ClemTig
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2008
- Messages
- 121
Prospective buyers: If you love what you see at Riviera, you should buy there. Ten years from now, you'll be a lot happier doing so than spending time today handwringing about what might happen tomorrow. Most owners don't think about what they paid X years ago for their contracts. They're too busy just enjoying them.
This.
We bought RIV, well because we want to stay at RIV. No spreadsheets, no sleepless nights of walking at 7 months.
DVC owner since 2005. . It's how we roll.
I think DVC sales could be in trouble....
I do not think we have yet seen how this story will play out.
Interesting analysis. I’d venture a guess and say 12.9% of potential “add on” customers are ticked off by resale restrictions, but it’s only a guess. I think the Feb/March numbers will tell us a lot after the recent price hikes.
I want to expand on my comment about Feb/Mar stats telling us a lot- I think December and January benefitted from this being a spanking new resort unveiled to the public, and the known coming price hike was also used to drive sales. February and March will not have those benefits. It is possible that sales will drop significantly. I think the economy bails out DVC sales to a large extent. If people feel boosted by the economy and recent stock market gains they are more likely to spend for this truly discretionary expense. So I am very interested in the next 2 sales points- from a purely selfish standpoint. I want these resale restrictions withdrawn on all future resorts. I want DVC to fail miserably on this. So far that hasn't been the case.
I agree that sales are NOT where Disney wants them to be...
I agree that numbers can be shown in a number of ways to make someone’s point
No competing resorts, booming economy, resort opening.... this is the bare minimum that they had to expect for the opening months
“Good” is a failure in this economy for DVC
Riviera
most expensive new resort + high point charts + large supply of points + bad location + low theming + sales restrictions + huge transport variable = only decent numbers with no competing resorts in the best economy in decades and strong incentives
If this same resort was on the monorail or walking to Epcot and had no restrictions, it would be selling OFF the charts.
Markets are effiicient. This resorts sales will run out of steam quickly and is hugely vulnerable to any economic issue.
At that point look for restrictions to be lifted and Disney to try and get sales across the the finish line on fumes before Reflections is in full swing
Just my opinion. I am wrong a lot...
Riviera
most expensive new resort + high point charts + large supply of points + bad location + low theming + sales restrictions + huge transport variable = only decent numbers with no competing resorts in the best economy in decades and strong incentives
...
But, Disney gave themselves an out if this failed miserably, which leads me to believe they went in with lower than normal expectations for sales and were willing to gamble.
...
Well, profit can be boosted through this program in the long run, as they will buy buy much cheaper with the ROFR purchases. That is "easy" hidden profit that requires no work. They just take it out of the seller's pocket, so to speak.
I also wonder if, rather than "selling" an upgrade to resale points, they just start buying up all of the resale properties with the ROFR and make us buy direct for the unrestricted points.
It is funny to me how current Riv owners on the board want the sales to be great; they'd rather validate their own purchase than have poor sales, despite the fact that poor sales might force disney to lift the restrictions, which in turn would increase the value of their purchase.
If I was a current owner I'd be hoping for poor sales but I apparently know nothing.
I am done with dvc now as a buyer. I can't support a company that has created a good product and then consistently made it worse while charging more. I've never experienced such a thing in my life; they actively want what you own to be worthless so they have the control to squeeze a few more dollars out of you.
Congrats to Disney they need the money more than the individual buyer; hard times for them.
I think DVC sales could be in trouble.
According to the DVC News articles published every month, from July to November (I think Copper Creek sales began to wind down in June?) sales declined from the previous year by double digit numbers. Every single month.
In the great fanfare of RIV being opened in December, it understandably had a good month, and DVC sales were up over 4%.
But DVC sales in January 2020 were again 12.9% down on January 2019.
So in 7 months, apart from a modest rise in December, sales are down double digits for 7 months.
I don’t have access to cost, and margin though so not clear if margins are up or down.
I read Riviera sold a lot of points compared to other resorts in their first year, but it went on sale March and by July Copper Creek was winding down with 54000 points sales. By August Copper Creek was down to 28,000 and September only 17,000 Copper Creek were sold and DVC News reported that generally DVC sales were now slowing. This coincides basically with Copper Creek selling out. The year on year monthly decline of double digits directly coordinated with Copper Creek running down from June and Riviera taking its place.
Compare how Riviera has had so few competing ‘new’ points at an alternative resort available in its first year to Copper Creek which also went on sale in March - but this time March 2017. In August 2017 a huge 114000 points were still sold at the still available Poly, 93,000 in September at Poly, 83,000 in October at Poly, 85,000 at Poly in November, 68,000 in December at Poly and 103,000 in January 2018. It goes on. In other words for Copper Creek, and I haven’t looked but suspect Poly before it, huge numbers of new sales were going to competing legacy ‘new’ resorts whilst the brand new resort was in its first year of sale.
So buyers of Riviera have had less alternative choice, for longer. So if new sales on the face of it for Riviera were not looking strong, then something would be seriously wrong- it did not have the same competition for customers in its first year.
But as I say above, month on month sales compared to 12 months ago are significantly down.
I do not think we have yet seen how this story will play out.
Riviera is twice the size of CCV. Twice as many points. Time will work against RIV.
DVC wants capital projects on a time cycle. RIV needs to be selling well ahead of CCV or it will directly compete with Reflections unless they slow the launch or Reflections.
Nothing in these numbers makes me feel Disney is happy with RIV sales at this point.
it might be a “lets not panic” but its not a home run by any stretch and they know reflections is looming
Riviera is twice the size of CCV. Twice as many points. Time will work against RIV.
DVC wants capital projects on a time cycle. RIV needs to be selling well ahead of CCV or it will directly compete with Reflections unless they slow the launch or Reflections.
Nothing in these numbers makes me feel Disney is happy with RIV sales at this point.
it might be a “lets not panic” but its not a home run by any stretch and they know reflections is looming