NEW YORK — Retail gas prices are increasing around the country even though U.S. supplies have swelled for six weeks in a row.
Pump prices rose the past three days this week, including a half cent Friday, to a new national average of $2.47 a gallon, according to auto club AAA, Wright Express and Oil Price Information Service. A gallon of gas is still 20 cents cheaper than it was a month ago, and it’s priced far lower than last year, when the national average was above $4.02.
In Denver, the price fell a half cent Friday to $2.384 and was down from $2.508 a month ago and $3.964 last year.
But with so much unused gasoline in storage, analysts said prices should be heading even lower.
That doesn’t seem to matter, with a lot of gasoline futures being bought up on the belief that a number of rosy earnings reports from major corporations hint at a coming rebound in demand from consumers.
Gasoline futures on Nymex have risen every day since July 13 and prices have jumped 28 cents in less than two weeks.
“There’s just a crowd behavior, and it’s forcing prices above what it should be,” said Fred Rozell, retail pricing director at Oil Price Information Service.
“People are acting emotionally.”
Crude prices also rallied this week as the Dow Jones industrial average increased 11 percent in the last nine days and passed the 9,000 mark for the first time since January.
Benchmark crude for September delivery rose 89 cents to settle at $68.05 a barrel Friday on the New York Mercantile Exchange.



