If someone offered you $40,000 now or $1,000/year for 40 years which would you take? This is obvious, right? You don't simply divide your cost by the # of years and say "it's like paying 1/40th of that per year for 40 years". $40,000, at even 5% interest is worth around 6x that over 40 years! The up front cost is a tiny fraction of your actual cost. For example if you have 40 years on your deal, $40k might be $1,000 per year for the capitol. True. But you have to add in 5%-10% interest. Where you pick in that range depends on you, but I use a medium 7%. Which means your cost is not $1,000 per year, it's your maintenance fees, plus $1,000 per year capital plus $2,800 per year interest. The interest is around 3X as important as the capital yet everyone overlooks this. That's why Disney sells these things. Getting your $40k now is so much more valuable than getting say $5k per year from you for vacations.
A more accurate formula might be:
CPY = M*P + C/Y + I
CPY: Cost Per Year
M: Maintenance & Taxes
P: # of Points
C: Capital
Y: Years
I: Interest
Interest will be broken down further: I = C*R
Where we consider R, your interest, somewhere around 0.1 if you're financing, 0.05 if you're not, or more likely somewhere in between.
In total,
CPY = M*P + C/Y + C*R
An example:
200pts @ $120pp
M = 5.6
P = 200
C = 24,000
Y = 42
R = .07
CPY will be 5.6*200 + 24,000/42 + 24,000*0.07
Which is 1,120 + 571 + 1,680
In total, $3,371 per year. Or /200, $16.8 per point per year.
If you ignore the time value of money you will understate your real costs by almost half, depending on the value you pick for R.
There are other tiny factors like if you would deduct a part of M off your income, how valuable this is to you, and other things like loaded points, closing costs, but these are one-time and small, so they don't change much.
I completely agree. I’m contemplating buying a resale contract because the way my family travels, it seems like it makes sense to buy DVC, and i fully understand the time value of money and all that. I have paid rack rate at thanksgiving for a 2BR at OKW, i have used a room only discount for a 1BR at CCV, I have paid a military rate for a 2BR at OKW (which was actually cheaper than renting points), and I have rented points for a 2BR at CCV. By my simple calculations, DVC, while more money up front, seems like in the long run is the better choice than how we have been doing disney. And it also comes with the fact that a Disney vacation is more likely as we are already paying for it. The money invested today doesn’t come with guarantee.I absolutely agree with you more than not, but it is also worth noting that there are more moving parts involved in this than just the time value of your money. There is also resale value (something I do not agree with taking into consideration, as it is too volatile) as well as the rising cost per night at comparative deluxe resorts.
People who bought into OKW are paying a yearly rate of $6.83 per point ($5.83 fees + $1 per year buy in cost). This rate can get them into a room at the Polynesian for under $110 per night in today's dollars. There is no other way to get that sort of rate.
Yes, they could have invested their money in 1992 and had enough to not worry about paying any price off the rack, but these same people have also taken 25 years worth of vacations as well.
I think the vast amount of variables involved in buying into DVC is why people just choose to use a simple calculator, realizing that the math is not going to be perfect by any means, but is at least consistent. It is also why people say it is so important to consider where you would be most happy staying as your number one priority.
Sure, that's pretty much why we bought in too. We wanted to own a little spot next to the MK that we can go back to for a long time. And access to the 2B's, cuz 2B's on the hotel side are really expensive.I completely agree. I’m contemplating buying a resale contract because the way my family travels, it seems like it makes sense to buy DVC, and i fully understand the time value of money and all that. By my simple calculations, DVC, while more money up front, seems like in the long run is the better choice than how we have been doing Disney. And it also comes with the fact that a Disney vacation is more likely as we are already paying for it. The money invested today doesn’t come with guarantee.
But also the dues will rise. So whether you're staying hotel side and paying ever increasing rates or staying DVC side and paying ever increasing dues that part is a wash. What remains in both cases, is that if you have $40,000 now, that is worth a lot. Whether it is 4% that you'd earn if you pay down your mortgage or 6% if you'd pay off a car or 15% if you'd pay off a credit card, that is actual money that you'd earn / save. At 7% of $40,000, that's $2800/year. That means you could vacation in Disney World for $2800/year and never touch your principle!The problem with including the time value of money is that it’s kind of already built in. You’re purchasing future lodging at today’s prices. And the dues will continue to rise. Hence, the simple calculation is the future value of the points in today’s dollars.
If you include the time value of money in the initial calculation, then you need to figure the future value of staying at a Disney resort and the annual increase in dues.
That's the issue.....every situation is different. If you were realistically earning 7% on that money then you would have been better off financing with a personal loan for 4%, yet people will say "don't finance".
A BLT example: 200pts @ $120pp
M = 5.6, P = 200, C = 24,000, Y = 42, R = .07
CPY will be 5.6*200 + 24,000/42 + 24,000*0.07
Which is 1,120 + 571 + 1,680
In total, $3,371 per year. Or /200, $16.8 per point per year.
There are many other ways to perform a financial analysis on this, and you listed one of them.
My question to you is - if you are buying at $16.8pp, wouldn't you be better off renting points from a member to save money. Or you should buy a 25 point resale and transfer in points as you need them.
I personally think 7% interest over 40 years is very high, but that is my opinion.
Also, most people will not keep their contracts for 40-50 years so this is more akin to a intermediate length investment. There are situations where someone bought BLT for $100 from Disney during the first two years and will keep it for 10-20 years and then sell it for a profit.
Rentals are very fluid, so if you know you are going to be going to Disney World for many years, you are better off buying. If you assume BLT points are about $17/pt/yr then you will come out ahead vs renting within 3-4 years, once those points most likely go for $18-20.
There are many other ways to perform a financial analysis on this, and you listed one of them.
My question to you is - if you are buying at $16.8pp, wouldn't you be better off renting points from a member to save money. Or you should buy a 25 point resale and transfer in points as you need them.
I personally think 7% interest over 40 years is very high, but that is my opinion.
Also, most people will not keep their contracts for 40-50 years so this is more akin to a intermediate length investment. There are situations where someone bought BLT for $100 from Disney during the first two years and will keep it for 10-20 years and then sell it for a profit.
Frankly, the question on renting points isn't about saving money - the renting points question is a matter of risk and value. Owning carries some financial risk, renting carries some risks as well. Owning provides certain types of value - the ability to control your own points. Renting provides different kinds of value - home resort booking windows if you can find an owner.
If you have to save money over renting points for DVC to work for you, you can't afford DVC. If you need the numbers to work for you in any way, you can't afford DVC. Dean will say that you shouldn't buy if it doesn't make financial sense, and there is truth in that - but you also should be very wary of purchasing because of the way the numbers work. Its easy to make them lie.