But if your circumstances change with job loss, divorce or health issues - things that no one really predicts or plans for - the resale restrictions may become your problem.
I also believe you misunderstand how ROFR works, but this will be a good test case. I don't think ROFR is going to prop up resale prices for Riviera if the restrictions are considered as draconian as I believe them to be.
I think you misunderstood
my point. First - while I could be a 17 year old kid bragging here about how great my middle-aged life is, if you believe that I am essentially telling the truth about our assessment and purchases, you should also assume that I have factored in the chances of job loss, divorce or health issues into thinking about whether we'd be selling our RIV contract any time soon. I don't feel an obligation to tell you all about my life, and of course nothing in life is a given, but DH and I are both in recession-proof jobs, with enough saved for retirement and beyond that if we were to leave our
DVC contracts to our kids, we'd make sure there was a financial provision so they wouldn't have to worry about paying MFs either. Divorce? We've been through a lot together, we are going on almost 30 years together, so while he may suddenly decide he wants to run away with someone he met online/in a chat room/on Tindr, I'd assess those chances at less than 1%. Health issues - well, true, we aren't getting any younger. Fortunately, we have good health insurance as well. I need to stay alive for 3.5 more years for my health insurance to cover DH for life, and my kids until they're 25, even if I pass before them. Although, DH makes more than I do, so even if I were to pass before then, I think he'd be ok, financially. And if I pass first, I'm really not gonna care about the resale restrictions!
ROFR: I never said ROFR would prop up resale prices. I said that ROFR was the "not so invisible hand" that leads to the market not working efficiently and transparently. Buyers and sellers price their offers and demands based in part on what might happen in ROFR. But everyone knows that ROFR is controlled by a drunken monkey, and so the uncertainty in the market creates inefficiencies that, in my view, leads to people paying more than they would in a market without ROFR. The big question, as you said, was whether buyers really think the restrictions are draconian. I'm betting that they will not, if what's happened with VGC, VGF and BLT (and CCV is a question mark) is any indication. While resale buyers there do know they can trade out, and do trade out, the majority of the informed buyers at those resorts buy to use their points
primarily at their home resorts. While it's too early to tell with RIV, I think anyone who wants a chance at a tower studio or a studio of any size over certain very popular times, is going to have to own there. If you already own at BWV or BCV, you're not really the target demographic of RIV. If you always want 1br (and never studios or 2br), or if you only travel in the summer and have lots of flexibility, you're probably also not going to be a resale RIV buyer.
I will add that between the 1/19 restrictions on the L14 resorts, the crazy ROFR activity recently, and the DVC developer credits, Disney made RIV competitive with resale for almost all of the other WDW resorts. The exception would be if someone is looking for 100 points or less - then there's no developer credit and AKV and SSR are the winners in that comparison.
“most owners are very happy with the restrictions.”
Um... what?? No, of course I'm not happy with them; I just decided they were a risk of loss that I was willing to assume.