An agent just told us that all resale memberships are units that Disney has chosen not to buy back for a specific reason. She said that Disney has been more proactive about buying back points and that Disney has first right of refusal so anything on the resale market is because Disney did not want them for some reason. Thoughts on this?
As noted above, that is simply not true. DVC does not make ROFR decisions until the seller and buyer have agreed on terms and the deal is submitted to them. They not only haven't "chosen not to buy back", they haven't even
seen the offer!
The negative side is that many of the memberships have 50% less life in them as little as 25 years left...
Half-lie. All DVC contracts expire whenever they expire, whether they are sold direct by DVC or purchased resale. The expiration date has absolutely NOTHING to do with how the contract is purchased.
Also, although you will frequently see shorter expiration contracts dissed here on the DIS, some buyers consider a shorter obligation a benefit, not a negative.
the membership can not be use for 4 of the 6 collections including the: Disney collection and Concierge
TRUE...BUT a classic example of a timeshare salesman citing a benefit of resale as a disadvantage to cloud the issue. Using DVC points for those two collections is almost universally a terrible waste of points.
usually the resale memberships will be stripped out and have no points for the next couple of Use Years
Lie. Some contracts are "stripped," others are "loaded" and you are actually getting a lot of truly free points.
Contrast that with the typical DVC timeshare salesman lie that you are getting "free" points buying direct, when all you are really getting is the current UY points that you are paying for!
with but since the dues are paid in advanced the person buying a resale is responsible for to pay for dues (even if the website states that there are points available only Disney as access to actually see that)
Mostly a lie, in several areas. First, all terms of a resale transaction are agreed upon by the buyer and seller, and everything is negotiable. You pay dues for points only if you agree to do so, and the typical practice is you do
not because available or banked points are used as a deal-sweetener.
Secondly, some owners pay their dues in one lump sum; others pay them by automatic monthly debit to their checking account. Those paid monthly obviously would not be pre-paid.
also it may be a contract that has gone into foreclosure or has a lien on it so it is not the most attractive."
Lie. There is no difference between a contract which had been foreclosed (most of which would be sold directly by Disney anyway) and any other contract. Points is points, no matter what their history.
And the lien comment is laughably stupid. All liens have to be settled at closing, so they are irrelevant to the buyer. If the timeshare salesman (who is a Florida-licensed real estate agent) doesn't know that basic fact, they are truly lacking in job knowledge!