I know DVD has the infrastructure to easily sell any foreclosed timeshares, but foreclosure like I said is not cheap. Second, the finance arm is not endlessly bankrolled. If a loan goes bad, the capital that was allocated for that loan is now not earning interest income, is not covering the finance arm's overhead, and monies are being paid to recoup the collateral. Even tho DVD can resell the points, there were probably significant costs to sell those points such as commissions, marketing and other closing costs. By having to recycle these points thru the "system", DVC loses the return on their investment, even if they "chargeback" the commissions paid on a purchased finance deal gone bad which is done in other indirect finance industries. An interesting thought tho is that DVC is likely to "repurchase" the points at contract cost, as it is more likely to be lower than current market "not resale". You have a legal issue when DVC owners have significant equity in their points and have their timeshare foreclosed. They will have to show an earnest attempt to sell the property at market values. Those people with negative equity will likely have a judgement placed against them. So quite honestly, I really do not think they would knowingly make a loan that on paper would likely go bad. That would just be bad business.