MargaretMary
Soarin' to the BoardWalk... I wish...
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2004
- Messages
- 57
Could someone outline the pros and cons of buying from Disney vs. a resale?
Thanks!
Margaret Mary
Thanks!
Margaret Mary
For comparisons, here is what my final contract is looking like(signing all paperwork this weekend). 150 points, I paid closing and MF's, ended up being $78 per point. I do have 110 points for 2004, which I could rent out(similar to forfeiting above) which would net $1100 thus bringing my cost down to $71 per point.Disney is currently offering a $10 per point discount on SSR Phase 2 without forfeiting any points, so you figure with that savings you're paying $85 per point, which compared to the resales + closing costs is a pretty good deal for an extra 12 years of use.
But isn't part of the point of DVC to save money over a long period of time while others are paying inflating room rates?Remenber, you're paying that extra money for something you won't use for 38 years!
Originally posted by carlos1117
Rick,
If you use the "Rule of Seven", as commom investment tool, you're money is suppose to double every 7 years, so if you took that 1500 in seven years it would be 3000, in fourteen 6000, in twenty-one 12,000, in twenty-eight 24,000, in thirty-five, 48,000.
So now take 48000 and divide by 12years = 4000.00 per vacation for accomodations. So, all in all, it may not be a bad deal, but you still have to wait 38 years to benefit.
MyDogDrew, having a lot of banked points with the contracts we purchased was a BIG selling factor for us as well! That's something you will NEVER get when buying through Disney. We are going to WDW twice later this year (2 BR in Oct, 1 BR in December, weekends included), almost all on banked points. Since I will be too old to care much about what happens in 2042, I'd rather have that "instant gratification" of "free" vacations!!Originally posted by mydogdrew
We just bought a resale with 2002-2004 points intact. We are renting these and will use begining with 2005.
If you use the "Rule of Seven", as commom investment tool, you're money is suppose to double every 7 years, so if you took that 1500 in seven years it would be 3000, in fourteen 6000, in twenty-one 12,000, in twenty-eight 24,000, in thirty-five, 48,000.
MyDogDrew, having a lot of banked points with the contracts we purchased was a BIG selling factor for us as well! That's something you will NEVER get when buying through Disney.
Funny, I did a Google search, and didn't find a "Rule of Seven", and as an MBA, I'd never heard of it.... (I did find Seven of Nine, but that's a different forumOriginally posted by carlos1117
Rick,
If you use the "Rule of Seven", as commom investment tool, you're money is suppose to double every 7 years, [...]
Originally posted by carlos1117
Rick,
If you use the "Rule of Seven", as commom investment tool, you're money is suppose to double every 7 years, so if you took that 1500 in seven years it would be 3000, in fourteen 6000, in twenty-one 12,000, in twenty-eight 24,000, in thirty-five, 48,000.
So now take 48000 and divide by 12years = 4000.00 per vacation for accomodations. So, all in all, it may not be a bad deal, but you still have to wait 38 years to benefit.
Yeah, I had to do all that "Net Present Value" and "Discounted Cash Flow" stuff.Originally posted by erikthewise
The "12 more years" factor should be viewed through the lens of a present-value calculation. Just as getting a million dollars in 2042 is not the same as getting a million dollars today, 12 years starting in 2042 is only worth 2-4 years right now.