This talk of no profits on fuel sales is an industry perpetuated myth turned into urban legend by last media and people who cant count.
Back when I worked in one, petrol was 80c a litre and the margin was about 7%. I would expect today it would be similar or slightly lower but it DOESN"T matter for the following.
Lets say station x sells 10,000 litres a week at $2 a litre with a net profit of 5%, that's $1000 of pure profit in 7 days.
The station then spends $19,000 of the weekly $20,000 takings to buy another 10,000L and the cycle continues. So that $19,000 of initial capital is tied up buying fuel for the whole year, but over the course of the year it generates $52,000 in pure profit.
Its just like the supermarkets, there is a fine margin and the occasional loss leader but the turnover is huge and very fast.
Compare this to a motorbike shop that might buy a 1199 Pangiale Corsa SP wholsesale for $19,000 but take the whole year or longer to sell it at the retail of $71,000 (lets used that just to keep the numbers common.
Now whoses rolling in the cash, the servo or the bike shop????
Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket - Eric Hoffer
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