Gasoline rises, diesel and kerosene roll back as forecasted

As predicted last week, gasoline prices have increased by P0.20 per liter for the third straight week, while diesel and kerosene see a P0.20 per liter rollback effective today.

In Manila, Philippines, oil companies including Jetti, Seaoil, Petron, and PTT Philippines implemented the anticipated adjustments: a P0.20 per liter hike in gasoline and a P0.20 per liter rollback for both diesel and kerosene. This brings year-to-date net increases to P21.30 per liter for gasoline, P21.55 for diesel, and P6.55 for kerosene.

Department of Energy assistant director Rodela Romero attributed the movements to global market dynamics, including anticipations around Ukraine-Russia peace negotiations and Iraq's resumption of production at a major oilfield. Jetti president Leo Bellas noted softening Asian price benchmarks due to rising supply expectations, potential Chinese outflows, and refinery restarts.

These changes follow last week's P1.20 per liter gasoline surge, aligning with earlier forecasts based on Mean of Platts Singapore trading amid a weakening peso.

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Major oil firms in the Philippines are raising fuel prices again today, with diesel and kerosene marking their seventh straight week of increases. The hikes include P1 per liter for diesel and P0.60 per liter for gasoline and kerosene. This occurs amid volatile global oil prices due to geopolitical tensions.

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Fuel prices are moving in opposite directions today amid recent geopolitical developments that have rattled global oil markets. Diesel will increase by P0.20 per liter and kerosene by P0.10, while gasoline will decrease by P0.10, according to major oil companies.

Following initial DOE warnings earlier this week, local oil retailers in the Philippines will implement double-digit fuel price increases of P17 to P24 per liter starting March 10, amid ongoing Middle East tensions. President Marcos plans to seek emergency powers to cut excise taxes.

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Due to the war in the Middle East, diesel prices in the Philippines are expected to exceed P100 per liter, prompting public utility vehicle drivers to consider other jobs. Jeepney and tricycle drivers like Renie Rabago and Omeng Elardo struggle with rising fuel costs while their earnings remain low. The government offers a one-time P5,000 subsidy to assist them, though some say it is insufficient.

Philippine fuel supply may last until the second week of May with one million barrels expected soon, according to the Department of Energy. Energy Secretary Sharon Garin said the average supply stood at 45 days as of March 20, down from 55-57 days when the Middle East war began nearly a month ago.

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