I’ve been preparing for financial collapse since 1970

I’m much older than the rest of you and therefore raised by parents that lived during the 1920’s … what a fun bunch they were!

I stop short of washing and reusing my plastic sandwich bags, but I’ve seen it done! IYKYK …
Or nicely folding aluminum foil to reuse for the next day's sandwich along with the brown paper lunch bag.
I don't think I am quite as old as you both (but I'm using a 100 year old guy as my avatar), my parents and inlaws were born during WWII in Asia, and ... we never used plastic sandwich bags because reusable aluminum foil was less expensive! We opened larger Christmas presents by gently undoing the tape (and using a minimum of tape when wrapping) so we could reuse the wrapping paper. We had to treat our brown paper bags with great care so we could use them multiple times...
We are obviously doing better than our parents did, but I do still save and reuse a lot of things "for the environment," and we have moved to reusable bags and storage containers for ... ahem ... the same reason.
I hear you on the logic that defaulted direct loans won’t hit the resale market, Disney will just take back the contract and sell them when the market allows. But two things:
1) Resale finance won’t get absorbed. Monera will take back contracts and flip them.
2) If people stop buying generally, the premium priced resorts stand to lose the most demand, especially the premium priced resorts with restrictions that devalue your purchase so quickly right away.
3) The Aulani argument makes a lot of sense. It’s expensive to get there. Those pricy airline tickets are the first casualty in a tight economy.
1. agree. One of my resale purchases was VGF from Monera back in 2017 or so; a VGF add-on in 2018 was a resale from an international seller who I heard had bought and financed on a cruise and then had to come up with money to close. They had upside down points, also, because they hadn't paid dues in a while. so it takes a few years for direct or financed purchases to have to get sold; first the owners will probably default on dues and monthly payments before realizing they won't be able to turn things around.
2. Also agree, and I wonder if Disney, if still in active sales, can just sell those as hotel rooms or packages, and still find a way to make things look okay-enough on the financial statements.
3. This is actually worrying me a bit. We are going to Maui for spring break (not a Disney trip, and fortunately the hotel and air were paid for back when fuel prices were low). But this has me wondering if/when we will get back there. Hawaii needs the steady tourist $ and after the 2 Kona lows I really feel for them.
Back to 2007-2009, sure, there were plenty on Wall Street who lost their jobs, but those who really got smacked were those with mortgages where they were suddenly upside down and had little choice but to the let the bank foreclose. The upper income classes cut back for a few years, and Wall Street found other ways to keep making money other than securitizing mortgages and other debt (although they still do plenty of that).
Different from my childhood, also, is the thinning of the middle class. We took middle class
Disney vacations as a kid - piled into the station wagon and drove, stayed at a Days Lodge with a kitchen offsite, stopped off to visit friends and family who lived along the way. This doesn't seem to be the way most
DVC-ers, especially recent ones, visit WDW any more. (Nor do we - the spirit of my mom and inlaws cringed when I got the LLPP for my daughter and myself on her birthday). I feel like CFW may have been DVC's bid to appeal to that disappearing middle class (sleeping 6 at a 1br price), but also if they don't sell out on points they can probably sell on a cash basis and still make decent 4.
United is projecting jet fuel could be basically 2x for the next 18 months already (even if the Iran war doesn’t continue) so we’re going to see fewer flights and higher fares across the board (book your flights now, people!) if he’s correct or even if he’s wrong but the other handful of airline CEOs agree.
this worries me too. not to mention certain areas of airspace being shut down at times because of certain operations in the area ...
“Research” From Gemini:
likely to be Financed: Poly, Riv and Grand Cal
HI likely to buy in Fl: Saratoga and AK
Recession proof: Grand Cal, Beach Club, Poly, and Bay Lake
I'm half thumbs up and half LOL. I think financed, especially recently financed, is going to get hit a bit. But Poly being "recession proof" has me laughing a little.
DVC, even if you consider the debt people may take on to get the contract, are still largely of a different category of people that may not be representative of someone else when discussing the severity of a given recession. Vacations tend to drop off first but with a timeshare type program it's also not the same vacation that others are.
Agree - even if most people don't internalize the cost of the dues when buying in, that is probably a steady rate of buyer's remorse/must sell across all economic conditions.
My wild *** guesses of biggest drops - based on wild guesses about mix of new owners and financing:
CFW (high dues, recent sales, no resales on the market yet)
RIV (although I am a direct owner) anyone who bought within the past 5 years and financed may be at risk. (As I said elsewhere, we bought at a decent rate and have had 7 years (starting in Dec 2019!) of great trips using every last point, so our "loss" is mitigated already.)
VGF (if anyone financed big chunks of points in 2022)
POLY (new buyers, and based on the # of resale contracts back in 2018ish)
BCV, BWV - 2042 and I think the resale prices have been a bit high lately. (when we bought BLT resale BWV and BCV were selling at around the same price per point, I think BLT was a little undervalued since Poly and VGF and then CCV were all shinier and newer by then)