Disney Dad ADL
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2015
- Messages
- 911
I am constantly surprised by how many people completely ignore the time value of money. This is one of the timeshare salesperson's oldest tricks.
Illustration: I have an open offer. Loan me $10,000, and have me pay you back $1,000/year for each of the next ten years, and at that point we'll call it even. If you are willing to do this, please send me a PM and we can consummate the deal. If you are not wiling to do this, ask yourself why you are willing to just divide price-per-point by the number of years on the contract.
Yeah, that's a good point as well. That's another wrench to consider.
However, I tend to discount it a little bit for various reasons. Assuming we are comparing something like Vero Beach (with high MFs and low initial cost) vs Bay Lake Tower (high initial cost and low MFs), there are a couple other things to consider:
1. In order for it to matter, you have to invest the initial "savings" and not use it to buy other stuff. I think people say they would do this, but I bet many (most?) in the end do not.
2. IMO, the interest rate you will receive on the "savings" is probably lower than one might expect. People often say they will get 8% or whatever they say is the historical returns on stocks, however I think you can't really invest the money in that way. The money you are "saving", unless you are getting extremely high interest rates or it's a very large amount, will eventually be eaten away by the difference in MFs every year. So it has to be invested with short term use in mind, rather than long term, and therefore in safer investments. Otherwise you run the risk of being unable to afford to pay for your MFs if say the stock market falls by 15%. in other words, more CD's and online savings accounts, maybe bonds at best, rather than stocks, and therefore much lower interest rates.
3. If the difference in annual cost is very high, the time value of money at some point could start favoring the other side. Just hypothetically (I haven't actually run the numbers), say 10 years from now in 2026, total cost of VB becomes more expensive than BLT. In theory, every dollar saved in MFs on the BLT side after that could be invested as well.
Anyway, ultimately to me it's all just a thought exercise more than anything that I find it interesting to think about. There's no way you can account for everything accurately and you should just buy what you want to buy. I think the risk that the DVC market tanks at some point is bigger concern than the difference between AKV and BLT.
Edit to add: Regarding the chart, I think the time value of money favors the low buy-in/high MF resorts, but the fact that annual dues increase over time favors the high buy-in/low MF resorts, so maybe they cancel each other out ultimately. I think the one exception is SSR, which is sort of a special value since it's low buy-in/low MF and clearly the cheapest of all.
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