I've come up with the following (perhaps flawed) logic... Can someone tell me why my math doesn't work.
Example 1: Buy 250 points at BLT direct from Disney at $115 per point. So the purchase price is $28,750, for which you receive a total of 12,500 points (50 years x 250 points). You have annual maintenance of $3.78 per point, or $47,250 (50 years x 250 points x $3.78). Assuming for the sake of this comparison and simplicity that maintenance fees never go up; you get a total cost of $76,000 for 12,500 points, which works to approx. $6.08 per point.
Example 2: Buy 250 points at SSR via resale at $70 per point. The purchase price is $17,500, for which you receive a total of 11,000 points (44 years x 250 points). You have annual maintanence (same assumption as Example 1) of $4.46 per point, or $49,060 (44 years x 250 points x $4.46). You get a total cost of $66,560 for 11,000 points, which works to approx. $6.05 per point.
A weakness is the assumption that the maintenance fees are a constant. Of course they will increase, but if they increase at the same percentage, I think the math still works (of course this disregards the fact that $4.46 growing at 4% has a larger impact than $3.78 growing at the same 4%) (but you will have an additional 6 years of compounding for the BLT compounding to catch the SSR).
So aside from my maintenance fee weakness, the real difference is $0.03. Compounded into the calculation is duration of term (and thus additional points), so the real benefit associated with paying the extra $0.03 per point is the ability to reserve 11 months in advance for BLT instead of SSR offset by the additional commitment in terms of over number of points purchased.
I've often seen SSR being regarded as a real value in the resale market, but am having a hard time truely reconciling that. In our case, we know we want to stay at BLT; but I believe that if my math is right, the actual benefit of buying a SSR resale and hoping for availability when the 7 month window opens is nominal on a cost per point basis. In this case isn't it really $0.03 per point for the 11,000 SSR points you would be purchasing - or $330.
Example 1: Buy 250 points at BLT direct from Disney at $115 per point. So the purchase price is $28,750, for which you receive a total of 12,500 points (50 years x 250 points). You have annual maintenance of $3.78 per point, or $47,250 (50 years x 250 points x $3.78). Assuming for the sake of this comparison and simplicity that maintenance fees never go up; you get a total cost of $76,000 for 12,500 points, which works to approx. $6.08 per point.
Example 2: Buy 250 points at SSR via resale at $70 per point. The purchase price is $17,500, for which you receive a total of 11,000 points (44 years x 250 points). You have annual maintanence (same assumption as Example 1) of $4.46 per point, or $49,060 (44 years x 250 points x $4.46). You get a total cost of $66,560 for 11,000 points, which works to approx. $6.05 per point.
A weakness is the assumption that the maintenance fees are a constant. Of course they will increase, but if they increase at the same percentage, I think the math still works (of course this disregards the fact that $4.46 growing at 4% has a larger impact than $3.78 growing at the same 4%) (but you will have an additional 6 years of compounding for the BLT compounding to catch the SSR).
So aside from my maintenance fee weakness, the real difference is $0.03. Compounded into the calculation is duration of term (and thus additional points), so the real benefit associated with paying the extra $0.03 per point is the ability to reserve 11 months in advance for BLT instead of SSR offset by the additional commitment in terms of over number of points purchased.
I've often seen SSR being regarded as a real value in the resale market, but am having a hard time truely reconciling that. In our case, we know we want to stay at BLT; but I believe that if my math is right, the actual benefit of buying a SSR resale and hoping for availability when the 7 month window opens is nominal on a cost per point basis. In this case isn't it really $0.03 per point for the 11,000 SSR points you would be purchasing - or $330.