NEW YORK - ConocoPhillips will sell the remainder of its gas stations in the United States, the company said Wednesday, though Conoco, Phillips 66, and 76 will continue to operate under those familiar signs.
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The 600 or so stations are being sold to Pacific Convenience & Fuel LLC, a subsidiary of PetroSun Fuel.
The deal is "in the ballpark" of $800 million, said Sam Hirbod, chairman and chief executive of PetroSun and Pacific Convenience.
Part of the deal includes a long-term contract in which ConocoPhillips would provide fuel for the stations.
"If our brand is at that site, we will be supplying the gas," ConocoPhillips spokeswoman Terry Hunt said in a phone interview.
The purchase will help boost Pacific Convenience's presence in major West Coast urban areas, Hirbod said.
"We see opportunity in the future," he said in a phone interview. "As the oil companies exit, we think there will be more flexibility."
Houston-based ConocoPhillips, which as separate companies had ties to Oklahoma, began several years ago to spin off its retail stores, focusing more on exploration and refining, where much more money can be made.
It's not alone, as larger oil companies exit the retail gas sector due to shrinking profits as they struggle to pass on the higher energy costs to Americans eager to cut back on fuel spending.
The biggest factor in the skyrocketing price of gasoline is the historic ascent of crude oil, which has surged from $45 per barrel in 2004 to around $120 this past week.
Major oil companies now own fewer than 5 percent of gas stations, with the rest owned by smaller chains and independent operators.
But all gas station owners have played a delicate balancing game in recent months, hoping to maintain a price that allows them to afford the next shipment of gasoline but not give the competition an edge. If a profit can be made, it usually comes from convenience store sales and auto repairs.
The ConocoPhillips sale must still be approved by regulators.
Shares of ConocoPhillips rose $1.49 cents to $83.87.
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Dear ConocoPhillips,
I am finished doing business with you! I have been one of your most dedicated customers for almost 20 years. I have been thinking about breaking my ties with you, so this seems like a great time. I would go out of my way, in any town I was in, to go to a Conoco. CP employees don't even do that. I don't appreciate the way you have treated Oklahoma and Ponca City in general. I know you won't miss my 33,000 miles a year. Jim Mulva will still be raking in insane amounts of cash. I hope other Oklahomans will follow my lead and do the same. Loyalty still matters to me! There are other engery companies that are doing quite well in Oklahoma. CP head man doesn't care about people. He cares about how much money HE can make.
Thank you for joining our conversations on NewsOK.com. We encourage your discussions but ask that you stay within the bounds of our terms and conditions. Please help us by reporting comments that violate these guidelines. To review our rules of engagement, go to Commenting and posting policy.
Leave a comment. Log in below or sign up (it's free).Editor's note: It is not our intent to offer comments on crime or fatality stories.
I am finished doing business with you! I have been one of your most dedicated customers for almost 20 years. I have been thinking about breaking my ties with you, so this seems like a great time. I would go out of my way, in any town I was in, to go to a Conoco. CP employees don't even do that. I don't appreciate the way you have treated Oklahoma and Ponca City in general. I know you won't miss my 33,000 miles a year. Jim Mulva will still be raking in insane amounts of cash. I hope other Oklahomans will follow my lead and do the same. Loyalty still matters to me! There are other engery companies that are doing quite well in Oklahoma. CP head man doesn't care about people. He cares about how much money HE can make.