Brad Bishop
Well-Known Member
Yes Disney could sell a unused room at the Poly for $99 but because Disney is all about financial engineering these days they would rather report an illusory 'loss' on the unsold room which can be used to manipulate the taxes than record a small profit on the room.
Maybe.
I don't know about the inner-workings of Disney so this is a bit of guesswork but...
A normal hotel/motel can only sell that room that night. If you walk into a hotel, without a reservation (most people do reservations) you can dicker on the price and they'll have an idea of what the lowest price for that evening is and you're working down to that and they're, obviously, trying to keep you above that. Below that price it's not worth it. The thing is that they only get to sell that room for that night and then that "inventory" is lost.
For example, today it's June 24, 2016 @ 3PM. They later it gets into the evening the less likely it is that a hotel is going to sell a vacant room. If they don't sell it past a certain point, they'll never have the opportunity to sell that room on June 24, 2016 again. If it were toilet paper or some other item, they still have a chance to sell it tomorrow. That room expires tonight, though, in the sense that they can't make money off of it for June 24 past today.
Now, that low-dollar amount is basically where it's no longer worth it to them. They're actually better off with the room being empty than selling it to you.
That's your normal hotel.
For a resort like Disney, something else comes into play which is the perceived value (the economic guys can educate us on the correct terminology).
For example, say the Contemporary really can make a few dollars profit on selling a room at $100/night. The perception is $1000/night for a room, though. While they may be interested in having deals which take them down below $1000/night to fill the rooms, it's not in their best interest to dilute the high-dollar perception of their rooms/hotel unless they're REALLY hurting. Part of the value of their premium product is the perception that it's a premium product.
I think this is why I've heard that WDW just shutters sections of their resorts (they'll claim something like refurbishments) rather than sell lower, even though they'd still be making some money, rather than trying to attain the goal of maximum occupancy. I think part of it is the funny-financials as mentioned by @ford91explorer, but another part is the dilution of the perceived value of their property.
Part of those financials is taxes but I bet another part is that it's better to show the higher ups a higher $/night average on rooms than a smaller $/resort gain.
Just a guess on the WDW bits, though.