I appreciate your approach and points (I really do). However, it runs on the premise that everyone else is just a naive emotion driven buyer. While such buyers absolutely exist, they cannot sustain DVC by themselves.
See, this is where you and I disagree. I believe that this type of buyer is the super majority of DVC owners.
And yes, people saying my "downside risk" is a 50% loss does enter into the equation for many buyers. Measuring downside risk why spending $30 to $40k is not a unique, superior skill.
People on this board seem very quick to sell the average DVC buyer short.
Again, I think you and I disagree on who the "average" DVC buyer is. If you look at the numbers, less than 2% of DVC owners are on this forum. Simply being on here potentially puts you in the top 2-5% of DVC buyers with regards to education about the product.
I believe that the average DVC buyer is someone who is in full on vacation mode, walks up to the DVC kiosk and before they know it they are in the red van, touring the model rooms, signing a contract and eating their free ice cream. That's how the timeshare business works, and it works well. Rare is the buyer like myself who sits through the entire presentation and tells their salesperson that they're going to take a month or two to think it over and research their options.
If Disney does not care about resales because all of their customers just buy on emotion anyway, why bother having a ROFR clause?
Great questions. First, there is a difference between embracing an active resale market and wanting control over your product. Disney is one of the most control oriented companies on the planet. It stands to reason that they would want complete say over what happens to a contract, even after they sell it to you.
Why would your guide have a prepared response to resale questions?
Salespeople have prepared responses to every possible objection known to man. It's part of sales. Their response is to dismiss the resale market entirely and to focus on the value of the product...making you think you'd be crazy to ever even consider selling it.
Why would they have changed resale benefits at all (it obviously had zero affect on their emotion driven business)? Do they just want to spite the few, superior thinkers on this board knowing it has no real affect on their business? Sounds like a lot of effort for something that has no meaning to them.
I think you're making my argument for me. My opinion is that Disney enacted the restrictions to weaken the value of resales and to increase the perceived value of direct purchases. I never said that Disney doesn't acknowledge the existence of the resale market, I said that they don't benefit from a healthy, active resale market.
DVC actually refers people to Fidelity that need to sell yet they have no need for a resale market? Why would they bother?
I'll flip this question back to you...if resale points were such a hot commodity, why wouldn't Disney just buy them back from the owner instead of referring them to Fidelity? At that point Disney can either refer the seller to Fidelity in the hopes of getting the contract in the hands of someone who will reliably pay the maintenance fees, or engage in a drawn out legal proceeding to foreclose on the contract for lack of payment of said fees. Either way they win, it's just a matter of how quickly, how easily, and how much. In my opinion, the referral is simply a courtesy. But make no mistake, DVD's main objective is the sale of direct points...period.