Does the math take into account the fact that the jackpot is split amongst all winners? You'd have to divide by the number of expected grand prize winners, not to mention any second, third, and xth prize winners which are taken from the same jackpot purse.
Donated again to a work pool. One of the engineers started researching the cost of small South Pacific islands again.![]()
Here's a "scary" thought for those involved in "office" pools, especially if you're the one who "owns" the ticket:
Generosity could result in Powerball winners taking home even less. If you anticipate sharing the prize money, make that agreement before the numbers are drawn (as you would with an office pool), said Labant. Otherwise, the money is a gift rather than income for those recipients, she said — meaning you, the giver, will be the one paying all the income taxes as well as any gift taxes resulting from a substantial split.
Triggering the gift tax is easy to do, with such a big prize. The IRS allows you to gift up to $14,000 per recipient each year, tax-free, with bigger gifts eating away at your lifetime exemption of $5.45 million. (Gifts to a spouse are unlimited.) Exceed that, and the gift tax is a flat 40 percent.
Take 90% of your profits, invest in a slow, but steady investment. Hell, at this amount, just a simple bank account or long term-CDs would suffice.
You could burn the rest of it in a massive "I Won The Lottery" Bonfire, and unless you are beyond stupid, you will be set for life. Of course, just burning the money you didn't invest would prove that fact, but I digress....
Who doesn't want to change? The trick is making change for the better...
How much would it take to remove Clarkson?![]()
Just bought a ticket. My current plan:
Trust funds for immediate family members. A trust fund for my son that he would get after he finishes college and works for a few years. I'd invest $50M for my 'income' (and I highly doubt I would be able to spend the return on 50M no matter how hard I tried, I don't care about accumulating any more 'stuff' and there is only so much traveling you can do).
Some of those expenses don't even make sense. Like $3400 for phones.
Really? Remember that when this list was done (divorce in 2008, so the expenses are probably 2007 numbers), most plans were not unlimited texts or minutes. My inlaws (with 3 teens still at home) routinely had bills in the $800 range. I know, because we heard about it A LOT. I can easily see Shaq using 4x as much - phones for his assistants, kids, wife, guest houses, cars, boats, etc, etc.Some of those expenses don't even make sense. Like $3400 for phones.
If there's one axiom in economics that holds true outside of the principles, it's that people will always find a way to adjust their lifestyles to their newly expanded budgets. A $50MM investment, with a safe yield of 3%, would gross $1.5MM in revenue, less account fees and earned income tax rates, and you're right around $750K, probably just under. People can spend that with very little effort, and that's not on items that will accumulate their physical possessions.