Advertisement banner image
Advertisement banner image
Image at ../data/upload/3/2628733Image at ../data/upload/9/2628729Image at ../data/upload/8/2628728Image at ../data/upload/6/2628716Image at ../data/upload/6/2628606Image at ../data/upload/5/2628405Image at ../data/upload/5/2628395Image at ../data/upload/1/2628261Image at ../data/upload/3/2628233
Sub Page View
Today Page View: 95,871
Yesterday View: 136,223
30 Days View: 2,751,203

필핀 소비자 물가 이야기(3)

Views : 5,743 2018-07-19 23:35
자유게시판 1273934308
Report List New Post


플리즈~~ 해석죰 ~~~~



Slow to lower prices



Go figure how gasoline stations in Bulacan and other provinces are able to consistently sell gasoline and diesel about four pesos cheaper per liter compared to pump prices seen in Metro Manila.

Go figure how card-carrying members of a shoppers’ club are able to get three pesos off to the liter while Muntinlupa and Las Pinas residents get discounts of at least a peso per liter.

The wide disparity in fuel prices from one gas station to another franchised by the very same petroleum companies somehow bolsters public suspicion of big profit spreads being enjoyed by oil companies.

Question is, if oil companies are required at least 15 days of buffer stock, how come pump prices fluctuate on a weekly basis – every Tuesday – instead of changing every 15 days?

It’s because local pump prices are benchmarked every Monday based on Mean of Platts Singapore (MOPS) and not on any of the three primary benchmarks based on actual crude prices such as West Texas Intermediate (WTI).

MOPS is the daily average of all trading transactions between petroleum buyers and sellers as assessed and summarized on a weekly basis by Standard and Poor’s Platts, a Singapore-based market wire service.

With MOPS, the peso-dollar exchange rate also comes into play in determining fuel pump prices as the peso landed cost of bringing in the finished oil products vis-à-vis their acquisition costs in dollars is computed on a week-on-week basis.

On paper, there may be nothing inherently wrong benchmarking with MOPS. In theory, at least, benchmarking with MOPS should result in local fuel pump prices going down or going up based on a formula and a computation that is transparent and the variables checked for accuracy against padding.

But how come local pump prices go up so fast with any slight upward movement in global oil prices as reflected by MOPS, and then too slow to go down when global crude prices have gone down?

There is a disconnect somewhere in the benchmarking, in the computation of the landed cost and the final determination of pump prices that may be to blame for why fuel pump prices are slow to come down?

Whatever the reason for the above, it is high time that experts tilting heavily in favor of fuel end-users take a long, hard look at the formula used to determine fuel prices, if only to guard against excessive profiteering.






질의 중... 30초 정도 걸려요 ...
  본 글을 신고하시겠습니까?
Report List New Post
게리겔 [쪽지 보내기] 2018-07-19 23:41 No. 1273934309
쉽게 말해서
한국에서 문제되는 것 처럼
유가 반영이 국제 유가 상승시엔 빠르게 적용하고
국제 유가 하락시엔 느리게 적용하고

여기서 오는 가격 차이로 정유사들이 떼돈버는 사이에
소비자들은 물가 상승으로 고통받고 있다 입니다

올릴땐 빠르게-
내릴땐 느리게-

한마디로 나 쁜 넘 들
필리핀여행 - 써니투어
cafe.naver.com/sunnydaytour
김해스토리 [쪽지 보내기] 2018-07-20 02:29 No. 1273934375
2 포인트 획득. ... 쉬엄 쉬엄~
고바우1 [쪽지 보내기] 2018-07-20 10:24 No. 1273934566
49 포인트 획득. 축하!
아니 영어박사가 왜 해석요청을?
귀찮다?ㅋ
자유게시판
필리핀 코로나19 상황
신규 확진자
+502
신규 사망자
새 정보를 기다리고 있습니다.
No. 95498
Page 1910