- Gas prices remain around $3.93/gallon — nearly $1 above pre-war levels — even as US crude has fallen ~27% from early June to ~$70/barrel, approaching the $67.02 price before the Iran conflict began; Trump accused oil companies of “gouging” on Truth Social and directed the DOJ to investigate.
- Oil executives are privately furious, saying Trump’s accusations ignore basic supply-chain realities: refiners and gas stations sell barrels purchased weeks earlier at higher prices before they can lower pump prices — “the market doesn’t reprice every gallon overnight.”
- The move directly mirrors Biden’s 2022 playbook when $5 gas followed Russia’s Ukraine invasion — and echoes California Gov. Newsom’s ongoing feuds with the oil industry — putting Trump in populist company he’d rather not share.
- Industry insiders expect the friction to be short-lived — price-gouging investigations against oil companies have a long history of coming up empty — but warn that prices could surge again if inventories keep falling and Asian demand rebounds as Hormuz traffic normalizes.
What Happened?
President Trump posted on Truth Social late Tuesday accusing big oil companies of failing to pass through falling crude prices to consumers and calling for a DOJ investigation into price gouging. The statement came 10 days after the US-Iran deal was announced, with the national average gasoline price still hovering around $3.93/gallon — less than 4% below its post-war peak — while the US oil benchmark has dropped roughly 27% to around $70/barrel, close to pre-conflict levels. Oil industry representatives pushed back, pointing to structural supply-chain dynamics: fuel is purchased weeks in advance at higher prices, and stations must sell through existing inventory before repricing. Exxon, Chevron, and ConocoPhillips all referred questions to the API trade group.
Why It Matters?
The episode is striking primarily for what it reveals about political dynamics: Trump is now deploying the exact rhetoric his party used to attack Biden in 2022, when Democrats faced a similar gas-price backlash after Russia’s Ukraine invasion sent prices to $5/gallon. The “war profiteering” and “price gouging” language is almost verbatim. This matters because it illustrates the structural bind any administration faces when an energy shock causes prices: raw material costs and pump prices operate on different time horizons, and political pressure — regardless of party — tends to run ahead of market mechanics. ClearView Energy Partners’ Kevin Book noted Trump has “demonstrated his ability to go beyond words” in ways Biden did not, suggesting potential real consequences beyond rhetoric.
What’s Next?
Industry insiders expect the dispute to fade — prior price-gouging investigations against oil companies have uniformly come up empty because market-based pricing differentials are not evidence of collusion. But there are genuine market risks that could complicate the politics further: executives warn that oil prices could surge again if inventories keep dwindling, and that resurgent demand from China, Japan, and South Korea as Hormuz traffic normalizes could push crude back up. If that happens before pump prices have fully normalized, Trump would face a second round of consumer frustration with far fewer levers to pull. The administration’s implicit threat — deploy the FTC or DOJ against merger approvals as leverage — is the more credible tool if pressure escalates.
Source: The Wall Street Journal












