Tiggerette
You are *so much* my type of nerd!!
- Joined
- Jun 30, 2013
- Messages
- 1,262
My understanding of the situation is that basically DVC picked the worse definition of base year to create inventory out of nowhere for 2022 and people are upset about it.
... [excise]
I mean, is it really that bad for DVC to massage in some inflated inventory to try to absorb the vastly Inflated points balance? It spreads the pain amongst everybody in a stealthy way that most won’t notice.
... But I’d reserve judgement for a few years to let DVC work off excess inventory, and see if they consistently make the worse base year decision, before calling it a trend. I see their 2022 point chart in doing whatever they can to absorb excess banked points during covid without rocking the boat.
I fear we may end up distilling thoughts to simple difference of opinion, but mine is that this matter is egregious enough to warrant close examination of the contract allowance. The publicized messaging didn't initially come across as a mitigation measure for a specific time, nor describe a circumstance necessary to end those mitigation measures. The actions were a reinterpretation and application of contract language. If the inflation didn't impact ownership valuation, and was solely to "eat up" reservations / point cost for a well-defined period of time, perhaps I could be swayed to a "one time exception." This would rely on DVCM acknowledging they are moving from the standard interpretation in order to benefit membership by explicit, demonstrable efforts. I hear that you're willing to give a few years to see where it goes. I suppose my threshold is much shorter, because I have no basis to think the total points required to reserve or base year calculation, or seasonal point chart costs would ever revert to prior, standard interpretation.
Moreover, I don't know that the assumption of higher point values to reserve= more points eaten up. That relies on the assumption that owners will book within those higher seasons. The points will not be eaten up if they cannot book due to higher points costs, or just prefer not to book in those higher cost seasons in order to maximize their available points. If either of these situations occur to a significant degree, then the points exist unused, and if unused points somehow lead to unused rooms, then breakage becomes more substantial pure income, beyond the 2.5% cost recovery.