Nowadays, they monitor how much you owe, if you put the amount of a contract on a credit card, your other rates may go up, even if you don't have too much debt and a perfect payment record. Suddenly drop $14K or more of unsecured debt on your record and you may really regret it. Even if you pay it off quickly, it can drop your credit score and suddenly there is a cascade affect on everything from your car insurance rates to other credit cards or revolving lines of credit. DVC doesn't show up. I like that.
In the past months, I have seen two good friends lose their homes. Had they not refinanced and home equitied themselves to death years ago when that was "safe", they'd still have their homes today.
And herein - in your two thoughful posts - lies the crux of what got many people into the messes they are in now.
The truth is, many people have gotten much better at working the system to
obtain the maximum amount of credit to buy the things they want than they are at
repaying the debt. They'll use every device to avoid "lowering their credit score" because in the context we're discussing -- financing DVC -- it will mean the higher interest rate. Or, as you point out, it might have far greater ramifications.
But does anyone ever bother to think about
why prospective lenders want to monitor how much debt we have? No -- we just try to find a way to work around it.
I'll tell you why lenders monitor our debt -- it's because higher debt
reduces the likelihood that we'll be able to pay off our debts. A dropping credit score
should tell us to double-check to be sure we're living within our means. Unfortunately all it usually tells us is that we need to conceal more.
When we work ourselves into debt up to our eyeballs, it doesn't take much of an upset to cause the whole house of cards to come crashing down. The sky doesn't have to fall -- all it has to do is rain hard.
And it doesn't matter whether you're rich or poor -- if you're rich, there are just more zeros involved. A middle-class person might lose their job -- or even just have their hours cut back. A wealthy person might get a margin call because their stock portfolios have decreased in value. If either person is living on the edge, they're in big trouble regardless of how many zeros there are.
Unfortunately, as others have noted..."stuff happens"...especially in these uncertain times. Ideally, we'd manage our debt so that "stuff" doesn't
ruin us.
The debt
repayment side --
As I explained in several earlier posts, if you use a home equity loan to finance DVC, that action
in itself does
not put your home at risk. A home equity loan is basically a second mortgage, and that creditor would have to pay off the first mortgage before they could go after the underlying asset.
But...if I get in over my head and have to refinance the whole package into one convenient lower payment, the whole picture changes. If I do that several times, the picture can get really ugly. DVC is paid off at that point, but the debt burden remains. The debt that DVC created may be the straw that breaks the camel's back and causes foreclosure.
But that's not the home equity line's fault. The fault there is that the borrower bit off more than they can chew.