bongo59 said:sir even if they ran away from the timeshare business there is little chance they will runaway from these resorts on Disney property surrounding all this valuable real estate..........i am just sorry.........to suggest that is as close to ludicrous as it gets.........i do think your arguement may wash for HH or VB because they are offsite...........but the places on WDW property will never be let go to a secondary owner
Dr T. never suggested that Disney would sell the land. But the possibility always exists that they could farm out administration of the program.
Disney Vacation Development (DVD) built the resorts. Disney Vacation Club (DVC) is simply a non-profit organization created to administer the program. They handle bookings, point tracking, trades with other entities, and so forth. It would be well within their power to disband DVC and farm-out the MANAGEMENT of the timeshare program indefinitely.
You're certainly welcome to argue "Disney would NEVER do that", but bear in mind that 40-50 years is a loooooong time. You should have seen the (justified) paranoia here a year ago when Comcast made its bid to buy Disney. Who's to say whether Comcast would have wanted to stay in the timeshare management business or not? Who's to say whether the next Disney suitor or even Michael Eisner's replacement will have the same opinion of timeshares?
First Wave said:Shoot! Right now, DVC is the best thing Disney has going. Their hotels are not all that profitable. The DVC members are PREPAYING for their rooms for the next 50 years (at SSR). AND...they pay MFs each year. Why would Marriott be in the timeshare buisiness if pre-selling rooms wasn't profitable? If WDW tanks, everyone that owns DVC will still be going to Orlando until 2042. Or am I missing something?
A couple of issues:
1. There will certainly be some saturation point at which the market for DVC points isn't what it used to be. Some people (more knowledgable about timeshares than me) have publicly stated that they believe SSR will be the last DVC resort. I don't necessarily agree, but I also don't know that they can continue building and selling points for the next 40 years until the contracts at the first wave of resorts revert back to DVC.
2. Every time they sell points to a new DVC member Disney loses a cash customer. Even if a market for DVC still exists 10 years down the road, the Disney beancounters may ultimately realize that building additional DVC resorts would do irreparable harm to their cash flow on the existing resorts.
Whatever the reason, if Disney decides to stop building new resorts, ROFR probably goes away and the "value" of DVC contracts will be....???? Nobody knows.
As for the statement that the resorts "aren't that profitable", I'd be curious to hear the basis for this statement. Attendance levels at WDW were up significantly in 2004, and by all reports I've read, many of the guests are staying at Disney resorts. Even Annual Passholder discount codes (which have been around forever) seem to have fewer and fewer rooms available to book at the discounted rates.
As long as DVC and the cash resorts can peacefully coexist, and DVC points continue selling, everything will be hunky dorey. But what happens when the cash resorts begin to see noticable declines in occupancy which can be traced back to DVC? I don't see them shuttering the Grand Floridian just so they can keep building DVCs...
sjdisneywedding said:the majority are saying flat out that the 12 years dont matter because they will not be here to use those years. They arent saying they'd rather have 12 less years at a resort they love more.
The 12 additional years have the potential to be valuable to us in a number of ways:
1. If our children want the contracts, they can have them.
2. If a time were to arrive when we would consider selling, it would probably be in about 20 years as our children are leaving the nest. Which would be more valuable in 2024:
A. One of the older resorts with 18 years remaining.
B. SSR with 30 years remaining.
All things being equal, I'll put my money on the latter.
We own at SSR, and the 12 additional years were just one of the reasons we decided to buy. I have absolutely no regrets. If it's the only destination available when I am 70, so be it. We'll still be staying for a fraction of the cash rates and the resort is an example of Disney Imagineering at its finest.