But the original purchaser represents "Net" income to Disney. The resale buyer offers nothing to Disney on the re-purchase of those originally bought points. Disney has already made their money from the original sale and makes nothing from the re-sale. There is nothing in it for Disney when those points continue to sell on the re-sale market.
Disney wants that re-sale customer to become a Direct purchaser. That's how they profit from a sale.
Every point has two major cost components: developer cost and MF.
DVC gets their developer fees paid once on each point, no matter how many times resold.
If I buy a house from a developer, and then I resell, should the developer get more money?
Here's what I think bothers me truly about this: DVD and Disney makes a ton of money from DVC sales. It's a huge money maker that keeps on giving: new resorts, frequent guests, subsidization of its deluxe resorts, etc etc.
I don't think it's too much to ask, by a direct buyer committing to decades of loyalty, that DVC also commit to the same level of loyalty to those points.
When DVC sells a fifty year point, it knows that point must be managed for fifty years.
For DVC to put its new sales over that commitment to those points is crappy business. It sends the message that as a current owner, I become baggage to DVC the moment the ink is dry.
It's just business. Used to be, customer service WAS their business.
When you're conducting business in the five figure range, loyalty is a prime consideration. What five figure purchase have you recently made without some warranty or insurance to insure fidelity to the product?
With Disney, that fidelity has been their reputation. This crap is a reputation killer.