fumanchu2488
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- May 20, 2020
- Messages
- 340
Agree.If you look at the order in which Disney has been reopening its hotels, Deluxe Resorts have opened first.
Indeed, the next resorts with announced opening dates are:
There still are no announced dates for POR, POFQ, ASMusic, and ASSports.
- Beach Club
- Wilderness Lodge
- Boardwalk Inn
- Polynesian
We hear that the Grand Floridian is not reaching 100% occupancy and yet Disney is still opening Deluxe Resorts first.
The takeaway is that $400 per night rooms at lower occupancies are more profitable for Disney than $200 per night rooms at higher occupancies. This is especially true at resorts that are already operating because they have associated DVC buildings. Disney is going to have a higher margin with a 70% filled Poly than a 100% filled All Stars. (Historically, anything below 80% is a very low occupancy for WDW.)
Still, if some Deluxe Resort rooms are unfilled, it makes sense to convert them to DVC, which will get them filled. The Grand Floridian has 867 rooms. Converting 200 to DVC instantly solves the GF's occupancy problem.
The driving force right now is theme park capacity. Due to COVID restrictions, Park Passes are reaching their limits at all 4 theme parks. This means that Disney will open hotels in the most profitable sequence possible.
By the time VGF2 is open, these COVID restrictions should be lifted and WDW should be back to normal.
I guess my point is, if they keep raising DVC prices but cash rooms get cheaper, the savings goes down. That gets compounded if they add incentives to cash bookings that DVC would not get like ticket packages and free dining. Seems like they are going to have to heavily incentivize Deluxe hotels or convert to DVC.