Just for interest sake, I ran a fairly basic example through a spreadsheet to see how owing DVC and renting out points compared to a investment.
Here's my assumption that I used.
Point Bought = 100
$/Point = $60/point
Initial DVC Purchase Costs = $6,000
Initial Investment Amount = $6,000
MF = $4.80 (assume using SSR)
Annual MF Increase 3.5%
Tax Rate = 30% (this is on both the rental income and investment income)
Investment Return = 6% (I used this as it is my actual return on my investments since 1999)
Rental Rate = $11/point and increase by $1 every 4-5 years based on MF
I then ran these number for 10 years and 20 years and the results were.
Investing 10 years:
Total after tax earning = $3,054
Initial Investment = $6,000
Total Value after 10 years = $9,054
Renting after 10 years:
Total Rental Income after MF = $4,248
Value of DVC = ?
Total Value after 10 years = $4,248 + DVC resale value
For them to come out equal, the DVC needs to be worth $4,805 or 80% of it's original purchase prices after paying for realtors commisson.
Investing 20 years:
Total after tax earning = $7,662
Initial Investment = $6,000
Total Value after 10 years = $13,662
Renting after 20 years:
Total Rental Income after MF = $8,488
Value of DVC = ?
Total Value after 10 years = $8,488 + DVC resale value
For them to come out equal, the DVC needs to be worth $5,174 or 86% of it's original purchase prices after paying for realtors commisson.
Given the assumptions, it certainly looks like renting DVC points is not a good investment.
Playing around with the numbers can come up with all kinds of wonderful results.
For example, If on the other hand your investments only earn 2.5%, then after 10 years your DVC would only have to be worth 50% and after 20 years your DVC could be worth nothing.
On the other hand earning 6% and paying no taxes on either option, the DVC contract would have to be worth 78% after 10 years and 119% after 20 years.
For myself investing I'd rather just buy a nice dividend paying Canadian bank or dividend ETF.![]()
I just purchased my first DVC contract, and stumbled upon this thread.
I actually view DVC as an investment first and vacation second. If one were to look at DVC purely as an investment, it's pretty simple. You pay $ per point up front cost, say $50. You collect a certain amount of income per point each year, say $11. You pay a certain amount of expense per point each year, say $4.81 at SSR. Your annual cash flow is $11 - $4.81 = $6.19. By 2054 your contract stop generating points and it is worth zero, so you have 40 years of the contract generating cash flow for you.
Think of it as a cash flow stream that you paid $50 up front, and it generates $6.19 per year for 40 years. PV = -50. PMT = 6.19. N = 40. FV = 0. Solve for rate in excel: =RATE(40,6.19,-50,0). You get 12.26%. That's is your internal rate of return. It definitely beats any long term stock market return, and in my opinion with lower risk. Additionally, this return merely assumes yearly cash flow stays at $6.19, which is unrealistic as it should go up with inflation. The IRR goes up to mid to high teens when you consider cash flow growth. Find me another asset class that can generate this kind of return.
Or, let's use Doug's assumption of a 6% stock market return.
1) Investment of $50 growing 6% a year to 1/2054 (assuming SSR): after 40 years, that investment is now worth $50 x (1.06^39) = $485.18
2) Buying SSR: $6.19 in year 1 growing at 3% (my assumption of inflation). The cumulative cash flow is reinvested with 6% return (stock market). Example: Year 1 cash flow = $6.19. Year 2 cumulative cash flow = $6.19 x 1.06 + $6.19 x 1.03 = $12.94. Year 3 cumulative cash flow = $12.94 x 1.06 + $6.19 x (1.03^2) = $20.28... etc. By 2054 your cumulative cash flow is $1449.72.
Now the assumptions are definitely garbage in garbage out, so take all this with a grain of salt. Many people seem fixated that it takes 5 / 8 / 10 years or whatever to break even, but they seem to forget that the contract generates points (and cash flow) for 40 years.
I see two major risks to this:
1) A common risk I see is that the maintenance fee goes up at a faster rate than rental fee, and your "spread" gets eroded. I think that is a theoretical risk but not realistic. The rental points comes from owners. Maintenance fee cannot sustainably grow faster than rental fee because at some point owners will not be willing to rent, drying up the pool of available rental points and thus push rental prices up. There may be fluctuations on the spread based on the economic cycle, but it should normalize over the life of the contract.
2) Disney changes the rule on you down the road that limits your ability to rent. I don't see how they can do this without destroying the resale market, and I think they prefer a vibrant resale market to sell their direct points. But if they make it more restrictive then those points aren't too bad for vacations either.
Anyways, just throwing a counter argument out there.