Winning the Lottery
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@scottalanmiller said:
If you take the lump sum vs. the payout let's show some math....
- The taxes are about the same because they are at the max. So no tax advantage to the long term pay off.
- One allows you to invest, the other steals your money through inflation (unless you believe that there will be deflation over 20 years which has never happened in history but hey, if you are the betting kind...)
So let's way you get $20m after taxes. That's one $20m payoff or 20 $1m payoffs.
The lump goes straight into investments and ears roughly $2m a year in interest. In the FIRST YEAR you are making more in interest on the money than the annual payoff will be. You earn an extra $1 after the first year ALONE.
Going into the second year, assuming both are investing, the lump person has $22m and the other has $1m. The year end revenue will be $2.2m vs .1m. The person with the lump sum is actually accelerating in revenue versus the person taking the long term payoff.
It would be estimated that by the time that the payoff of $20m was completed, the lump person could have $80m or so, in the bank.
That's assuming you use a managed company like Vanguard to handle your money. But your average Joe isn't going to be thinking about that right away. I personally would take the lump sum and invest most of it.
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@dafyre said:
@scottalanmiller said:
If you take the lump sum vs. the payout let's show some math....
- The taxes are about the same because they are at the max. So no tax advantage to the long term pay off.
- One allows you to invest, the other steals your money through inflation (unless you believe that there will be deflation over 20 years which has never happened in history but hey, if you are the betting kind...)
So let's way you get $20m after taxes. That's one $20m payoff or 20 $1m payoffs.
The lump goes straight into investments and ears roughly $2m a year in interest. In the FIRST YEAR you are making more in interest on the money than the annual payoff will be. You earn an extra $1 after the first year ALONE.
Going into the second year, assuming both are investing, the lump person has $22m and the other has $1m. The year end revenue will be $2.2m vs .1m. The person with the lump sum is actually accelerating in revenue versus the person taking the long term payoff.
It would be estimated that by the time that the payoff of $20m was completed, the lump person could have $80m or so, in the bank.
That's assuming you use a managed company like Vanguard to handle your money. But your average Joe isn't going to be thinking about that right away. I personally would take the lump sum and invest most of it.
As long as you don't do any of the things those 10 giant losers did, you're probably better off. I'd try to diversify. I wouldn't want too much of my money in 1 area. Might even put a few million into bitcoin and see what happens.
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@dafyre said:
That's assuming you use a managed company like Vanguard to handle your money. But your average Joe isn't going to be thinking about that right away. I personally would take the lump sum and invest most of it.
You have to assume that they won't set it on fire. If their goal is to waste it, then both options are equally bad. Only the lump has the benefit of good options. Once you assume the worst then the lump becomes better again, because you would be assume that "that's only if the person taking the long term payout doesn't take a forward loan against it at predatory rates." We can always make up ways for people to have set the money on fire... the question is which provides the most benefit and the answer always comes out to be the lump - whether the person desires to invest or desires to party, the lump enables it better in both cases.
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@quicky2g said:
As long as you don't do any of the things those 10 giant losers did, you're probably better off. I'd try to diversify. I wouldn't want too much of my money in 1 area. Might even put a few million into bitcoin and see what happens.
$10m isn't really enough to start talking about diversification. $500m, sure. But diversification is generally just a financially unsavvy term for "bad investing." When most people talk about diversification they mean some stocks, some bonds, some weird stuff like lotto tickets or the horses.... but when financial people say it they mean "some blue chip, some financials, some venture capital, some emerging markets." They don't mean going to bad investments, but that's what diversification means to common folk.
Some things, like bonds, are essentially guaranteed to be bad investments. That's not diversification, it's just throwing money away.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@dafyre said:
That's assuming you use a managed company like Vanguard to handle your money. But your average Joe isn't going to be thinking about that right away. I personally would take the lump sum and invest most of it.
You have to assume that they won't set it on fire. If their goal is to waste it, then both options are equally bad. Only the lump has the benefit of good options. Once you assume the worst then the lump becomes better again, because you would be assume that "that's only if the person taking the long term payout doesn't take a forward loan against it at predatory rates." We can always make up ways for people to have set the money on fire... the question is which provides the most benefit and the answer always comes out to be the lump - whether the person desires to invest or desires to party, the lump enables it better in both cases.
Bigger pile of drugs and bigger bottles of booze
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@quicky2g said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@dafyre said:
That's assuming you use a managed company like Vanguard to handle your money. But your average Joe isn't going to be thinking about that right away. I personally would take the lump sum and invest most of it.
You have to assume that they won't set it on fire. If their goal is to waste it, then both options are equally bad. Only the lump has the benefit of good options. Once you assume the worst then the lump becomes better again, because you would be assume that "that's only if the person taking the long term payout doesn't take a forward loan against it at predatory rates." We can always make up ways for people to have set the money on fire... the question is which provides the most benefit and the answer always comes out to be the lump - whether the person desires to invest or desires to party, the lump enables it better in both cases.
Bigger pile of drugs and bigger bottles of booze
I think that one qualifies as helping you to wind up on that list of 10, lol.
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Wow Dan Bilzerian bought $100k worth of Powerball tickets. See here. 1 of the winning tickets is near where he lives.
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@scottalanmiller said:
If you take the lump sum vs. the payout let's show some math....
- The taxes are about the same because they are at the max. So no tax advantage to the long term pay off.
- One allows you to invest, the other steals your money through inflation (unless you believe that there will be deflation over 20 years which has never happened in history but hey, if you are the betting kind...)
So let's way you get $20m after taxes. That's one $20m payoff or 20 $1m payoffs.
