FLYNZ4
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 19, 2004
- Messages
- 711
Do you think that DVC will make offers to extend the life of existing contracts for the non-SSR resorts?
Here is an example: I own a hangar for my airplane as part of a condo association. We own the physical buildings, but we lease the land from the airport... and we have ~30 year lease for the property. Occasionally, when the lease dwindles to 20 years remaining... the condo association renegotiates the lease with the airport... pays them additional money in exchange for an extended lease (30 yr)... then charges each condo owner a fair share of the cost for the extended lease.
Hence... you might expect to pay $30K for hangar with a 30 year lease... and then another $10K each 10 years to extend the lease back out to 30 years.
I think it would be good for owners with 38 years remaining to have this option available to them... and it almost certainly would be great for DVC.
DVC is one of the few timeshare condo associations where the equity has actually increased... and a amazingly, this is done even though it is a RTU type of contract.
However... it is also clear that this has to reverse itself sometime in the future.... this is certain because the ticking clock dictates that the residual value (equity) will dwindle to zero eventually.
By allowing the option of extending the contract length... DVC members would be able to protect their equity... and DVC would have a cash cow of simply collecting additional revenue without the costs of construction, marketing and sales. Unless there is something in the governing documents that I do not know about, I would speculate that there is a good chance this might happen in the future.
By contrast... if DVC does not offer this option... then I think that the current condos will enter a slippery slope of equity erosion. This one is difficult to predict, but it will be accelerated by DVC offering new resorts with longer contracts. I think a lot of the erosion will be a result of perception vs simple economics. At 38 years currently remaining... it still is not too bad from a perception standpoint. However, in another 10 years... I think that most new customers for DVC contracts will have lifespan expectations longer than the contracts they buy. I think this will play very heavily in their decision process since people who buy Disney... often want to pass that experience on to their children... and I know that for a lot of people.... maybe the majority... they value the eventuality of passing their DVC memberships on to their children/grandchildren.
Comments or other speculations?
/Jim
Here is an example: I own a hangar for my airplane as part of a condo association. We own the physical buildings, but we lease the land from the airport... and we have ~30 year lease for the property. Occasionally, when the lease dwindles to 20 years remaining... the condo association renegotiates the lease with the airport... pays them additional money in exchange for an extended lease (30 yr)... then charges each condo owner a fair share of the cost for the extended lease.
Hence... you might expect to pay $30K for hangar with a 30 year lease... and then another $10K each 10 years to extend the lease back out to 30 years.
I think it would be good for owners with 38 years remaining to have this option available to them... and it almost certainly would be great for DVC.
DVC is one of the few timeshare condo associations where the equity has actually increased... and a amazingly, this is done even though it is a RTU type of contract.
However... it is also clear that this has to reverse itself sometime in the future.... this is certain because the ticking clock dictates that the residual value (equity) will dwindle to zero eventually.
By allowing the option of extending the contract length... DVC members would be able to protect their equity... and DVC would have a cash cow of simply collecting additional revenue without the costs of construction, marketing and sales. Unless there is something in the governing documents that I do not know about, I would speculate that there is a good chance this might happen in the future.
By contrast... if DVC does not offer this option... then I think that the current condos will enter a slippery slope of equity erosion. This one is difficult to predict, but it will be accelerated by DVC offering new resorts with longer contracts. I think a lot of the erosion will be a result of perception vs simple economics. At 38 years currently remaining... it still is not too bad from a perception standpoint. However, in another 10 years... I think that most new customers for DVC contracts will have lifespan expectations longer than the contracts they buy. I think this will play very heavily in their decision process since people who buy Disney... often want to pass that experience on to their children... and I know that for a lot of people.... maybe the majority... they value the eventuality of passing their DVC memberships on to their children/grandchildren.
Comments or other speculations?
/Jim