With my dealings at The Timeshare Store, Inc.® I have come across many people that will price a property at a price so they can sell it even if it requires them to bring THOUSANDS of dollars to the table.
I think silmarg is right on with this information:
I have yet to come across a buyer who is going to offer more for a property simply because we tell them the seller has a high mortgage and has to come out of pocket. The seller is pricing the property to sell and not based on what amount is owed on the mortgage in my opinion.
Jason
I don't expect a buyer to offer more for a property "simply because" the seller has a high mortgage. What I meant was why would a seller consider selling a DVC contract for THOUSANDS less than they owe, unless they are in dire straights? Why wouldn't you just keep it?
A seller can list a house worth $75k for $100k. But it will never sell.
The bottom line is if a seller is underwater (where the loan is in excess of the property value) they have a few tough choices. They can:
- stop paying the loan and let the property get foreclosed (ethics and credit rating not withstanding)
- sell the property for fair market value (even if that means taking cash out of pocket at closing to satisfy the loan)
- do nothing (this means keep paying the loan or list the property for sale at a price it will never sell for)
Not everyone selling is selling from the same standpoint. Some are underwater and hopeful for a buyer who will get them out from under. Others may have paid in full and just want to convert their DVC into cash or are going thru a divorce. This seller will likely price theirs more aggressively - shutting the former seller from ever getting a bite.
I have bid aggressively (below asking price) on several SSR contracts in recent months. Most every bid was accepted with no counter offer. I think there are many sellers who want out and will take any reasonable bid (my bids have been ROFRd by DVD). The market is flooded w resale contracts - Fidelity has almost 400 SSR contracts for sale - so its a buyers market (provided DVD does not ROFR them). In fact, there have been SSR contracts for sale in the mid to low $60s at Fidelity for more than a month and have not sold. Its crazy.
This is what I am talking about! Doesn't anyone else think that selling DVC contracts for this low of an amount undermines the value of DVC as a whole? Why would anyone pay $75-80 per point (which in my mind is still a great deal compared to original prices) when they can get it for $60 per point. All this does is drive down the overall value of DVC.
Silmarg is dead on...and while it is no comfort to Magicx2...that's just the facts of life. If you owe more than the property is worth you simply have some hard choices to make. A seller's bad financial decisions are not the problem of the buyer.
Not all sellers are selling because of bad financial decisions. I am in a situation where we don't HAVE to sell, but we would like to. Yes, I want to get what I owe out of my contract and I am willing to bring some money to the table. However, I am not willing to bring thousands of dollars to the table just to get it done. Honestly, if someone is in such bad financial straights that they HAVE to sell their DVC, how can they afford to bring that much out of pocket anyway?
Right -- the fact that you might still owe money on your loan is of no concern to any potential purchaser - it's business, not charity. It's sad for the seller, but that's life. If you price your resale to ensure that you recoup all your costs, it will most likely never sell.
I never said that it should be of concern to the buyer. It really is none of their business nor should they care. I don't want to recoup "all my costs", just what I owe. If I wanted to recoup all my costs I would have to price my points at $90....never going to happen.
My biggest gripe is that the prices seem to be set by the broker, not the seller. Why wouldn't a seller want to get the most out of their points that they possibly can? So why don't the broker's suggest to everyone that they list their points at $80 per point instead of $70? Yes, you will have the occasional person that wants to get a quick sell and might price a little lower, but why wouldn't you want to get the most out of it you can?
I know that park tickets and DVC are two entirely different things, however, when Disney raises their park ticket prices the visitors don't say "Well, I am going to Universal because their tickets are cheaper." They pay it and they go. Because if they are going to go they are going to pay no matter how much those tickets are. Same thing with DVC. If everyones asking price went up, they would still pay it. Because if they are truely looking to buy, they would buy whether the average price was $80 or $70.
Brokers suggesting such low prices are not limited to just one company. Every company has suggested a selling price under $75 pp. What if they all suggested $77? In fact I was told by two companies that they wouldn't take a listing OVER $75. Why not say we won't list anything UNDER $75. If BP, Shell and Marathon all offered gas at $2.50 a gallon even though last week you just paid $1.75 wouldn't you still pay the $2.50 a gallon?