I'd like to believe that, but last week there was ANOTHER poster on the budget board (there have been at least four) who is endanger of foreclosure on their home with recently purchased and financed DVC points.
There is good financing and bad financing. There are people who are good at finance and those who aren't. If one used their home as collateral on a dvc loan, I don't think anyone would ever venture an argument as that being a proper use of financing. If they didn't use their home as collateral, then there is only one way the bank can foreclose........... because they can't make their mortgage payments. Whether or not they make the dvc payments are not relevant to the mortgage company. If they have enough to make their home payments but not their dvc payments, they shouldn't be making dvc payments. Direct dvc financing default would have no impact on the banks ability to foreclose. You seem to want to link the two and again, it is either A)not relevant or B) someone that has without question misused and misunderstood HOW to finance DVC. The OP wanted to dicusss financing dvc, not financing dvc in an imprudent manner.
Often their reasons they ended up there sound a lot like the ones here....my job was safe, I could easily make the payments, the points were going to go up, I was going to Disney every year anyway. This year has been really bad where a lot of people even WITH normally sufficient safety nets have found themselves out of work for longer than they ever thought - or taking new jobs at much less money. Or taking paycuts or hours cut in their current job so now they have to live on less, while simultaneously their credit card company jacked the minimum payment.
We can agree on the severity of the environment. Having said that, the vast majority of DVC financed purchases are not defaulting. I don't have the number, but I would be willing to bet that over 85-90% of all financed contracts are current. This would be a very high default rate vs the norm. Still, it somewhat outweighs the "4 people are in trouble on the message board" argument against financing (at least for me). 85% or more are able to meet their obligations in the worst credit crisis since the great depression. And, if they can't meet the obligation, the contract allows for Disney to recover the asset. I don't agree that morality has anything to do with it. Yes, some people can't handle finance and make bad decisions, but most do not. And by the way, please explain to me how Disney is harmed if the borrower defaults?
I think the majority of time financing works - the interest is throwing money away, but we all throw money away.
An absolute incorrect statement. Interest can be throwing money away or it can be a vehicle to increase and amplify wealth, or raise one's standard of living earlier than otherwise possible. Knowing which is which is the issue. My grandfather waited until he could by a house for cash as did many of his generation. Most ended up buying a home in their late 30's(and basically paying the landlords mortgage before that). I owned my first home at age 23. Proper financing worked. It saved me from "throwing money away", to an owner of property that he could use for his mortgage and enhance HIS wealth. See a parallel?
And from a security perspective, I'm not interested in financing a purchase unless I have current assets to back it up - most people - something like 80% of us - will face a period of unemployment or another significant financial setback - too much risk for me, but I'm very conservative. But financing its a little like alcohol....most of us can drink without ill effects - and some of us have our lives ruined. Encouraging other people to finance, without understanding their level of understanding and discipline, is like waving a beer in front of a person without understanding that alcoholism runs in their family like Secretariat at the Derby or knowing that they got out of rehab three weeks ago. Its nice that its offered (a refreshing adult beverage or the opportunity to finance), it really doesn't need to be pressed or encouraged
Most of us can also drive a car responsibly. Some of us cannot. The issue isn't the car, it's the irresponsible driver. The issue isn't the alcohol, it's the alcoholic. The issue isn't financing, it's knowing when and how to use it. Everything good thing has a cost for those that misuse it. It certainly doesn't mean that it shouldn't be available for those that use it appropriately. By the way, can you focus some attention on bacon.
I definitely cannot use it appropriately
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