Fuel Prices: According to Michel-Edouard Leclerc, They Will Not Fall for Several Months
10 Articles
10 Articles
According to Michel-Edouard Leclerc, the price of fuel will not fall "as soon as possible", which evokes "at least six months", or even "until next winter, an energy crisis." Against the backdrop of war in the Middle East, he estimates the price of oil to be permanently unstable.
Ten days ago, the president of the strategic committee of the E. Leclerc centres predicted a fall in fuel prices. Conversely, he acknowledged this Monday that "it is impossible to have a purchase plan" in the coming days.
Fuel prices in France are rising again, and it worries consumers as geopolitical tensions in the Middle East rise sharply. The relations between the United States and Tehran are causing disruptions on oil infrastructure and maritime transport, with visible repercussions on pump prices, due to a rapid rise in prices. This dynamic, which seems to be gone to last, weighs directly on the budget of French households. Prices today and forecasts Michel…
Michel-Édouard Leclerc is categorical and asserts that the price of fuels will not "fall soon." According to him, we must expect "at least six months, perhaps until next winter, of an energy crisis in front of us", he announced on 20 April last on the airwaves of Europe 1. He insists that the prices of fuel are currently very volatile, as Capital reports: "It won't fall soon and if it falls, what I want is that it is serious because for the mome…
For the iconic boss of the Leclerc centres, we have at least six months of energy crisis ahead of us and he is absolutely right. What is happening in the Gulf is humanly dramatic for those under the bombs, for us, the drama is economic because the blockade of Ormuz is a black scenario [...]
On CNews, Michel-Édouard Leclerc set the tone from the beginning of his speech. "The price of oil will not fall anytime soon," he said, before adding: "We have at least six months of energy crisis in front of us."For households, the message is clear: the war in the Middle East is no longer only a peak of tension on the markets, but a long-lasting increase in the bill at the pump. Fuel: Michel-Édouard Leclerc spreads a rapid fall in prices Monday…
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