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The French government claims that fuel margins have returned to levels seen before the crisis

The French Finance Ministry announced on Wednesday that fuel retailers are now making the same gross margins they did before the Iran war, after a brief spike in prices. The data release comes after an announcement made in April, which was heavily criticized by the industry. It said that the French government would consider fixing the price at the pump so as to prevent fuel distributors from earning windfall profits because of the record high prices due to the closure of Strait of Hormuz.

The statement from the Ministry read: "The government will continue to closely monitor the evolution in prices and margins with close dialogue with industry actors."

The Finance Ministry did not reply to a question about whether they still plan to implement their decree capping the prices. The French prime minister said that 'nothing is off the table', including a superprofits tax, to help ease financial hardship for consumers.

The government's public discussion of a possible decree to cap margins coincided with the peak in margins and their subsequent stabilisation to pre-war levels. This shows that the industry understood the message, said an official from the finance ministry who declined to give his name.

Data shows that the profit margins on gasoil used in diesel engines jumped from $0.28 per liter ($1.25 per gallon), before the war, to almost $0.40 per litre ($1.51 a gallon) during the first week in March, before they slowed down.

The margins on gasoline rose from 0.30 euro per litre (or $1.32 per gallon), pre-war, to 0.33 euro per litre or $1.48 per gallon in the same time period.

The government also added that French motor fuel consumption dropped by 11% in April. It attributed this to a price-related reduction of demand as people drove less after fuel prices increased.

(source: Reuters)