I just went to the DAE Live website. I checked availability for all of 2007. It appears that someone has figured out that they could dump all of their bad inventory into DAE and pluck out anything of value.
Check out how much availability there is for Silver Lakes Vacation Club. I don't know anything about that resort, but I doubt its equivalent to the Maui Ocean Club.
As those units expire without anyone exchanging for them, the exchange credit imbalance will mount. In other words, an exchange credit will be due the depositer, but there will be no unit in the system matching that deposit.
What makes it worse is that DAE is stuck on the archaic principle that they can only rent to timeshare owners. Well, that significantly restricts the market for those dogs weeks and so they will not even be able to rent many of them so that they could rent something else to insert it back into the system to help relieve their exchange deficit.
Worse yet, deposit credits are good for 3 years. So, in any 3 year window, there could be a huge exchange credit deficit vs. deposits available.
It is possible that DAE has developers who will deposit weeks into their system for free. If they do, that will help reduce the exchange deficit. I wish DAE would publish their exchange credit/deficit balance sheet. That will tell us the health of their exchange system. Until then, I will continue to assume that that system is a ticking timebomb for timeshare exchangers.
I don't buy the argument that they have a request list that works effectively. I'm sure it works early on, but as time goes on and as there are tons of requests for the best resorts based on deposits made long ago, it will become impossible to get anything decent.
Why would anyone put anything decent into DAE? Time will tell if the DAE business model can continue to succeed.
Check out how much availability there is for Silver Lakes Vacation Club. I don't know anything about that resort, but I doubt its equivalent to the Maui Ocean Club.
As those units expire without anyone exchanging for them, the exchange credit imbalance will mount. In other words, an exchange credit will be due the depositer, but there will be no unit in the system matching that deposit.
What makes it worse is that DAE is stuck on the archaic principle that they can only rent to timeshare owners. Well, that significantly restricts the market for those dogs weeks and so they will not even be able to rent many of them so that they could rent something else to insert it back into the system to help relieve their exchange deficit.
Worse yet, deposit credits are good for 3 years. So, in any 3 year window, there could be a huge exchange credit deficit vs. deposits available.
It is possible that DAE has developers who will deposit weeks into their system for free. If they do, that will help reduce the exchange deficit. I wish DAE would publish their exchange credit/deficit balance sheet. That will tell us the health of their exchange system. Until then, I will continue to assume that that system is a ticking timebomb for timeshare exchangers.
I don't buy the argument that they have a request list that works effectively. I'm sure it works early on, but as time goes on and as there are tons of requests for the best resorts based on deposits made long ago, it will become impossible to get anything decent.
Why would anyone put anything decent into DAE? Time will tell if the DAE business model can continue to succeed.
Comment