Your odds don't change no matter how many play. The number pool is still the same.Why? Your odds aren't increased with less people playing. It's true there is less of a chance someone else would share with you, I assume. But there is less cash going into the pot for them.
If I won the powerball, I would find a no-limit roulette table and put it all on red.
Your odds don't change no matter how many play. The number pool is still the same.
If I won the powerball, I would find a no-limit roulette table and put it all on red.
When you know that you have a gambling problem. lol
Things I would do:
1) Interview several lawyers with extensive experience with high net worth individuals.
2) Interview several accountants and discuss long term goals.
3) Pay off my house.
4) Buy a house in Charleston, SC (under $500k)
5) Buy a house in Vail, CO (under $1M)
6) Spend the first entire year traveling the world.
Who I would give money to:
1) $5M to each set of parents
2) $1M to each sibling
3) I would pay off my top 5 friends homes and they would sign confidentiality agreements
4) A yearly spend will continue in perpetuity for philanthropic ventures, which would now be my full time job.
Pretty lame. But I would be the rare lotto winner that actually stayed rich.
Realistically I would spend a huge amount in the beginning (maybe 1/4 of the total) on luxury items like a ~50 million dollar yacht, cars, house(s). I would invest about 2/3. I would probably give away the last 1/12 to family, friends, and donate something crazy to ND.
Alternatively I would like to own a piece of an NBA or NHL Team. Or maybe just buy an MLS team.
The NBA seems like it would be a great investment when you look at the values now versus a few years ago.
The thing for me would be more about having something to do every day. If I was a large investor in a sports team I could go to the games regularly, be involved in the business, etc.
I would definitely travel for a year or two but after that you have to have something to be invested in. Might be a sports team, maybe a high-end restaurant.
3) I would pay off my top 5 friends homes and they would sign confidentiality agreements
Isn't Michigan one?Only 6 states allow you to stay anonymous if you win the lotto
Only 6 states allow you to stay anonymous if you win the lotto
Only 6 states allow you to stay anonymous if you win the lotto
I wasn't talking about them not talking about the fact I won, but rather that I gave money to them.
But as Insanity pointed out, I live in one of those states.
Set up a trust fund before claiming a big prize, or your name could be released publicly — potentially in any state.
"If your goal is to remain anonymous, you're going to need to form a trust, partnership or corporation, in which your name is not on there," Chiumento said.
But according to the Florida Lottery, Powerball winners cannot claim anonymously. Even if the prize is claimed in the name of a trust or limited liability corporation, the trustee's name or a partner's name is public record, along with their age and city, it said.
Tips for Powerball winners
Flagler County attorney Michael Chiumento recommends these tips for claiming a winning Powerball jackpot:
- Before you claim your prize, form a blind trust. You'll still be the trustee in control over the trust.
- Sign the winning ticket. That way there's evidence that it's yours. Make copies of the ticket and give them to a loved one. Store away the original winning ticket somewhere safe.
- Surround yourself with trusted advisers: A tax attorney, financial planner or an accountant.
- Have a representative from the trust, whether it's your attorney or someone else you designate, claim the prize on the entity's behalf.
- Open a bank account in the name of that entity, and the money would flow in there. You, as the winner, would be able to control the entity and how the money is distributed and spent.
When you know that you have a gambling problem. lol
Things I would do:
1) Interview several lawyers with extensive experience with high net worth individuals.
2) Interview several accountants and discuss long term goals.
3) Pay off my house.
4) Buy a house in Charleston, SC (under $500k)
5) Buy a house in Vail, CO (under $1M)
6) Spend the first entire year traveling the world.
Who I would give money to:
1) $5M to each set of parents
2) $1M to each sibling
3) I would pay off my top 5 friends homes and they would sign confidentiality agreements
4) A yearly spend will continue in perpetuity for philanthropic ventures, which would now be my full time job.
Pretty lame. But I would be the rare lotto winner that actually stayed rich.
Realistically I would spend a huge amount in the beginning (maybe 1/4 of the total) on luxury items like a ~50 million dollar yacht, cars, house(s). I would invest about 2/3. I would probably give away the last 1/12 to family, friends, and donate something crazy to ND.
Alternatively I would like to own a piece of an NBA or NHL Team. Or maybe just buy an MLS team.
When you know that you have a gambling problem. lol
Things I would do:
1) Interview several lawyers with extensive experience with high net worth individuals.
2) Interview several accountants and discuss long term goals.
3) Pay off my house.
4) Buy a house in Charleston, SC (under $500k)
5) Buy a house in Vail, CO (under $1M)
6) Spend the first entire year traveling the world.
Who I would give money to:
1) $5M to each set of parents
2) $1M to each sibling
3) I would pay off my top 5 friends homes and they would sign confidentiality agreements
4) A yearly spend will continue in perpetuity for philanthropic ventures, which would now be my full time job.
Pretty lame. But I would be the rare lotto winner that actually stayed rich.
I think you'd be surprised at the expense and maintenance of having one of those. You might eat away at your winnings pretty quickly.
The only thing I would do is buy the University of Michigan. Then I'd run then in to the fuckin ground. I don't care if I'd be broke after, money can buy happiness.
Thought for sure you'd by LL Bean or Eddie Bauer. lol
I'd place 30% in private charitable foundation and another 20% in a donor advised fund to max out charitable deductions and save a couple hundred million from Uncle Sam. That should leave about $250M after tax to scrape by. With $470M set aside for charitable work and $250M unencumbered I would splurge with maybe $5 million and focus the rest on becoming a billionaire activist investor.
The foundation hopefully gets tied in so the investments can be leveraged for activism and the people managing it would be well compensated and largely related to me. Might own a couple of beach houses through the foundation to use for retreats, meetings, headquarters... whatever passes as a viable trust asset. ND would be a big beneficiary and I would be a very public advocate for proper structuring of Catholic church assets around the country, starting locally. "Donations" to all group of six bowls for 50 yard line seats every year and ND season tickets (screw the box). Private jet is obviously a foundation expense too.
Might look at rolling up small mutual funds too, drop $50M in some fund with only $40M under management and petition for a change in management (mutual funds are technically owned by the investors). Do that to a few and merge them together to build a bigger investment pool and drop the costs/fees. With a half billion investment pool you could take on some decent sized funds. Over time I think you could build quite a business - however the regulation sucks and might be less PIA to just pool private money and stick with the activist role.
- Set up trust to stay anonymous.
- $10M to parents
- $2M to sister
- Education trust for family and selected friends
- Pay off all debts of my closest friend group
- Beach house in Delaware (Bethany or Rehoboth)
- Ranch in Montana
- Invest the rest in a largely risk adverse portfolio
If you win this you become an automatic player in the national economy and you have the ability to change a TON of lives.