StoweFoSho
DVC Dad Life
- Joined
- May 29, 2019
- Messages
- 95
There's a lot going on here to try to explain the current market, but some of it just sounds like conjecture. I never bought in with the intention of making money on my purchase. I just bought in because I saw that I could consistently get rooms at resorts that I wanted for cheaper than the cash rate.There is always much discussion about resale expectations.... Will restrictions hurt the resale of Riviera, when will 2042 resorts really start to see their resale values decline..
And I'd point out, that resale values have mostly been flat in the last year, which is a real dollar decline. (If you bought a house in 1975 for $30,000 (which would be a really nice house in 1975), and it was only worth $50,000 in 2022, then the real dollar value has declined... since the increase didn't keep up with inflation).
Anyway, I believe we are entering a negative period for resale values, not just at restricted resorts or 2042 resorts. Resale pricing is mostly set by free market supply and demand. The caveat being ROFR. Disney isn't actually setting a "floor" with ROFR, they are simply buying the cheapest contracts set by the free market -- that doesn't exactly create a floor, but it does boost demand and provide a boost to prices because of the increased demand.
Back to supply and demand: Disney has tight control over the supply of direct points. They decide when to build and sell a new resort. They can add more direct points to the market using ROFR, foreclosures, etc. They can reduce the number of direct points on the market by using DVC properties for cash bookings.
On the other hand -- The supply of resale is always going up. Each time they build a new resort, it increases the supply of resale. The older DVC owners get, the more likely they are to re-sell their points.
So there may be some month to month fluctuation, but in the long term, the number of resale contracts on the market is always increasing.
If demand isn't increasing in line with the increase in supply, prices will drop. Disney artificially reduces the demand for these resale contracts with various restrictions: the resale restrictions on Riviera, the inability of legacy resale to use Riviera and future resorts, blue card perks, etc. But even without these drawbacks, eventually the demand for DVC can't keep up with the ever increasing supply. We hit a saturation point.
Are we at the saturation point now? If not, we will be within the next 2 years;
Right now, there are still 3 resorts with incentivized direct points: Riviera, Aulani and VGF. VGF will take at least another 1-2 years before it sells out. Aulani will never sell out. Riveria has at least another 4-5 years.
Next year, VDH joins the fray. Likely, that's 4 resorts selling incentivized points at the same, time, and Disney not using ROFR at those resorts.
In 2024, Poly tower joints -- VGF may or may not be sold out by then. So between 4 and 5 resorts for sale at direct, at once.
What's the impact of having all those resorts at direct sale at the same time?
1 -- Disney wont' be using ROFR at those 4-5 resorts. So there will be less demand-support for re-sale coming from Disney itself. You won't have that ROFR "floor"
2 -- Those points will be incentivized, giving a direct purchase ceiling...
In other words, VGF re-sale was in the 190's before it reopened for sales. In 2024, why pay $195 resale for ANY resort, when you can get direct points at 4-5 resorts for a similar price?
Meanwhile, take a look at what happened to VGF re-sale prices when direct sales re-opened... VGF re-sale dropped by 10-20% practically overnight. Well.... That will likely happen at Poly in 2024-- Current pricing of $166 at Poly, which is about the same at BLT and Copper Creek. But if Poly re-opens for direct sales... and re-sale prices drop at Poly to $145... that will also impact resale prices at BLT and CCV.
So far -- The big issues driving down likely resale prices -- DVC expansion and market saturation.
The next big issue is indeed the 2042 expiration: I believe next year, we enter a big psychological milestone for buyers: The resale contracts will clearly have under 20 years remaining. (technically, they are already under 20 years but with a 2042 expiration is psychologically still sounds like 20 years). I'm NOT saying 2042 contract prices will plummet next year. But the financial value of those contracts gets tighter and tighter by significant margins with each passing year. By the time we hit 2027-2032, most buyers likely will really scrutinize the math on a per year basis.
Of course, as demand for the 2042 contracts lessen, some of those prospective buyers will look more at 206x+ contracts. If and when VGF and Riviera sell out, their resale prices may get a little bit of a boost.
But for the reasons stated, n terms of real dollars, I expect resale prices to drop at most, if not all, resorts over the next 2 years. (Riviera and VGF *might* get a little boost when they sell out, and as 2042 contracts get closer to 2042). The raw dollar prices may increase somewhat, but not on the pace of inflation.
So let this simply be buyer beware -- I don't expect re-sale value to disintegrate into nothing. But don't go in with an expectation of significant resale. I'd go in with the expectations of a re-sale loss.
The DVC market goes up and down based on all kinds of factors: direct price increases and incentives, amount of resale inventory, home resort priority/room inventory, overall economy, WDW resort demand, cash room prices, ROFR activity, new resale restrictions, point borrowing, annual pass/ticket sales, resort announcements, etc. These all create trends, but trends end.
This is a luxury product that has some elasticity to it. The OP is only comparing recent purchase price points and comparing them to current-day values- Spring and Summer 2021 saw huge increases in the resale market prices and now they are coming down or are flat. This period of rapid growth is an outlier that is going to affect when you only look at the recent past. Yes, in July 2021 VGF avg resale at DVC resale market was $198pp. And that was a HUGE increase from July 2020 when it was just $156pp. Anyone whose cost basis is $198pp is going to have trouble recouping that same amount with VGF back on sale direct at that price. But every single DVC buyer has a very different cost basis that everyone else.
Everyone wants to buy low and sell high, but that's not always going to be the case. Some people will time everything perfectly and make money, others will time it at the worst and "lose" money.
However, the OP's analysis completely ignores the economic principle of utility. If I purchase at $XXpp, use my points for deluxe resort accommodations and then resell the contract ten years later at the same price point with a real dollar loss due to inflation, I still got a measurable and immeasurable utility out of the transaction. Measurable because I can compare my actual expenses to cash rooms or rented points. Immeasurable because of my satisfaction and affinity for the product.
The OP's assumptions are that everyone makes the obvious cheapest financial option when DVC buyers and owners have shown time and time again that they don't always do that. Some buy Saratoga Springs and trade-in to whatever resort they can at a cheaper cost-basis, others pay for home resort priority at smaller resorts; some purchase direct at a higher price point for ease of transaction and unrestricted points, others purchase resale for a lower-cost per point knowing that there are restrictions in place.
Are we at market saturation, or are we just at a new point in the DVC experiment where there could be more than the traditional two or three resorts that are actively selling? Are announcements of new resorts slowing the resale market as potential buyers wait for the new resorts to go to active sales? DVC News estimates that VGF expansion will run out of point inventory for direct sales in November 2023, likely before Poly tower goes on sale, but maybe there's a short overlap. That means it's likely that there are 2 WDW resorts on sale at the same time (Poly, Riv) along with one DL resort and one beach resort. I don't expect DVD to let all these go in a fire sale. They are playing the longterm game.