HyperspaceMountainPilot
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2019
- Messages
- 3,277
I think technically it would be use value per point minus dues per point x number of years, discounted by the time value of money (usually based against prevailing treasury bonds), though you may not need to use the time value of money because cash booking rates increase much faster than dues and generally higher than prevailing inflation rates.Yea, that makes sense. 6-15 is an investment with a possible return (however small), but 1-5 you’re not even thinking of selling, you’re just going to ride it out to the end.
How do you even do the math to determine when it gets upside down?
Price per point x years left compared to cash or rental price?
You could calculate the “value per point” by cost of renting or by cost of rack rates or rack rates with a 20-30% discount, depending on what you want to justify (and frankly, time of year is probably a factor). For the hard to rent properties, I think the midpoint between point rental cost and retail cost (in busy season) or discount retail (in slow season) is probably about right.