Depends on what's going on in the economy. China started waging a de facto currency war this week against the U.S. and much of the West.
It's going to savage Brazil in particular.
It's not a war of ambition, but desperation. China used inflated housing and building numbers to prop up its economic bubble and all bubbles pop. It looks like China is going to follow Japan into an outright liquidity trap.
That will leave the dollar strong and King. Except that's not a good thing. Deflation (a strengthening dollar where a dollar is worth more but nobody has any) is always a scarier monster than inflation (everybody has dollars but they don't buy as much).
It looks like there's going to be deflation in the short term. This is why the government has been printing dollars like crazy, to avoid deflation. Those dollars just aren't circulating like they should.
If you multiple 6x2, that's 12, a higher number. 6 is the number of dollars and 2 is his often they circulate. Want more dollars in circulation? Print two more and now 8x2 is 16. Now you printed 2 dollars but there is the equivalent of 4 more dollars changing hands.
But what happens when the circulation rate falls below 1? 6 x 0.8= 4.8. Now print two more dollars and 8 x 0.8 = 6.4. For two more dollars, you get only 1.6 dollars in circulation. Do that at the macro level and the more you print the more printing money has a paradoxical effect on what you want to achieve: a liquidity trap.
China devaluing its currency three days in a row could spark a printing war that tips multiple nations into the trap.
This is why if you're Canadian or British, it's suddenly a lot more expensive to travel to the U.S. This move has been going on for 6-8 months. China has thrown its hands up and waved the white flag on currency. The move to a stronger dollar might become a stampede.
My point is if that happens, dollars will be very hard to come by and spending those precious dollars on timeshares might be increasingly difficult over the next year or two.
You ask if the value is going up in the near term. If the economy stays the same, it's going to keep going sky high. With no waitlist avail, VGF is no longer tied to direct prices and resale could very well go higher.
IF the economy stays the same.
Really, the real question is - will the economy stay the same? If you could guess that correctly, you could make a fortune.