Kickstart
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2017
- Messages
- 288
Exactly, in your example, over the course of two years you've paid a MF on each point used.... If you borrow all next year's points (in normal times), you don't pay $0 MF next year just because you have no points left to use. ..
The maintenance fee is per point. It doesn't matter that DVC charges you in January. In the end you're paying a MF on each point that you get, and each point has a real value which should not be pro-rated based when they were paid for. They should only be pro-rated based on remaining available "useable" value.
The accurate comparison is to another resale contract that has no remaining current use year points, not to a direct contract the DVC is able to sweeten with free or prorated points. For instance:
August UY $100 pp AKV 100 point contract - 0 2020, 100 2021, 100 2022
vs
August UY $100 pp AKV 100 point contract - 100 2020, 100 2021, 100 2022
Seems to me it makes sense for the buyer to pay MF's on the second contract as it has more value... 100 more points of value compared to the first. In fact, even with paying MF's the second contract is a better deal than the first, as you can easily rent those points for more than you paid in MF's. I just don't see the logic in the argument that it's unreasonable for the buyer to pay MF's in this situation, when it's a better deal than not getting the points in the first place.
EDIT: corrected some typos
Last edited: