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Speedway SuperAmerica Gas Company

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Facts About Speedway SuperAmerica Gas Company. Opportunity Costs of Selling Gasoline. ... FACTS ABOUT SPEEDWAY: Opportunity Costs: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Speedway SuperAmerica Gas Company


1
Speedway SuperAmerica Gas Company
By Angela Iadanza, Kamilla Grigorova, Ashle
David, JD Krasonic, and RJ Zitzelsberger
2
JD
3
TABLE OF CONTENTS
  • JD
  • Facts About Speedway SuperAmerica Gas Company.
  • Opportunity Costs of Selling Gasoline.
  • Kamilla
  • Substitutes and Complements
  • Elasticity of Gasoline
  • Angela
  • Marginal Utility
  • Advertising
  • Ashle
  • Gas Industry as a Perfect Competitor
  • Factors of Production for Gas
  • RJ
  • Price Discrimination of Gas
  • Taxes
  • Governments Role in Gas Industry
  • CONCLUSION

4
FACTS ABOUT SPEEDWAY
  • WHO WE ARE 1) A gasoline-convenience store
    company.  
  • 2) Marathon Ashland Petroleum LLC
  • 62 owned by Marathon Oil Company.
  • 38 owned by Ashland Inc.
  • WHERE WE OPERATE 1) Headquarters in Enon,
    Ohio.
  • 2) Midwest and Southeast United States.
  • WHERE WE RANK IN THE INDUSTRY One of the
    largest chains.

5
Opportunity Costs
  • The value of best alternative which must be
    given up in order to get something.
  • Revenue- loses convenience store revenue when
    the company chooses to produce more gasoline
    rather than selling goods.

6
Kamilla
7
Substitutes and Complements
Complements
Substitutes

8
ELASTICITY
  • The Sensitivity of Quantity Demanded to Price
  • Gasoline -.20 (Hall and Lieberman)
  • Very inelastic in the short run. Differ in the
    long run.
  • Ex) (Long Run) Finding a job closer to home and
    move closer to your job. (Short Run) A car pool
    and drive more slowly on the highway.

9
Angela
10
Marginal Utility
EXAMPLE
  • the change in total utility an individual
    obtains from consuming an additional unit of a
    good or service.
  • such as Gasoline
  • varies from purchaser to purchaser.

11
Marginal Utility (cont.)
  • LAW OF DIMINISHING MARGINAL UTILITY
  • The Example shows what a rational consumer of
    gasoline would do. Purchase until Marginal
    Utility equals zero.

12
Advertising
  • Tries to differentiate its product.
  • Entice individuals to come to their gas station.

13
Advertising (cont.)
Other examples of Advertising
  • Speedway attempting to entice the Consumers

14
Ashle
15
Perfect Competition
  • Speedway fits the Characteristics of the Perfect
    Competitive Ideal
  • Large Number of buyer and sellers
  • Homogenous Product
  • Easy entrance and/or exit
  • Perfect Knowledge

16
Perfect Competition (cont.)
Perfectly Competitive Firms such as Speedway are
said to be profit maximizers. 1. Because of the
homogeneous product and perfect knowledge
assumptions. 2. PC firms take the market price as
given and react to it. 3. Their objective is to
maximize profits. 4. And profits are simply the
difference between Total Revenue and Total Costs.
17
Factors of Production
  • Land Over 2,000 store locations
  • Labor nearly 34,000 employees
  • -19 different benefits available for non-store
    employees and store managers and 15 different
    benefits available for fulltime Store Customer
    Service Reps and Assistant Managers
  • Capital a). Human Capital includes the skills
    possessed by the factory
    workers as well as the
    knowledge of the chairman of the board.
    b). Physical Capital includes the
    buildings, machinery and equipment used by
    the company. No exact value was found for
    Speedways physical capital

18
RJ
19
Taxes
Affects on supply curve Price, Quantity
Price (Dollars)
Quantity (Gallons)
20
Price Discrimination
  • Price Discrimination - different prices for the
    same product/service when the differences in
    price do not reflect differences in costs.
  • Occurs only within the same city.
  • Income and Location.
  • Discount Cards.

21
Example of Discrimination
www.speedway.com
22
Governments Role
  • Government places clean-air regulations on
    gasoline.
  • 1) Reduce Smog, Air Toxins, and Carbon
  • Monoxide
  • 2) Restrictions on Storage and
    Transportation
  • State and Federal Tax
  • 1)Based on National Averages
  • Federal Excise Tax18.4 cpg
  • State Excise Tax20 cpg

23
Conclusion
What we learned 1)Taxes 2)Conglomerates 3)Pric
e of Gasoline 4)Elasticity 5)Price
Discrimination
24
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