Chili327
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2023
- Messages
- 4,362
Not sure i agree with that. lolDisney will most likely foot the bill.
Not sure i agree with that. lolDisney will most likely foot the bill.
It's a cost of doing business. Similar to paying for wages, insurance, benefits, marketing etc.Not sure i agree with that. lol
Being able to sell isn't the problem (i mean there will always be buyers), the price may be lower if the market dictates that, but people will only be giving them away when the rental market is higher than the dues or when dues are just too high in general. SSR, OKW, etc will always have owners that are willing to stay there, so I think its different.I don’t think VB is much higher risk than buying one of the large SAP resorts, SSR, OKW, AKV. If something comes along that upsets the resale market, these might have the biggest hit on salvage value compared to purchase price. There’s just so many of those points. If demand took a serious hit there’d be a real struggle with owners competing to sell
Yes, but if someone is under contract why would Disney take it from them (pay to rofr) when they are under contract to pay those dues. Now if people just let them get repo'd that maybe true, Disney is probably happy to take them for free & use the points for rental.It's a cost of doing business. Similar to paying for wages, insurance, benefits, marketing etc.
If Disney has to buy back all of the contracts to keep them from becoming worthless, then they’re worthless.DVD has a brand to maintain for future years with their new premium product. I do think eventually it will no longer make sense to ROFR these contracts, but it will be much closer to the end of the contract (maybe 8 years from now).
While VB is not a parks hotel, Disney will do whatever they deem reasonable to drive revenue for parks (at least until other business units increase margins). DVD is a great way for them to generate additional mandatory revenue for parks, as it forces people to spend their points on disney hotels. They must have a general knowledge of average attendance and expenditures for DVC owners over the life of the contract.
These contracts are worth more in their eyes than just the sunk real estate cost. There's additional revenue Disney earns and retains from higher income earners spending time and money in the disney ecosystem.
A good example of this outside of disney is to look at caterpillar. They've significantly increased revenues per sale through offering customer value agreements.
In a vacuum, they typically would want to purchase when the cash rental values exceed acquisition costs for the contract. We forget the two items below (and many other criteria unknown to us) when analyzing contract values:
The contract value is comprised of hotel cash values and service value add (what amount is spent by customers on an average basis during each stay).
Disney still sets pricing for these hotels. Rental values are derived from the pricing strategy held by disney. Theory would suggest there will always be a market for renting points, as disney will do whatever they can to avoid renting at a loss. I would anticipate a squeeze on further. Increases where possible in the future, as they still need the hotel to be profitable.
The third unknown that I'm not sure how they would calculate is the goodwill value for their brand. If the resale market is a benefit for maintaining higher direct sales (I would argue this is probably not the case), the value of VB would have some arbitrary value assigned for goodwill as well.
I agree with you on Disney not caring about resale value. I think the challenge for them lies in vacancy rates. They need to maintain a certain value for each nightly rental. Their pricing model is based on simple economic principles of supply and demand.Anyone who thinks Disney uses ROFR to prop up resale values is fooling themselves. Disney uses ROFR for one reason and one reason only: to obtain inventory that they (a) do not have to bid competitively for and (b) can turn around and sell back to someone else.
If they cared about resale value, they would not have spent the last many years doing everything they could think of to devalue resales--up to and including selling restricted resorts.
If they wanted to hold inventory for rental purposes, they'd've built hotels---you know, things with rooms they rent out---not timeshares.
Edited to add: I do suspect they would take inventory back, but it will be at below market rates, as they have been doing for years in dribs and drabs. And if VB is selling for $0 on the open market, you plausibly would have to pay Disney to get them to take it back.
... with David’s or DVC Rental Store, you’re only going to get $14-$16 per point.
If you can’t rent out your points for enough to cover dues, is there any value left? This seems very likely to happen in the next 5 years.
I think you're confusing hotels with DVC... As DVC we don't pay anything when we stay whether we go or not, so there is no "vacant room" issue, they just get sucked up at 7 months from other DVC members. And whoever signed the contracts keeps paying the dues.I agree with you on Disney not caring about resale value. I think the challenge for them lies in vacancy rates. They need to maintain a certain value for each nightly rental. Their pricing model is based on simple economic principles of supply and demand.
If their cash rooms lay vacant at 20%, the operating expenses need to be distributed amongst all the occupied rooms. I'm curious how this would be modeled in if they pulled all inventory.
I agree that they would prefer to acquire worthless, but I'm wondering how likely that would be, seeing as nightly rates should continue to climb. It may be more dependent on what was described above where the maintenance fees exceed the nightly rental rate.
Where did you get this info?Disney can't even rent out all of its own hotel rooms most of the time
Owning DVC is a very expensive way of "having control of the reservation." When you're in the unit, it feels exactly the same if you own it or you're renting.Renting points is not the equivalent to owning because you don’t have control of the reservation.
Every time I see the "rooms available tonight" signs.Where did you get this info?
Where do you see that.. on the DVC side or Disney hotel side?Every time I see the "rooms available tonight" signs.
Vero is probably the one that gets there first. That still doesn't mean Vero will be worthless--as long as there is a gap between owning it and using it.
Currently DVC rental store has different rates for every resort and David’s pays out (and charges) a lower rate for SSR, VB, HHI, and OKW.
The thing is that within 7 months, when (virtually) all points are the same, they all pay their lowest rate and they all charge less too. So VB’s rate is tied to WDW at that point. And before that point, the fact that DVC rental store and David’s are already charging their lowest rates tells me the demand isn’t there for them to charge more. Or they would.