One Billion Mega Dollar Questions:

80 Proof

Well-known member
Jan 3, 2003
64,596
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I’m sorry why can’t you invest if you’re taking it in annual payments again?
You can, but it won't be worth as much. You could probably take the lump sum, invest in annuities and do better in the long run than taking the payment option (which is just an annuity the government takes a cut from).
 

BlueRaider22

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Sep 24, 2003
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Now that is another option I have always wondered about. Would also definitely have on a disguise and/or mask at the winners photo shoot......LOL

You'd have a month or two to grow your hair and beard out.

Though, I'd be too tempted to get crazy with the disguise and name........then it'd backfire. I'd choose something crazy and it'd make the news, "We're live with LEX18 and we're about to meet the winners of the $1.02 billion dollar prize. In the Hawaiian shirt and kilt we have Crapbag and his wife Princess Consuela Bananahammock....."
 

ukalum01

Well-known member
Apr 29, 2002
18,066
3,227
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1. Lump (and it ain't close)
2. Yes, I'm quitting. If you're working for someone else and you're honest with yourself, having a $325,000,000 liquid net worth greatly reduces the desirability of hopping on that Monday morning Teams meeting.
3. I would definitely keep a place in the area but I've never seen myself staying here later in life so I'd set up a homestead somewhere else.
4. Of course.
5. I would hope that I would be past the "buy crazy ish" part of life. Take care of family and close friends, college funds for a bunch of kids, try to do as much good as possible, etc.
 

CAT Scratch FVR

Well-known member
Sep 4, 2004
5,737
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As never having won, if I won, am I allowed to say I want $300 million and the remainder is to be divided among family and friends and charity in increments of my choosing?
1. Lump sum- time value of money (Bobby Bonilla deal was not really a good deal for Bobby)
2. Yes, quitting
3. Would get a second home
4. Ideally, bulk of giving would be right off the top if allowed per my initial question.
5. Crazy, always thought of million in mad money for me, million for the missus, to be spent on whatever we choose, mine would would probably be spent on bringing friends on extravagant golf trips. Europe, Australia, New Zealand, all the No Laying Up series stuff.
 

ukalumni00

Well-known member
Jun 22, 2005
23,096
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1. Lump sum because I trust my ability to invest wisely and not spend like a freak.
2. I would work a bit longer only because I like the people I work with and do not want to put them in a bad position plus keep as much suspicion out of the mix as possible. Once I get everything taken care of with the lawyers and accountants I would make up a new job I am taking and immediately go to Bora Bora or some other high end tropic place to vacation.
3. Sell my current house and go buy a few homes in areas I can frequent during certain times of the year.
4. Absolutely. Animal shelters and St Jude come to mind
5. Luckily have lived a comfortable life the past 10+ years so not a strong desire to go make a bunch of crazy purchases. Def get a really nice wake boat to go with the new lake house. Get a membership at several nice golf clubs and play golf as much as possible. Take care of family I like and the few friends who I have stayed close with over the years.
 
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GrandePdre

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Jan 21, 2008
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A. Would you take it all at once, or take the 30 year income stream?

B. Would you quit your job?

C. Would you move to another location?

D. Would you donate to charities and other worthy causes?

E. Name some crazy "ish" you would do with it?
A- All at one time.
B- Yes. The job I have and the unwanted attention it would bring to my workplace would be a huge distraction to the company.
C- I would likely add a secondary or tertiary residence to my new home in Central Kentucky. Maybe Florida and Hawaii.
D- Absolutely. I'd love to be my own Make-A-Wish guy.
E- Off the top of my mind, I'd probably do Vegas in a whole new, baller way. I'd do some research to determine the best overwater bungalow between the Maldives, Tahiti/Bora Bora, Fiji, and SE Asia.
 

tWildcat

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Mar 12, 2011
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A. All at once
B. My current one, yes, but I’d find something that I like doing
C. No, I like where I live
D. Yes
E. Not really sure, but I’d for sure go to every UK football bowl game and each SECT/March Madness game each year for basketball
 

JDHoss

Well-known member
Jan 1, 2003
16,412
39,811
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A - Lump sum

B - Already retired

C - No, but I'd buy one (or more) places somewhere in the tropics, but out of the hurricane/cyclone belt and Seychelles/Maldives come to mind.

