(Reuters)
- The average price of a gallon of gasoline in the United States has
dropped one dollar since early May, the lowest price in more than four
years, according to the Lundberg survey released Sunday. Prices for regular-grade gasoline fell to $2.72 a gallon, down 12 cents since the last survey two week ago. The recent drop has been compared by many to the extreme price plunges that took place after the 2008 recession. The
decline in prices was driven by slower demand coupled with dramatic
growth in oil supply production, especially in North America and Canada.
The strengthening U.S. dollar also played a role. "We may see a few more pennies drop before Christmas," said the survey's publisher, Trilby Lundberg. "All this presupposes that crude oil prices don't bounce up significantly in the near future." The
highest price within the survey area in 48 U.S. states was recorded in
San Francisco at $3.04 per gallon, with the lowest in Albuquerque, at
$2.38 per gallon.
U.S. gasoline prices fall to four-year low: Lundberg survey

Reuters
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