DonMacGregor
Sub Leader
- Joined
- May 13, 2021
- Messages
- 6,499
I'm not suggesting you are making a straw man argument, but I do think there's a little more nuance to the discussion.The reason I say that is those point would be sold to someone else. I can see that a regular DVC owner would probably trade out some of their points therefore book less rooms at boardwalk but it would be a fraction less than an owner booking. So if commercial renters are booking 50 rooms in May. The new owners would maybe book 45.
Only the most naive member would believe the flood gates will open with rooms available weeks out across every resort, particularly in the high-demand categories. As you said, the points are still out there, still owned by someone, and still being used to make reservations. People complain about the lack of availability for specific room types, dates, etc. which logically means the popularity and desirability of those rooms will remain. They're popular for a reason and it will still be difficult to book them, regardless of who owns the points.
However, (and you do touch upon this) instead of one "mega renter" owning dozens of contracts all for commercial use, targeting and reserving the same lucrative room types (studios, for example) during high demand weeks, and making numerous reservations, you'll see a more natural distribution as now dozens of discrete owners, with their own travel plans, preferred or needed room types, and travel calendars, will be using those points in a more organic fashion and not necessarily targeting peak travel periods.
It's a statistical improbability that the multiple (dozens, hundreds?) owners who will replace the mega renters will all seek out and rent the exact same rooms, at the exact same times, in the exact same numbers, for the same duration, as the mega renters. No amount of pretzel logic or rationalization will improve that improbability.
If, say, 100,000 points are unloaded by mega-renters (I mean, that's only ten people/entities at 10,000 points each), with the average size of a DVC resale contract being 150 points, then that 100,000 point tranche equates to the possibility of redistributing those points to as many as 650 new owners (allowing of course for the likelihood that some number of the 100,000 points are locked into larger contracts, and that new buyers may purchase more than one resale contract). Even if you get really conservative and assume only 500 new owners of those points (because again, the average contract size is still 150), that's still 500 new owners with distinct travel plans, preferred or needed room types, and travel calendars, versus 10 mega-renters all looking to gobble up only the most lucrative reservations. That's some serious dilution. And that's only 10 mega-renters. With a couple of hours of sleuthing, you could easily find that many people renting out point totals in the 10K range with little to no effort.
To put it another way, if you average a studio at +/- 20 points per night, that equates to +/- 5,000 room nights that aren't absolutely being tied to high-value rooms. 100,000 points out of millions seems de minimis, but injecting 5,000 room nights worth of points back into the system for a more organic distribution might actually be perceivable. Make the average point value 50 points (two bedroom), and you're still at 2,000 room nights (but I think I read you and a few other folks arguing that the studios are where everyone wants to be, so we'll stick with the 20-point number)
Many folks will still use their points during peak periods, and that's to be expected. And why shouldn't they? They own the points and that is their right. However, the points are distributed/diluted across numerous members who won't all want to go on vacation all during the same travel periods.