D - Yes, absolutely. Food banks, Habitat for Humanity, homelessness projects and youth projects for underprivileged kids.

E - Trip to the edge of space might be on the list. Do a metric **** ton of traveling.
 

TortElvisII

Active member
May 7, 2010
51,232
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A - Lump sum

B - Already retired

C - No, but I'd buy one (or more) places somewhere in the tropics, but out of the hurricane/cyclone belt and Seychelles/Maldives come to mind.

D - Yes, absolutely. Food banks, Habitat for Humanity, homelessness projects and youth projects for underprivileged kids.

E - Trip to the edge of space might be on the list. Do a metric **** ton of traveling.
I figured you to be most likely to go Jack Whittaker (RIP). I am joking but check out Jack.


He then purchased a Lamborghini and drove it through his neighborhood throwing cash.[6][8]

On August 5, 2003, less than a year after Whittaker won the lottery, thieves broke into his car while it was parked at a strip club in Cross Lanes, West Virginia. The thieves made away with $545,000 in cash that Whittaker carried around in a suitcase.[9] When asked why he would carry that much money around with him, Whittaker responded, "Because I can." In another incident, two employees at the club, the general manager and a dancer-manager who were romantically linked, were arrested and charged with a plot to put drugs in Whittaker's drinks and then rob him.[8] On January 25, 2004, thieves once again broke into his car, this time making off with an estimated $200,000 in cash, but this was later recovered.[10]

This guy won on Christmas. He had lots of bling on.
 

gamecockcat

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First, if you won that much, there is NO way you could blow through that amount of dough. Invest in 10-year Treasuries at 3% and your annual INCOME would be $9 million+. Pretty damn hard to 'blow' through all $380M no matter how hard you try.

Second, as others have said, TVM is a *****. A dollar 25 years in the future isn't worth nearly as much as a dollar today (especially at 9% inflation). Add in higher income taxes, possible 'annual wealth tax', higher estate taxes, etc. Take the cash today and figure it out.

A. Would you take it all at once, or take the 30 year income stream? Already answered - all at once

B. Would you quit your job? Without a doubt and I really like my job. But there's a whole bunch of the world I'd like to see while I'm still in really good physical shape.

C. Would you move to another location? Live in CO - would depend on where my kids end up (one in Denver, one in Boston). I want to be near at least one of them. Would not buy another home. With that kind of dough, I can rent anyplace I want for any amount of time and not have the hassle of taxes, upkeep, security, etc.

D. Would you donate to charities and other worthy causes? Of course - after setting up my kids with a trust for the max gift tax exemption (~$12 million/person). Gary Sinise Foundation and St. Jude's have been the recipient of our larger donations annually. Local food banks, homeless shelters, animal rescue and, most likely, ALS Foundation. I would definitely set up charitable foundation and have my kids help me run it.

E. Name some crazy "ish" you would do with it? I'd definitely have a lot more guitars and a nice recording setup in my home so, whenever the Muse strikes, I've got the ability to record stuff. I'd take a lot of tennis lessons as I'm getting frustrated with the level I'm at. I'd take the family on a lot more vacations. Australia/New Zealand for a month or more would be #1 then Italy/Spain/Austria/Switzerland. Honestly, I'd have a hard time spending just the income from a lump sum like that. Spending $100k a month seems like fantasyland to me so spending 7X that amount EVERY month seems unrealistic. I'd also certainly be one of those guys who own a timeshare of a private plane and rarely, if ever, fly commercial again unless going overseas.
 

WildcatFan1982

Active member
Dec 4, 2011
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A. Lump sum.

B. I have two jobs. Certainly quit 1, probably both. I'd be like Jack Blacks character in "High Fidelity" and find a DREAM job and just show up whether they pay me or not.

C. I currently live in a small apartment in Clarksville. I'd either buy a house in Louisville or Lexington. And probably a condo in NYC.

