I conclude that they'll take a lesser margin because I don't believe there's any way that they can pass off CBR @ the same rates as Poly, GF, etc. IMO, the only way they could sell it would be at a discounted rate, hence the lesser margin. See below example for my rationale.
Never said that. What I mean by "decimate the existing program" is with regard to New Sales.
Let's say for arguments sake that they do decide to sell CBR for the same price as the current offerings ($160/pt). With a minimum buy-in of only 100 points (also assuming that the cost per night will be lower, which would make a 100 pt contract do-able), your initial OOP investment is $16K. Current average maintenance fees across property are just over $6.00 per point, and on average, they increase ~3% per year. Total cost of ownership (not include any other costs like tickets, meals, etc.) over 20 years is just over $32K (initial investment + annual inflationary dues).
I don't dispute a previous post in which you indicate that a week @ CBR can be had OOP for roughly ~$1,500. With the same 3% inflation, it would take you 15 years to break even on your CBR DVC purchase as compared to paying OOP. Conversely, a 150 pt contract @ VGF (which I would expect to be comparable in terms of # of nights per year) is currently running ~10 year payback. This is based on the current $160/pt buy in, current maintenance fees and your notion that the deluxe's run about "double" the OOP cost of the moderates, which I tend to agree with.
A longer payback period for a watered-down product seems like a tough sell to me. The only way the payback period becomes more reasonable is by lowering the initial buy-in, which ultimately results in lower margin.
Other food for thought... The current program, as you've mentioned, is marketed as an opportunity to lock in "deluxe vacations @ moderate pricing". No dispute there. What would the target market be for moderate DVC - moderate vacations @ value pricing? Frankly, I don't see the types of folks who target value/moderate resorts as the type of clientele that Disney is looking for, and conversely, I don't see that same clientele as the type to sell out significant upfront $$$ for ~30+ years worth of
Disney vacations. Disney's strategic focus over the past decade has been 100% concentrated on the upper-middle class and beyond.
Obviously, these are just my thoughts/opinions. I think there's more ammunition to suggest that moderate DVC is a stretch, but YMMV.
Edited to add payback period math for anyone interested: