IMHO the dynamic that has changed timesharing the most and for the worst is RCI's development of a massive rental-to-the-public plan. It used to be that exclusivity was the glue that held the ownership / exchange model together. One had to own to participate. The rental program made it come unglued. It used to be that a blue week was sort of a starter week to get one's feet wet in the system and that helped give the lesser weeks value, contributing to the stability of the whole system. Since the rental program has started, it has led to owners questioning even ownership of red weeks.
RCI's rental program has led to the following:
1) allowed people to participate in timesharing on a rather wide scale without owning, without the continuing commitments, always at a cheaper price than retail developer purchase and often at a cheaper price than even resale purchase. This lead people to ask the question ''why own when you can rent?''
2) flooded the market with rental inventory, driving down rental prices, including the price individual timeshare owners or HOA's could get for renting their own weeks
3) took inventory out of the exchange pool, including prime inventory, making good exchanges harder to get and causing frustration with the exchange system.
4) for all of the above reasons, hurt resale prices, contributing significantly to the downward spiral of such prices. It also caused more people to want to get out of timesharing, putting more resale inventory on the market, further contributing to that downward spiral.
RCI's creation of its exchange program is what really led to timesharing taking off, but their creation of a rental program may lead to timesharing's demise.
RCI's rental program has led to the following:
1) allowed people to participate in timesharing on a rather wide scale without owning, without the continuing commitments, always at a cheaper price than retail developer purchase and often at a cheaper price than even resale purchase. This lead people to ask the question ''why own when you can rent?''
2) flooded the market with rental inventory, driving down rental prices, including the price individual timeshare owners or HOA's could get for renting their own weeks
3) took inventory out of the exchange pool, including prime inventory, making good exchanges harder to get and causing frustration with the exchange system.
4) for all of the above reasons, hurt resale prices, contributing significantly to the downward spiral of such prices. It also caused more people to want to get out of timesharing, putting more resale inventory on the market, further contributing to that downward spiral.
RCI's creation of its exchange program is what really led to timesharing taking off, but their creation of a rental program may lead to timesharing's demise.
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