D. After I have my fun, and get with a good financial planner.

E. Trip to Vegas. Combo "Hangover" and "wolf of wall street"
 

LineSkiCat14

Well-known member
Aug 5, 2015
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A. Take the lump sum.. but, I see the benefit of spreading it out. Keeps you humble and you don't run the risk of blowing it all too quick. With a Billion dollars over 30-years.. I'm not sure it matters much to me.. but I'll go with A because it's more up front, and I can always have a bank hold it year by year or some ****.

b. I would quit, but I would still want to work somewhere. Something enjoyable. Maybe go work at a ski shop, tuning skis.. maybe a bartender during the day time and just talk to people and make them drinks..

c. I like the northeast, I would definitely keep a house in the Capital District, but it would be a mansion. Probably my MAIN mansion. I would then by a lake house in the ADKS, a ski house in vermont, and probably something in the Caribean. I would also likely get a condo in some of the bigger cities in the north east/east coast.

d. I would donate. If for nothing else, than I can say I did something good with my life. I've worked at two different charities that I felt strongly connected to. But the kicker here.. you give to a charity, and it winds up just going to top executives it seems. I would try to conjure a way to give half to the staff, and half to the charity it self.

e. Some interesting things I'd do :
- Never fly anything but 1st class again, and possibly charter my own jet because I hate flying in general (airports and actually flying).
- I would probably give large sum to 20-30 of my closest friends and family members.
 

sluggercatfan

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Aug 17, 2004
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A. Would you take it all at once, or take the 30 year income stream?

B. Would you quit your job?

C. Would you move to another location?

D. Would you donate to charities and other worthy causes?

E. Name some crazy "ish" you would do with it?


My answers are

A. Minority view here, but 30 years (assuming it can be passed down to my kids if I die, otherwise, you bite the tax bullet all at once and take it now). You would get $33M or so immediately, then $33M every year for 29 years, so if you only live 2 more years, that is $100M right there. It would give you time to think about how to invest it, save a bunch of taxes on the front end, and plan the rest of your life. Plus, hell, I coudn't really spend $33M anyway without trying really really hard.

B. Of course, but my new job would be setting up a foundation or three and figuring out what to do with all the money over the next 20 or 30 years

C. No, but would definitely buy a couple of nice vacation homes, and several national golf club memberships.

D. Of course, who wouldn't? But first thing I would do is change my phone number, email, hell, maybe my entire identity.

E. Have to think about this one, throw a big damn party first, then go from there.
A. Cash Option
B. My job is being retired
C. Yes I would move, probably not leave the state , but definitely have a snow bird residence.
I have a large family and the wife and I only want so much so both sides of our families, along with a couple close friends would be made comfortable and set for life. Church and charities that I think are worthy would get a chunk. It's a lot of money, but I'd feel truly blessed to have the honor for the opportunity to do so much good .
 

Rebelfreedomeagle

Well-known member
Feb 24, 2017
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I would have to find one of those high end wealth management companies that cater to the super wealthy (sorry Shep!) so I suppose I would be heavily invested in tax haven based corporations and foreign properties.
As for the crazy thing, it’s pretty difficult to think of stuff I wouldn’t die doing. If I bought a Tesla S plaid, corvette z06, or AMG Mercedes I can virtually guarantee that I would die in the thing doing something stupid. Same for a TRX or Raptor R, I would just be doing something stupid off-road.
I do know one thing I would definitely set up a trust for - buying medical debts and forgiving them.
 

WildcatFan1982

Active member
Dec 4, 2011
21,179
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A. Lump sum.

B. I have two jobs. Certainly quit 1, probably both. I'd be like Jack Blacks character in "High Fidelity" and find a DREAM job and just show up whether they pay me or not.

C. I currently live in a small apartment in Clarksville. I'd either buy a house in Louisville or Lexington. And probably a condo in NYC.

D. After I have my fun, and get with a good financial planner.

E. Trip to Vegas. Combo "Hangover" and "wolf of wall street"

 

rick64

Well-known member
Jan 25, 2007
22,915
30,382
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A. 30 year payout if I could leaving it to family members.

B. Most likely.

C. Different house but same city.

D. Absolutely

E. Fight to keep my name out of the press buy hiring the best lawyer I could so folks didn’t know who won the money.
 

Catman100

Well-known member
Jan 3, 2003
6,663
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I never did actually answer the questions.

1. I think I would indeed take the lump sum. As someone pointed out, you can invest and turn that money into a lot more than you would receive in 30 years.
2. Not even sure I would tell my company. As much as upper management has been pissing me off lately, I'd probably just ghost their asses and leave them wondering what happened to me.
3. Definitely would have houses or high rise condos elsewhere. Naples, LA, Boston. Would like to have something in the Caribbean and somewhere I can ski.
4. I would probably give to St.Jude and to a veterans charity, but I would prefer to start my own thing. Homeless veterans is a real pain in my ***. I would love to try and start veterans only towns where they can get back on their feet, and perhaps the medical/drug/depression treatment they deserve.
5. Besides making sure my close family is taken care of forever, I would probably give a milly each to my closest 20 buddies. Have them come to Lex to my next birthday party, then give them the million and see how many get divorced. LOL
Private plane golf trips.
Great vacations with family.
Train for and climb Mt.Everest?
Buy a ticket to space?
 

