This feels a lot like trolling, but I'll assume for a second you are being sincere and I'll engage in an honest discourse around the topic. As was said by a previous poster, we have absolutely no knowledge of who the seller is, why they are selling, or what the financial impact of their sale will be. Nor will we ever. So it does not make sense to speculate on any of those variables because we simply don't know. What we do know, and what we can talk about, is the
DVC resale market itself and how current and future events might impact that and, by extension, how we would behave in a variety of different scenarios.
This is no different than the stock market. Someone who bought a share of Disney stock today at $95 is buying from someone else. We will never know if that person bought that share of stock in 2010 and is making a killing or if they bought it last year and they're taking a beating. We don't know if they're selling because they want out of the market or because they are losing their home or any of the reasons in between. Quite frankly, it's irrelevant. We don't talk about the impact of the person who sold the share, we can only talk about the details of the purchase. Do we think it was a good buy, do we think one overpaid, what do we think the long term outlook is, etc.
So...to that end, your characterization that we are finding joy in other people's misfortunes is an inaccurate and inflammatory personal attack. I get that it's status quo for this terrible place we call the internet, but it doesn't mean I'm not going to call it out when I see it.
The bottom line is that we are engaging in a theoretical conversation regarding DVC prices and the economy at large and you painted us as a bunch of ghouls preying on the misfortune of others. It's not ok to do that.