands at $0.177 per gallon, while the Q2 average retail fuel margin is $0.191 per gallon. The six week average jumped $0.025 per gallon to reach $0.197 per gallon. The month of June finished strong, with an average retail fuel margin of $0.210 per gallon.

From a fuel management perspective, these are critical benchmarks to use as a comparison for your own operations. When analyzing options for fuel management software systems, the question to ask is, “how difficult is it to access this information for my own comparisons?”. PriceAdvantage fuel software provides rich analytics to quickly slice and dice margin information for individual stores, markets, and the overall enterprise, out of the box, with no database expertise required.

High’s of Baltimore latest PriceAdvantage customer to implement GasBuddy OpenStore

More and more we’re seeing PriceAdvantage customers adapt GasBuddy OpenStore as their digital marketing solution. First it was Rutter’s, then it was Parker’s, followed by Family Express. CST Brands, formerly Valero, is the fourth PriceAdvantage customer to use both PriceAdvantage as their fuel software system for managing retail fuel prices, and GasBuddy OpenStore for digital marketing.

The synergy between the two solutions is powerful. When the fuel analyst pushes the optimized prices to the street, and the fuel price changes are completed at the POS, pumps and electronic price signs, the confirmation message is returned back to PriceAdvantage with a time and date stamp audit trail showing the exact time of completion.

Once the price changes are complete, PriceAdvantage through its integration automatically publishes the newest gas prices to GasBuddy OpenStore. From there the prices can be distributed to the various GasBuddy sites, making sure the latest and most accurate prices are on the GasBuddy map. This process also helps make sure every store appears on the GasBuddy map and doesn’t drop off due to a lack of price report updates.

PriceAdvantage offers a similar integration with OPIS, where upon completion and confirmation of the fuel price changes, PriceAdvantage publishes the latest price information to OPIS, from which the prices are distributed to the entire OPIS network including MapQuest, Garmin, and AAA.

Gas price signs have already moved from the old fashioned manual suction cup, to the electronic gas price sign, and are now adding the digital virtual sign seen on the Web. With PriceAdvantage and the integrations to GasBuddy OpenStore and OPIS,  the price signs are current across every type, maximizing all marketing and branding efforts.

Tesla unveils more progress on the electric vehicle recharging front

One of the biggest concerns of potential buyers of the electric vehicle is the inconvenience of refueling. Electric vehicle charging stations on the road today require an hour or so for a “top-off” recharge.

In their effort to move the electric vehicle recharging experience toward something consumers are more used to when refueling at a convenience store, Tesla is rolling out a network of Super Charger stations that can recharge their Super S vehicle 50% in 30 minutes. What’s even more compelling is that the refueling is free indefinitely for Tesla owners.

But Tesla this week has taken the refueling experience even further by announcing the availability of a 90 second battery swap alternative. The concept here is that the consumer can pay approximately $50 to have an assembly line type machine unscrew bolts that hold the current battery in place, remove the battery, drop in a replacement battery, and tighten the bolts to factory specifications. Not only is this less time than a traditional fill-up, but  in many parts of the country it costs less than the current price of a fill-up.

There is one significant downside, however. Drivers who take the replacement battery will eventually have to return to the charging station to get their battery back, where they’ll have to pay for the replacement process again. So in that scenario, the battery swap costs twice what it originally seems. The other options are for the driver to pay for their battery to be shipped to their local service center, or to keep the replacement battery which may not have the same efficiency as their original.

So while barriers to entry still exist for the electric vehicle market, there is no doubt that the gap in convenience between traditional fuel fill-ups and electric charging fill-ups is closing.

Retail fuel margins rebound

OPIS reported today that retail fuel margins across the USA had a slight rebound this week. The average retail fuel margin across the country now stands at $0.199 per gallon, up $0.047 from last week. The increase this week returned the year to date margin to the level of two weeks ago, now at $0.171 per gallon.

The average fuel margins for Q2 also inched up slightly to $0.184 per gallon. The six week average fuel margin is now at $0.172 per gallon, up $0.009 per gallon from last week.

With one week remaining in the quarter, it appears that average fuel margins across the USA for Q2 will be $0.025 higher than the average fuel margins for Q1. That is welcome relief for the retail fuel industry, which needs to operate at approximately $0.15 margins to be at the break-even point.

Fuel management highlights from the NACS State of the Industry Summit

In the NACS State of the Industry Summit there were several key fuel management highlights for the 2013 year.

  1. Gasoline consumption is up 1.3% year over year.
  2. Gasoline margins are up 3.6 cents per gallon for the first 12 weeks of 2013 year over year.
  3. Gasoline margins were at 16.6 cents per gallon for the first 12 weeks of 2013.
  4. The breakeven cents-per-gallon for last year improved to 9.21 cents, a 12% improvement.

From a fuel price management perspective, it is important to compare the results in your markets to these national industry standards. Perhaps individual markets are particularly competitive with margins and cannot match some of these statistical levels, but these industry standards provide a gauge and set of key performance indicators to use for measuring success.

Using these measurements as the basis to generate reports to reveal the success of your fuel organization can be time consuming if your fuel software is based on Excel. Even the most sophisticated homegrown systems can make it difficult to access reports that show relative performance of volume and margins for comparison sake. But with PriceAdvantage fuel software, heat maps and analysis views quickly allow you to slice and dice volume and margin information to see how a market of your stores is doing relative to another market, and which stores are shining stars vs. which stores are burdens bringing down overall performance.

With this information, your PriceAdvantage fuel management software allows you to adjust marketing and fuel pricing strategies to optimize performance at the store and market level, and maximize prices across the enterprise fuel system.