Laparkafan

Well-known member
Sep 5, 2004
12,743
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Side topic y’all watch that show where all those lotto winners go bankrupt - people don’t realize how fast they can/will spend money until they see it
 

Mad Max

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2015
3,300
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Lump sum…quit job…go all brewsters millions and be broke in 30 days….
 

Tskware

Well-known member
Jan 26, 2003
24,902
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FWIW (next to nothing) I took a future value calculator and looked at value of $20M (annual payment less taxes) over 30 years at 7% vs. 340 up front (after taxes) over 30 years at 7% and the final totals were not that different, both over $2B, but less than $2.5B, lump sum a little bit ahead.

But this thread has all been just a test, and for my amusement. Frankly, I plan on winning Friday, and then will change my handle. I promise to drop by under a new name every once in a while, my wife thinks it will help me to stay grounded to, you know, hang out and talk to some poors every now and then. Even though I will be hanging with Zuckerberg, Madonna, and the Royals, I will keep it real.
 

cole854

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Quit
Church and family will be set forever.
Close friends will get an 8x10
Stay in Lex for the majority of the time b/c of family.
Have a beach home in Hilton Head and a suite at Wynn.
 

Tskware

Well-known member
Jan 26, 2003
24,902
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Quit
Church and family will be set forever.
Close friends will get an 8x10
Stay in Lex for the majority of the time b/c of family.
Have a beach home in Hilton Head and a suite at Wynn.

I was thinking of an East to West golf trip; start at Ocean Course, then Pine Valley, down to Augusta National and play a round or two with Bill Gates and Condi Rice, hit Southern Hills on the way to Cherry Hills in Denver (have family there, they can ride in my cart), then on to 17 Mile Drive, where I can look for a house, and play Cypress Point a couple of times. But not Pebble Beach or Spyglass, not wasting my time on public courses.
 

cole854

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I was thinking of an East to West golf trip; start at Ocean Course, then Pine Valley, down to Augusta National and play a round or two with Bill Gates and Condi Rice, hit Southern Hills on the way to Cherry Hills in Denver (have family there, they can ride in my cart), then on to 17 Mile Drive, where I can look for a house, and play Cypress Point a couple of times. But not Pebble Beach or Spyglass, not wasting my time on public courses.

Lol...I would apply for a membership at East Lake, Jupiter, and Riviera.
 
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kyeric

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May 23, 2002
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A. Would you take it all at once, or take the 30 year income stream?

B. Would you quit your job?

C. Would you move to another location?

D. Would you donate to charities and other worthy causes?

E. Name some crazy "ish" you would do with it?


My answers are

A. Minority view here, but 30 years (assuming it can be passed down to my kids if I die, otherwise, you bite the tax bullet all at once and take it now). You would get $33M or so immediately, then $33M every year for 29 years, so if you only live 2 more years, that is $100M right there. It would give you time to think about how to invest it, save a bunch of taxes on the front end, and plan the rest of your life. Plus, hell, I coudn't really spend $33M anyway without trying really really hard.

B. Of course, but my new job would be setting up a foundation or three and figuring out what to do with all the money over the next 20 or 30 years

C. No, but would definitely buy a couple of nice vacation homes, and several national golf club memberships.

D. Of course, who wouldn't? But first thing I would do is change my phone number, email, hell, maybe my entire identity.

E. Have to think about this one, throw a big damn party first, then go from there.
A. All at once.
B. I'd give my 2 weeks since i like the people i work with. Wouldn't want to leave them hanging. But, i'd most certainly do something that i would enjoy much more and it most definitely wouldn't be working for someone else.
C. Probably not. Would likely buy another house somewhere else, but no need to leave.
D. Without question (my church at the top)
E. Don't need a big house, but i would probably have one built EXACTLY how i wanted it. When money is no object you can do that. Would also buy an expensive sports car. Outside of that, i wouldn't consider anything i'd do with my money crazy and even the two things i listed aren't really crazy, either.
 

