I am not an investor in VAC. Will their stock go up or down, yes. Will they survive as a company, yes though the business model might look different. As a timeshare owner, I care about the timeshare management side.
When it comes to sales, you are what you are measured on. If you pay someone on profit, they don’t care about revenue. If you pay on revenue, you don’t care about profit. When it comes to timeshares, how happy or unhappy you are will depend on what you measure.
If I want to go on vacation I need to stay somewhere. Who cares about the factors that goes into hotel pricing. Who cares about the factors that go into how other timeshares increase their MF. I look at what it costs for a place to stay after using all the discount codes I can use, what amenities the place I stay has that I value, and where it is located relative to where I want to be. This is this criteria in mind, I make a decision. Cost is only one factor and how they get to this costs is a head scratcher to me on the importance.
When I go to,HHI, I can stay at Springhill Suits, Courtyard, Westin, Marriott Resort or Marriott Timeshare. From May through August and Christmas, the more costly timeshare wins hands down. Even with the increase in MF.
When I go to Aruba I have 5 choices on where to stay. The timeshare wins hands down even with the Club Dues. II membership account, MF increases, II trading fees, e-plus cast and upgrade fees. My siblings and our spouses are going to Florida the end of April for my Moms 95th for 4 nights. We are staying at a single hotel and not Beachfront Towers.
As far as the initial value of the timeshare, well I posted this before and it still holds true. I owned stock both MCI and Lehman Brothers. If my timeshare goes to zero, my family and I got a lot enjoyment from my timeshare then from those stocks. Also the lesson learned, if ever I lose confidence in MVCI management or I am unhappy, I will sell.