Disney Fanatic said:My suggestion to you is to STOP using your points.
The contracts with any good amount of banked points get bought up very quickly. It's the contracts that are stripped that sit there and seem to take forever to sell.
I guess I'm just not following you. I can see the issue of non-legitimate bidders on eBay, but what would a "deadbeat buyer" be in a real estate transaction?vascubaguy said:You can definately save some $$$ by selling it yourself if you want to take on the task of listing it and dealing with potential deadbeat buyers. There are closing companies out there that will help you with the closing process once you get a buyer.
Ebay would be a decent place to start, but again... deadbeat bidders are out there... and you have to deal with those that might bid but then not have the money to follow thru, etc...
JimMIA said:I guess I'm just not following you. I can see the issue of non-legitimate bidders on eBay, but what would a "deadbeat buyer" be in a real estate transaction?
The buyer submits a contract with a deposit. The deposit goes into escrow. The buyer sends the cash to close or they lose their deposit. Where does "deadbeat" come into play?
[Personally, I would list it with TTS -- if I wanted out of DVC for any reason, I wouldn't want to play around -- but I'm just curious because this particular post didn't make much sense to me, and I'm wondering what I'm missing.]
Okay, I see what you mean, but that assumes an incredibly naive seller - who is the ONE person who definately should NOT try to sell by themselves. Where I come from, there's no such thing as an offer without a deposit. All the stuff before that is just talk.vascubaguy said:In the real estate market, the deadbeat buyer, IMO, would be the one that makes up an offer, submits that offer, negotiates and gets to the point of submitting a contract. You then wait for that to come in and it never happens. Just waisting your time. And, if you had others that were interested but moved on because you were holding out for that initial "buyer", you could have missed out on a sale. In a normal real estate transaction, that wouldn't be the case. Just to make an offer you would have to submit a deposit.
Even if the buyer sends the deposit and then backouts and forfeit the deposit, the seller is still back to having to start over with the selling process.
I probably could have used a better term than deadbeat, but I was using the ebay slang.
vascubaguy said:In the real estate market, the deadbeat buyer, IMO, would be the one that makes up an offer, submits that offer, negotiates and gets to the point of submitting a contract. You then wait for that to come in and it never happens. Just waisting your time. And, if you had others that were interested but moved on because you were holding out for that initial "buyer", you could have missed out on a sale. In a normal real estate transaction, that wouldn't be the case. Just to make an offer you would have to submit a deposit.
Even if the buyer sends the deposit and then backouts and forfeit the deposit, the seller is still back to having to start over with the selling process.
I probably could have used a better term than deadbeat, but I was using the ebay slang.