WildcatFan1982

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Dec 4, 2011
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E. Don't need a big house, but i would probably have one built EXACTLY how i wanted it. When money is no object you can do that. Would also buy an expensive sports car. Outside of that, i wouldn't consider anything i'd do with my money crazy and even the two
I couldn't handle an expensive sports car. Put me in a Ferrari and within a few minutes I'd be doing 200 down I-64
 

lex cath

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Take the lump sum payment, no question there.


Hell yes I'd retire; the very moment I knew with 100% certainty I'd actually won I'd be emailing the chief and giving my immediate resignation.

I'd donate to St. Judes Hospital, and other such hospitals and organizations that help children. That would be my primary philanthropic causes. I have also thought it would just be an incredible feeling to just walk into a grocery store, try to identify someone who probably could use a helping hand, wait until they begin checking out and then anonymously pay for their groceries. I just think that would be an awesome thing to do a few times a month.


I'd buy a new truck, and a new bass boat for my son and myself. Obviously his college would all be paid for, as would be my niece and nephew's. I'd buy, or possibly build, a house that I wanted. It wouldn't be a "mansion" or anything because I don't need anything like that. Plus, I'd be on the road a hell of a lot travelling the country bass fishing so home would be more like a pit stop, lol.

I'd set up my family and my closest friends; the ones I know that would would do the same.


I guess the craziest thing I'd do is try to find a few oz's of some premo to take with me when I head to Alabama, Texas, Florida, etc. to enjoy while in my pursuit of fishing for Mr. Bass. I'm telling you, there's not much I enjoy more than being out on the lake just as the sun is beginning to rise, with a nice wake and bake going on, and casting a topwater out and waiting for that explosion as a big bass comes up and inhales it. Good times man, good times.

I would not move away, nor would I change my identity, but I would ensure my son and I are as safe as I can make us.


I haven't played the lottery in months, but I think I'll buy a ticket or two tonight. I hear the fish down at Lake Fork calling my name as I type......
 
Jan 28, 2007
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A. Would you take it all at once, or take the 30 year income stream?

B. Would you quit your job?

C. Would you move to another location?

D. Would you donate to charities and other worthy causes?

E. Name some crazy "ish" you would do with it?


My answers are

A. Minority view here, but 30 years (assuming it can be passed down to my kids if I die, otherwise, you bite the tax bullet all at once and take it now). You would get $33M or so immediately, then $33M every year for 29 years, so if you only live 2 more years, that is $100M right there. It would give you time to think about how to invest it, save a bunch of taxes on the front end, and plan the rest of your life. Plus, hell, I coudn't really spend $33M anyway without trying really really hard.

B. Of course, but my new job would be setting up a foundation or three and figuring out what to do with all the money over the next 20 or 30 years

C. No, but would definitely buy a couple of nice vacation homes, and several national golf club memberships.

D. Of course, who wouldn't? But first thing I would do is change my phone number, email, hell, maybe my entire identity.

E. Have to think about this one, throw a big damn party first, then go from there.

A) I would take it all. If they owe it to you over 30 years you could still get stupid and sell the annuity to someone else for a lump sum, so it's not like it will necessarily keep you from making a dumb decision.

B) I would pay someone to walk into my company and resign on my behalf.

C) I don't think my wife would let us move until the kids finished school, but I'd move to a different neighborhood.

D) I'd actually do a bunch of direct payments to people who I think deserve the money. "Oh, you're in a bad spot and your kid has a handicap? Here's $25K." I sure as **** wouldn't donate to the Alzheimer's people after that fraudulent nonsense.

E) I would take a year of maximizing my utility. January in Hawaii. Feb and March skiing all over CO and Utah. April in Florida. Early May in Louisville for Derby. Late May and June in Charleston, SC. Northern Europe and Switzerland for July and August. Tour around the Southeast in a Winnebago for September and October going to college football, pro football and MLB playoff games. Back down to Florida for November and out to Hawaii for December.
 

JonathanW_rivals

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Lump sum.

Quit job, but maybe start consulting company, hiring a few people and doing some of it myself.

Get multiple (3-4) financial advisors who don’t know each other, so if one screwed you over with the part they manage, you aren’t back to 0.

