Len, I have been thinking about this since you first raised it on the podcast last week. In my opinion, multiple signs seem to give the idea of a sale some legitimacy:
- The aforementioned financial stress placed upon TWDC and Bob Chapek's need to improve the balance sheet and free up cash for opportunistic investment (e.g., ESPN gaming, Disney+ content, etc.)
- The appointment of Bill Diercksen as GM of DVC. He has spent his entire career on the finance side of Disney and other businesses.
- The unprecedented increase in ROFR activity on the 2042 Old Key West contracts and the unsolicited buyback offers to DVC members of that property. If they are going to sell the portfolio, they will want to clean up the issue of dual expiration dates for that resort to allow for a more favorable valuation.
- Chapek's comments about expanding into sports betting at the recent investor conference. They clearly see this as a growth area and NBC's investment in PointsBet is an indication of how networks see opportunities in synergy with the gaming side around pro sports broadcasting.
DVC revenues are recognized as a one-time benefit when title transfers to the owner, so existing DVC contracts don't directly drive revenues in subsequent years, creating a need to continually build (and sell) new resorts to generate YOY revenue growth (or parity.) So, unlike the hotel properties, TWDC isn't seeing DVC operations as a profit center...it is a cost center (excepting transfers to inventory of unused DVC rooms that they rent out to generate incremental revenue.)
So, I can see a scenario where it makes strategic sense for Disney to sell the DVC portfolio with lease rights to Blackstone or another investment company, which would generate billions in revenue (much of the value having already been depreciated on the books) plus an ongoing annuity in the form of lease revenues. Disney already leases land/buildings to 9 hotels on property including the Swan & Dolphin and has managed to weave them into its amenity offerings (extra magic hours, transportation, etc.) to make them more attractive than off-property options.
At the end of the day, the decision may be to focus on what they are best at (booking rooms and vacation packages) and enter into performance agreements with resort operators like MGM that can manage the properties at agreed-upon service levels for the guests. The financial impact is clear: TWDC gets a one-time windfall for selling the resort properties and annual lease payments and commissions for selling unused inventory while removing the headache of operations management and risk of increased labor costs in future years. The investors get a portfolio of properties with annually-increasing dues revenues and predictable lease costs. The only folks with significant downside are the owners, who start to look a lot like traditional timeshare owners with ever-increasing dues and poorly maintained and operated properties.
I hope this isn't the path we are on, but it does not seem entirely crazy to me.