cmrdgrs
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2007
- Messages
- 957
that assumes that a dollar right now is worth no more to you than a dollar in 2030. or that a point in 2030 is no more valuable to you than a point right now.
Agree chalee94. I don't think anyone is saying that a dollar in 2014 will have the same value in 2030.
you might be paying $20 per pt in annual dues in 2040, but the thing you have to wrap your head around is that paying that much in 2040 is no more than paying $5 per pt in 2014. it looks like it if you put it in a spreadsheet (and implicitly assume you are dealing with constant dollars), but it's not the case.
Again in agreement. Dollars do not have constant "value" through the years.
i would like to borrow from people who don't understand the time value of money...you could loan me $10,000 right now and in 15 years, i will cheerfully return your $10,000 in full. $10,000 = $10,000 and we are all square. except that when i put it in those terms, you start thinking i would have to give you more money down the road to make it worthwhile for you to give up that money right now.
DVC is expensive upfront and down the road. but you should have a natural understanding that every dollar that it costs you upfront hurts worse than several dollars will in 20 years.
DVC is expensive. Investing in DVC is a gamble, maybe most don't buy in with that understanding, but it is. Maybe I will and maybe I won't get my future value out of what is spent buying today.
I could take the money I spent on my upfront cost at DVC and go to Vegas. I might win and I might lose. I could take my money and put it in the stock market. I might win and I might lose. If I look at my own scenario of when I bought, I could have taken all the money I spent on DVC between 2006 - 2009 and bought a small house. Today, that house would not be worth more than I paid for it, and neither is my DVC if I sold it.
But, DVC isn't an investment. To your point I am using today's dollars and prepaying for something that will be more expensive in the future. I'm not sure, but aren't we really agreeing in the end?