lovwdwalot said:
Dean at what point would disney stop selling DVC because of having too many members? Is there a bar that they would use that would tell them that they are coming close to over load with members and resort rooms in the DVC system.
I'm not Dean, but here's my answer...
There is a direct relationship between DVC member inventory and DVC member points.
It's easy to understand with a conventional weekly timeshare resort. Let's suppose a given resort has 100 identical 2-bedroom condos. Let's suppose that the timeshare resort has "floating weeks" -- there are 52 weeks in each calendar year, so each unit can be occupied 51 weeks, with 1 week retained for maintenance. Thus, the resort developer can sell 5,100 floating weeks. If the developer tried to sell more than 5,100 weeks, the developer would be breaking the law. In fact, each owner gets a deed for a specific condo, tied to a specific week (even though the actual use is floating). That condo/week combo cannot be on more than one deed.
In theory, every owner can book a week -- but it may not be the week that the owner wants. And let's suppose that some of the condos sit empty in January and February. As the year continues, owners call to make reservations for that year. At some point, owners will be told that all weeks have been booked, and they're out of luck.
DVC is more complicated -- with
point charts that reflect dfferent condo sizes and different demand seasons -- but the idea is the same. Disney Vacation Development (DVD) can't and won't sell more capacity than is available. Our deeds are all tied to a specific real estate interest, expressed as a percetage of a "unit" (which does not necessarily equate to DVC villa). It's more abstract, but, as with conventional timeshares, the deeds can't add up to more than is physically available.
So, to answer the question, DVC can only sell points tied to actual declared inventory. If construction falls behind sales, DVD can pre-sell points that cannot be used until the corresponding real estate is "declared into the condominium."
And, as with conventional timeshares, there's no guarantee that members can use their points. The system works very well for those of us who plan ahead. But there are probably a fair number of points every year that expire without being used or banked (which is good for the rest of us).