June 4, 2026

[This blog post is a brief excerpt from a commentary published at speculative-investor.com on 31st May]

In the 27th April Weekly Update we noted that the oil price had peaked in March and probably was in a downward trend, but that the gasoline price was still rising. We went on to write that if the oil price continued to trend downward (as expected), then the gasoline price would follow. The gasoline price extended its upward trend until mid-May, but it has since begun to follow the oil price downward and last week generated evidence of an intermediate-term top by breaking below its 50-day MA. What’s likely to happen from here?

What happens in the near-term will be determined to a large degree by developments in the Middle East, which remain unpredictable. However, while there is a risk that re-escalation will push the gasoline price back up to near its May peak within the next few weeks, it’s likely that the May peak will turn out to be the peak for the year and that the price will be much lower by the final quarter.

Interestingly, oil and gasoline prices are adhering closely to the 2022 price pattern that was a consequence of the Russia-Ukraine war. As noted on the following daily chart, in 2022 the gasoline price initially peaked in March with the oil price but then made a new high in June before commencing a major decline. In 2026 we have essentially the same pattern.

By the way, there is a strong tendency for the gasoline market to make a seasonal low late in the year. The vertical lines on the chart indicate these seasonal lows.

In summary, our base-case scenario is that the gasoline price in the US is now in an intermediate-term downward trend that should lead to much lower prices within the next seven months.