Jerry5788
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2018
- Messages
- 414
With the flagging economy comes a drop in attendance at the parks, and no on will be paying rack rates for rooms (I'm not convinced a lot of people pay rack rates with our booming economy today). Exactly this sort of thing happened the year immediately after 9/11, Disney (and tourism in general) was hurting badly. Construction on Pop Century stopped completely. Live shows like "Beauty and the Beast" were cancelled (yes, that was around then, and yes, that needs to be put out to pasture). Parks opened later to save money. The list goes on. Point being, Disney is not the Disney we see today when the economy ***** the bed and the Mouse is suddenly finds himself penny pinching.
If the economy takes a another hit like in 2008, (which is not inconceivable given relaxed banking regulations, zero-down lending habits re-emerging, over-inflated asset values, banks failing stress tests, society - and entire countries - over-leveraged, etc.), a lot of people will either lose their job or live in fear of losing their job. In that state of mind, Disney will be among the last things on people's to-dos. It doesn't just take DVCers to be directly affected to change prices. Simply take away a chunk of foreign travelers, or once-in-a-lifetimers who will put that trip off a few years, and you will impact hugely the ability for Disney to service those who are locked into 50 years of visits the way they're able to today. When the product changes, its value changes.
How low will resale prices drop when Disney is not artificially propping that floor up? Low-ballers will continue to test that bottom. Despite the flood of ROFRs the last two months, people are still offering ROFR ripe prices. Imagine if we learned Disney stopped ROFR (as they nearly did a couple of years post 2008) today. How many of those premium priced DVC Resale Market contracts would be confident they can wait out for a buyer to come up and meet them?
Others who are more business savvy may be able to handle it, but for me, the risks of buying into a timeshare, and relying on the viability of the rental market longterm to make it work financially, is far too great to do comfortably.
- Chicken Little
Yeah agree with that logic - you should never buy anything you can't afford financially. Was just saying that is how I justify values/floors looking at it like I do other asset classes with discounted cashflows. I would probably be buying more contracts if we ever do see a crash - but hopefully we do not for the benefit of the majority.