RE: Asda starts pump price war
RE: Asda starts pump price war
Monday 23rd May 2005

Asda starts pump price war

Rivals forced to follow suit.


Asda starts pump price war
Asda starts pump price war
There's a price war going on at the supermarket pumps, and Asda blinked first. It has cut the price of unleaded by 2p a litre, resulting in Tesco, Sainsbury's and Morrisons matching its move.

Asda's move follows a $10 per barrel cut in the price of crude oil, and the company announced the cut, saying that it wanted to pass on the savings. The others said they just wanted to remain competitive.

Author
Discussion

zebedee

Original Poster:

4,593 posts

300 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
shell is generally the cheapest I have seen recently - usually 83.9 but there is a slightly out of the way garage (Shell) that sells at 82.9

I remember the days when it was 50-odd p (and I'm only 28!)

pakrat

27 posts

253 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
I remember when it was 50p a GALLON - and they cleaned your windscreen, checked your oil and pressed your trousers..ok not the last bit. We must have the most expensive fuel in the world, no doubt about it, the UK motorist is seen as the government's milch cow.

xxplod

2,269 posts

266 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
Yep. Just got back from Mauritius where locals are most worried at petrol prices at 25 rupees or 50p a litre. Its amazing when you tell foreigners how much we pay for fuel. They look at you as if you've just grown another head!

chrisx666

808 posts

283 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
In Poland the other day it was plz4.00 for a liter of unleaded. I got 5.3plz/£ exchange in the airport. Pretty expensive for the locals on a quarter of our salaries!!

timmy30

9,325 posts

249 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
Pre Tax we have the cheapest petrol per litre in Western Europe.

Post Tax we have (almost) the most expensive.

The greatest trick the UK Gov have ever pulled is getting UK motorists to blame the oil companies for high petrol prices. It's tax.

Do you know those cheeky munkies at HM Treasury actually charge VAT on the tax component of the petrol price....... a tax on a tax.

Recently I noticed that Tesco have started giving a breakdown of the price of their petrol including the tax component. Good for them.

zebedee

Original Poster:

4,593 posts

300 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
so how much are asda selling their fuel for anyway?

nickjm

361 posts

252 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
zebedee said:
so how much are asda selling their fuel for anyway?


I heard they are going as low as 76.9 for unleaded. I also heard that it was going to be 79.9 for both unleaded and diesel, but I can't see that happening.

havoc

32,537 posts

257 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
Cheap fuel?!? Well I was in Dubai last month...pump prices looked pretty reasonable there!

mutley

3,178 posts

281 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
That's ok for unleaded, what about those of us who use Diesel

delboy0127

2 posts

252 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
I can remember selling 4 gallons for 17 shillings and 8 pence, The customer would get free upper cylinder lubricant, I would serve them and they would give me 18 shillings and be very happy to tell me to keep the 4d change. I have just retired after 32 years selling petrol sorry giving it away with regard to my own profit margin.

x1m

5,889 posts

249 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
ASDA was 80.9 yesterday in Swindon for Unleaded.

g0kyk

12 posts

253 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
Its about time they started reducing the price of diesel, it is cheaper than petrol in most other countries and used to be the same here. Diesel prices have an effect on commercial transport therefore nearly everything we have to buy. Oh I forgot that gives the Government another 17.5% Vat on top of the increased costs of the goods as well as the fuel. tax on tax on tax.

nelly1

5,660 posts

253 months

Monday 23rd May 2005
quotequote all
LPG's pretty cheap.




'Till more people start using it, a la Diesel

Vipers

33,402 posts

250 months

Tuesday 24th May 2005
quotequote all
Headlines said "The others just want to remain competitive", cant the dumb heads see that if ASDA is selling at 2P cheper then the other supermarkets, then the other supermarkets wont sell much petrol, or does "remain competitive" mean something else to the bean counters.

All Tony has to do to please us is to drop about 10p a litre from the tax on petrol. This is more than off set by those bloody speed cameras anyway.........

venom500

2,984 posts

305 months

Wednesday 25th May 2005
quotequote all
If your sticking this stuff in your car then it,s either a company or shopping hack you don,t pay for maintainance."Super market Fuel" will and does knack your injectors/fuel system,it has NO special additives and thats why its CHEAP.
Not for me thanks!,it like my engine to make good power and run smoothly.

zebedee

Original Poster:

4,593 posts

300 months

Wednesday 25th May 2005
quotequote all
well, hopefully it is working - local shell garage fallen by 2p to 81.9 - hope it continues...

dcb

6,034 posts

287 months

Wednesday 25th May 2005
quotequote all
venom500 said:
If your sticking this stuff in your car then it,s either a company or shopping hack you don,t pay for maintainance."Super market Fuel" will and does knack your injectors/fuel system,it has NO special additives and thats why its CHEAP.
Not for me thanks!,it like my engine to make good power and run smoothly.


Fair enough - different cars are different.

Mine runs fine on supermarket petrol - in fact it can't get enough of it.

I would have thought that if there was a strong correlation between broken injectors and cheap fuel, then quite a few folks would have noticed by now.

Or is it just injectors in *some* cars ?

zebedee

Original Poster:

4,593 posts

300 months

Wednesday 25th May 2005
quotequote all
I've often wondered this - whether there is actually any proof that they differ in any way whatsoever - independent tests and the like. Anyone know of any conclusive links?

timmy30

9,325 posts

249 months

Wednesday 25th May 2005
quotequote all
The detergents are quite important really, and they are lacking in the same quality and quantity in Supermarket fuels. On older/ lower power cars you may not notice much as the injectors get clogged, but in a diesel car for example you will probably notice the car runs rougher as deposits build up around the piezo injectors.

xxplod

2,269 posts

266 months

Wednesday 25th May 2005
quotequote all
This whole "supermarket petrol" is a myth. Specific fuels have different properties e.g. BP Ultimate or Optimax but the 95 RON stuff is all the same. Take a peak at a refinery. Tankers from all companies go in and are directed to any given bay to be filled. There is not one bay for Sainsburys, one for Total, one for BP etc.... it is all the same stuff.