The lump goes straight into investments and ears roughly $2m a year in interest. In the FIRST YEAR you are making more in interest on the money than the annual payoff will be. You earn an extra $1 after the first year ALONE.
Going into the second year, assuming both are investing, the lump person has $22m and the other has $1m. The year end revenue will be $2.2m vs .1m. The person with the lump sum is actually accelerating in revenue versus the person taking the long term payoff.
It would be estimated that by the time that the payoff of $20m was completed, the lump person could have $80m or so, in the bank.
I hope you do not claim any kind of accounting knowledge, because that is a load of crap.
- The raw taxes may balance out to be similar, yes. But you get taxed again on the investment income when you invest that lump sum. So it raises the effect tax rate again.
- You are assuming that the lump sum is continually reinvested while the payout is not.
- A $2 million yearly return on $20 million is a 10% return. That is a crazy number to expect with typical low risk investing.
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Now, it is true that the best advice is always to take the lump sum. Investing smartly, you should always come out ahead of the annuity plans.
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@JaredBusch said:
Now, it is true that the best advice is always to take the lump sum. Investing smartly, you should always come out ahead of the annuity plans.
Mark Cuban's advice from the link @dafyre posted was to NOT take the lump sum but seems like he's giving that advice assuming we're all dumb asses that will buy 2 mansions, 3 boats, a pile of drugs, 20 cars and an IHOP and cross our fingers we can live off IHOP profits for the rest of our lives.
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@quicky2g said:
@JaredBusch said:
Now, it is true that the best advice is always to take the lump sum. Investing smartly, you should always come out ahead of the annuity plans.
Mark Cuban's advice from the link @dafyre posted was to NOT take the lump sum but seems like he's giving that advice assuming we're all dumb asses that will buy 2 mansions, 3 boats, a pile of drugs, 20 cars and an IHOP and cross our fingers we can live off IHOP profits for the rest of our lives.
Well most of 'Murica should probably take that advice.
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@quicky2g said:
@JaredBusch said:
Now, it is true that the best advice is always to take the lump sum. Investing smartly, you should always come out ahead of the annuity plans.
Mark Cuban's advice from the link @dafyre posted was to NOT take the lump sum but seems like he's giving that advice assuming we're all dumb asses that will buy 2 mansions, 3 boats, a pile of drugs, 20 cars and an IHOP and cross our fingers we can live off IHOP profits for the rest of our lives.
The problem with assumed bad advice is that you assume someone will take your advice on the lump but not on the investing. It's a fundamentally flawed logical stance. If you are giving advice, you should give good advice. Not give bad advice in the hopes that you gave just enough wrong that they will screw up and fix things by not listening to you.
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I long ago devised a plan that might or might not work... Of course it's a moot point since I never win.
Set up trusts for the kids, trust to live off, account for whatever expenses, retirement (as I won't get to retire till about 8 years after I"m cremated), fund to work on paying off any debt (like the house). look at building another house,...
I'd keep working. I like those I work with to much. Maybe sub-hire someone so I can take a weekend off here or there.....Like now when I'm hearing a load of stomping and screaming from upstairs - my guess is someone is playing XBox...
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My plan would be to invest it all, wait a year, then start living off of a good chunk of the annual dividends. Always with some going back in for growth so that it is always more each year, even if only a little more. That way you are always gaining, no matter what.
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@scottalanmiller said:
My plan would be to invest it all, wait a year, then start living off of a good chunk of the annual dividends. Always with some going back in for growth so that it is always more each year, even if only a little more. That way you are always gaining, no matter what.
That is my basic plan for any lump sum of money I ever happen to get. I would add pay off all debt first though, otherwise the dividends are will not accumulate as quickly since you will need to use more of them.
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@JaredBusch said:
@scottalanmiller said:
My plan would be to invest it all, wait a year, then start living off of a good chunk of the annual dividends. Always with some going back in for growth so that it is always more each year, even if only a little more. That way you are always gaining, no matter what.
That is my basic plan for any lump sum of money I ever happen to get. I would add pay off all debt first though, otherwise the dividends are will not accumulate as quickly since you will need to use more of them.
Well yes, I'm assuming my current debts are a trivial amount compared to the lump sum. I'd have a big celebratory dinner too. Buy a few extra Steam games. but nothing that you'd notice.
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@JaredBusch said:
@scottalanmiller said:
My plan would be to invest it all, wait a year, then start living off of a good chunk of the annual dividends. Always with some going back in for growth so that it is always more each year, even if only a little more. That way you are always gaining, no matter what.
That is my basic plan for any lump sum of money I ever happen to get. I would add pay off all debt first though, otherwise the dividends are will not accumulate as quickly since you will need to use more of them.
So, I guess it would work out like this.
- Find a good lawyer and financial consultant that I will trust.
- Use step 1 resources to create a trust(s) to contain all the funds.
- Put all of said money into ownership of the trust.
- Withdraw enough to pay off debt (car is all I have now, but planning on a house this spring)
- Invest the rest of the money into various funds recommended by person from step 1.
- Continue life as normal until dividends start coming in.
- Decide what to do with said dividends the first year and reinvest as much as possible.
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$5mil CDN (we do not pay tax on winnings)
Take out 1mil, purchase land / house / vehicles / vacation. Get it out of my system.
Invest 4mil, live comfortably on the interest (5% return gets you 200k/yr which is $100k/yr after tax. Very comfy)
$5mil - 50mil
As above, but invest 40mil.
Take 9mil and create scholarships, fully funded soup kitchens, library for kids who don't read gooder, maker spaces. That kinda thing.
Pay for all the school my 3 close friends have taken - books, tuition, all of it.
Setup scholarships for my 3 close friends kids (2 each) if they should have any. If unused it returns to the community scholarship funds.