Fill 529 plans for all my nieces and nephews. Also a starter fund for them (i.e. 50K) that they get after college graduation or at age 25.
Same for my kids, but bigger (say 500K).

New home for my Ex-mother-in-law, she’s had rough life.
Say a few hundred K to my Ex, her siblings, say 2-3 times that to my brother.

yes some charities. Probably spread that around 10 or so.

A vacation home, but not several, because I would want to travel all over. So private jet with pilot.

crazy? A 1-2 week golf trip for buddies (30 or so) to Scotland.
And front row tickets to every UK game, home and away.

nutritionist/chef and fitness coach, gotta stay healthy
 

KYWildCatsFan

Well-known member
Aug 18, 2017
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380,000,000 payout. Lets say you invest 350 mil of that and keep 30 mil in cash for a rainy day.

Lets say 5% ROI which is probably on the lower side. That's 17.5 Million a year you would earn without lifting a finger.

Pay yourself a couple million from that and reinvest the rest and your fortune will grow like wild flowers.

Why in the world would anyone choose the payments? You are also trusting the government to continue to pay you. Your future generations would be in a much better spot if you took the lump sum.
 
Jan 28, 2007
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Why in the world would anyone choose the payments? You are also trusting the government to continue to pay you. Your future generations would be in a much better spot if you took the lump sum.

The flip side would truly be you know you're a freaking moron and would be spreading around the cash like it's peanut butter the moment it came in. So you take the payments as a way to keep yourself from blowing it all. I'd actually respect somebody who was terrible with money if they did that. 22 year old Wayne Dougan probably would have done some really stupid crap with a single $323M payment.
 

trueblujr

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https://www.usamega.com/mega-millions/jackpotYour cash after taxes amount is listed by state.

Kentucky: 5% state tax- $1,708,333- $30,125,000Your average net per year: $19,853,712Your net payout:.

Cash after taxes lump. $349,487,045

After 30 year payments: $595,611,360

Also keep in mind if you take the 30 years that you start small and get big with time.

Not sure I can make it on 9 million a year.

https://www.usamega.com/mega-millions/jackpot/annuity/ky
I would hope that if you took the lump sum, with wise investing, you could turn $349 million into far more than the $595 million in far less than 30 years. I'm 52. that would be my route. So for me it would be...

A) Take the lump sum definitely, will hire a Lawyer and lay low for a while first though.
B) Yes and No. I might leave my role, but then let the owners know I have resources to be an investor and would like to use the backing and resources of the company to see some projects I have in my mind come to fruition. I think they would be open to that.
C) I'd buy land in the area I live now and build the house me and my wife want. I'd probably buy a place in Florida too and snowbird. maybe invest in rental properties in other areas where I want to visit.
D) Yes I'd donate to charities, but very picky about which ones.
E) Would probably buy a boat, and would probably travel to some exotic places. Want to see the northern Lights, that's on mine and my wife's bucket list. So would make that happen.
 

TortElvisII

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I will probably be looking to hire a driver tomorrow if anyone is available. Private pilot later.
 

trueblujr

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The flip side would truly be you know you're a freaking moron and would be spreading around the cash like it's peanut butter the moment it came in. So you take the payments as a way to keep yourself from blowing it all. I'd actually respect somebody who was terrible with money if they did that. 22 year old Wayne Dougan probably would have done some really stupid crap with a single $323M payment.
I'm 52, so Not sure I even have 30 years left. Have enough life experience to know how to be responsible with it.
 

KYWildCatsFan

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Aug 18, 2017
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The flip side would truly be you know you're a freaking moron and would be spreading around the cash like it's peanut butter the moment it came in. So you take the payments as a way to keep yourself from blowing it all. I'd actually respect somebody who was terrible with money if they did that. 22 year old Wayne Dougan probably would have done some really stupid crap with a single $323M payment.
Absolutely. You definitely have a point.

Plus, the amount of bad advice family and friends would be throwing at you would be off the charts. People who win the lottery are usually less happy over time.
 
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TortElvisII

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96,195
66
The flip side would truly be you know you're a freaking moron and would be spreading around the cash like it's peanut butter the moment it came in. So you take the payments as a way to keep yourself from blowing it all. I'd actually respect somebody who was terrible with money if they did that. 22 year old Wayne Dougan probably would have done some really stupid crap with a single $323M payment.
Seems the opposite happens more though. People out spend their yearly payments. The find themselves in trouble.