Raenstoirm
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2007
- Messages
- 5,703
The members website only talks about poly. Anything going on for wilderness? Also what are the prices right now? I don't want to call my guide. lol
Keep in mind they get most of these via ROFR, so there are the repurchase costs and admin costs involved. So they jack up the direct price. When selling "new" points at CCV and Poly, they don't have those additional costs.Crazy, adding on at VGC, VGF and BLT are $185pp! More than buying at Poly!
DVCNews usually keeps an update of pricing and promotions
http://dvcnews.com/index.php/dvc-program/financial/pricing-a-promotions
Yes but all it is, is a quick flip of something they have ALREADY made their profit on when sold the first time. The margins on a flip are huge. When they first sell they have all the costs of the build etc. A quick flip is even more profitable I'd suggest as all it is is closing (unless seller paying- even better) and admin costs. Often for $10000+ . Literally counjouring money out of thin air. I wish I had a piece of the action with this business model....Keep in mind they get most of these via ROFR, so there are the repurchase costs and admin costs involved. So they jack up the direct price. When selling "new" points at CCV and Poly, they don't have those additional costs.
Yes but all it is, is a quick flip of something they have ALREADY made their profit on when sold the first time. The margins on a flip are huge. When they first sell they have all the costs of the build etc. A quick flip is even more profitable I'd suggest as all it is is closing (unless seller paying- even better) and admin costs. Often for $10000+ . Literally counjouring money out of thin air. I wish I had a piece of the action with this business model....
yes -- it's a quick profit...but if the direct purchaser they sell to would have bought CCV or Poly otherwise, then the $40 per point profit they get on VGF is significantly lower than the profit they'd make on the new build. Don't forget, even if they buy BLT for $115 a point and sell for $185, their profit isn't $70 a point. There are a lot of built in costs associated with the transaction (they have to pay the closing costs and MFs on those ROFR contracts if that is what the original buyer agreed to), so their real cost is closer to $125 a point. Then there are the costs of sales people and doing additional paperwork.
If the direct buyer is only interested in a sold out resort -- then yes, it is better than nothing. But if the sales guides are 100% busy selling the new resorts, you don't want to take them away from selling a larger profit item. It's similar to companies requiring a certain IRR before a project gets the green light. Yeah -- some projects would have been profitable, but if they aren't as profitable as another option, then you don't tie up the resources.
Not to mention, if you have a million points* to sell on CCV, it's best to sell those as quickly as possible so that you're not paying all of the maintenance costs yourself.
*I have no idea how many points are available -- I just pulled this number out of the air.
Not sure what profit Disney make per point on the initial sale. Big builders will typically make well under 10% net profit on a new build. Suspect Disney make a lot more than that, but don't know figures. However build costs and costs for aquiring property into DVD will be high I'd have thought. If they flip a BLT contract, they make circa 70% gross margin after closing costs. Flip a saratoga it's more like 80%. I'd be surprised if they are making bigger margins on the initial sale, compared to a direct resale.
Not sure what profit Disney make per point on the initial sale. Big builders will typically make well under 10% net profit on a new build. Suspect Disney make a lot more than that, but don't know figures. However build costs and costs for aquiring property into DVD will be high I'd have thought. If they flip a BLT contract, they make circa 70% gross margin after closing costs. Flip a saratoga it's more like 80%. I'd be surprised if they are making bigger margins on the initial sale, compared to a direct resale.
They'll have to pay a lease I imagine, but know what you mean about it all being under an umbrella company. Even if they are making such huge sums on timeshares in the first place, the flip is minimal work and effort, still for profit margins that would make 99% of businesses weep. Not only do they load the contract with (mostly) 30-100% mark up, but they also often sell it (see comptroller website) with a loan with 10% interest, with zero risk of default and recovering the assets. It MUST be highly profitable, even if they are earning extraordinarily margins on the first sale, which does make it curious if they have a long waiting list they don't buy up every contract, albeit those with the long waiting list are the ones with less difference in resale V direct prices.