Originally posted by Maistre Gracey
Some of the posters on that board are highly knowledgable about Disney. I am not sure if 'Another Voice' is some sort of Disney employee with some inside scoop, or not.
That being said, much of what is discussed on that board comes out negative toward Disney. Many of the posters there really seem to find fault with everything Disney. This gets a little old and tiresome for me, so I don't read too much over there.
Please don't get me wrong- that is not a slam on the people on that board, but rather my personal preferance for a more uplifting, light hearted, positive view of Disney.
Selling DVC makes no sense to me. I am not sure why Disney/DVC would be building new DVC resorts only to sell them off...![]()
Many hotels were built under Eisner, and again, why would he build them just to sell them?![]()
I do not believe Disney and Eisner are in the real estate business of building, then selling hotels.... even for a profit.
Unfortunately. selling off the Disney resort hotels might make business sense when you're a company with a lot of debt -- and when you're a company that can continue to profit from those hotels even if you no longer own them. (And yes, if the hotels are sold as a "package," it's highly likely that DVC would be part of the deal.)Originally posted by PamOKW
Lots of folks are speculating in the wake of Disney's resignation. I don't think the prospect of selling off the resorts only makes a lot of sense. I could see turning over the management of the resorts (like SW&D) but not selling the property.
Companies sell profitable operations all the time — especially companies that need the cash to retire dept or to invest elsewhere. Not surprisingly, profitable opeations fetch a lot more cash than unprofitable operations.Originally posted by Chuck S
As long as building resorts and "selling" DVC points to members is profitable for Disney, I don't see this happening.
The scenario in this thead is based on the idea that if Disney were to sell its hotels, the DVC resorts would most likely go with them.Originally posted by Lisa P.
HH & WW, do you think the profit from such a sell-off would outweigh the lost management fees/profit over time? I could see this being beneficial -OR- detrimental to DVC members, depending on the quality provided by a new management company. Interesting to consider.
There are already hotels on site that are neither owned nor managed by Disney. For example, Tishman Hotels owns the WDW Swan, the WDW Dolphin, and the Hilton at WDW. The first two are operated as Starwood (Westin, Sheraton) hotels, and the third is, of course, operated as a Hilton.Originally posted by PamOKW
The loss of control is why I would think actually selling the hotel property would be a long-shot.
[snip]
That need for control is part of why they won't permit anyone to "live" at a DVC resort.
But the real "control" (policies, quality of the guest expereince) goes with the management rights, not with the physical asset ownership. If Disney wants to extract cash from the hotels, they could sell the physical assets and continue to operate them. That's what Marriott International does. Marriott International owns almost no hotels, but Marriott is a leading hotel chain and a respected brand -- beacuse of how Marriott manages and controls the Marriott-branded hotels.Originally posted by PamOKW
I could see them selling the management rights to the resorts.
Disney might have been looking to expand their interests in the travel/vacation industry in the mid-1990s when they built DVC resorts at Hilton Head and Vero Beach, when they launched regional attractions like Disney Quest and Club Disney, and when they announced Disney's America in Virgina.Originally posted by timC
In fact, I seemed to be under the impression that Disney was looking to expand their interests in the travel/vacation industry... If so, why sell these assets?