Money: NY Times says Powerball Winner Take Our Advice & Take the Annuity

playahaitian

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Powerball Winner: Take Our Advice and Take the Annuity

So let us suppose, reader, that you have won Wednesday’s $1.5 billion Powerball jackpot. Congratulations! You have some important decisions to make, such as what ailing magazine to acquire and what congressional seat your spouse should run for. But first, you must choose whether to take the prize as an annuity paid over 30 years, or a lump-sum payment right now.

If I’m reading you right, you should probably take the annuity.

First, some background: You might not realize this, but the top prize in the $1.5 billion Powerball is not actually $1.5 billion. (Nor is it $999 million, as many of the three-digit-readout lottery signs around the country say it is.) If you take the prize as a one-time cash payment, you will get a mere $930 million, before taxes.

If you want $1.5 billion, you’ll have to take it in installments over the next 30 years. That’s a long time, and so most people take the cash, according to Kelly Cripe, a Powerball spokeswoman. But I think most of them are making a mistake, for the following reasons.


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First, while people associate the term “annuity” with payment streams that end when you die, the Powerball prize is actually what actuaries call an annuity certain: a stream of annual payments, every year from now until 2045, regardless of what happens to you. If you die before 2045, the future payments become part of your estate, like any other asset.

Second, there are big tax advantages to the annuity. The main one is that taking the annuity is basically like letting the government hold onto part of your prize for a while and invest it for you — and the government does not pay tax on investment income. Of course, once you get the annuity checks, you’ll have to pay income tax on them. But if you take the lump-sum cash prize, you’ll pay tax twice: on the prize when you win it, and on the income you get by investing it.

This adds up. If you invested all your prize money in the same way Powerball does (essentially by putting it in government bonds), you’d end up with 20 percent more cash in 2045 if you took the annuity option rather than the cash option, thanks to the tax savings. You could shave that difference by picking a different investment strategy with better tax management, but you’ll never beat the effective tax rate of zero on the investment income earned inside the Powerball annuity.

Taxes aside, you’ll probably quibble with the pretax rate of return on the Powerball annuity.

Effectively, it’s like investing in bonds that pay 2.843 percent interest. But that’s actually a good deal for an ultrasafe investment in today’s ultralow interest rate environment, said Allison Schrager, a financial economist with expertise in annuities.

  • But what if you don’t want an ultrasafe investment?

    I don’t know all about your risk preferences, but I do know you buy lottery tickets. So maybe you’d prefer to take the cash option and gamble in the stock market for a higher average return. Or maybe you have a brilliant business idea ready to go and all you’ve been waiting for is the several hundred million dollars in investment capital you need to make it happen. Or maybe you want to buy the biggest house in the Hamptons, and the $22.6 million first-year annuity payment isn’t big enough to do that. If you want to go any of those routes, you’ll have to take the cash option


    But this leads us to the biggest advantage of the annuity: protecting you from yourself
  • Again, I don’t know all about you, but I do know you buy lottery tickets, so let’s consider the possibility that you are not one of your generation’s great financial minds. We all know the stories of people who win huge fortunes in the lottery and then lose them. The great thing about the annuity is, no matter what stupid choices you make this year, you’ll have an enormous check waiting for you next year — all the way until 2045.
  • The big advantage of the cash prize is flexibility, but let’s not underrate the value of the annuity’s inflexibility. Your Powerball win is likely to bring a lot of long-lost friends and relatives out of the woodwork with stories about why they need money. Being able to tell them that this year’s check is only for $22.6 million, and that’s really not very much after taxes and the new mansion and the summer house and the cars and the boats and the new political magazine, will help you conserve your fortune.
  • As a Powerball winner, you’ve already done way better than you could reasonably have expected with your investment strategy. Don’t press your luck. Take the annuity.


http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/13/u...ake-our-advice-and-take-the-annuity.html?_r=0
 

Amajorfucup

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Platinum Member
They have a typo in the headline.. It should read...

"Hey dummies, who cares about the present value of a dollar, give the government a tax free loan and let them put you on allowance like a child with your winnings and hope the state or federal government never become insolvent or near economic ruin because the first thing to get tapped will be that lottery war chest".
 

easy_b

Easy_b is in the place to be.
BGOL Investor
i don't know....they may one year can't pay me my money...and i will get very upset
 

playahaitian

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Certified Pussy Poster
yep...the fact that there's a "push" now in the media for ppl to take the annuity is exactly why I would not lol

^^^^

that is a FUNNY coincidence.

I've been posting threads on this debate for years and I have NEVER EVER heard all these so called reliable sources telling people to NOT take the lump sum.

It has ALWAYS been take the lump sum.
 

Coldchi

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
if you under 30......i can understand doing annuity payments.
but if u win and u like 50, 60 years old.......fuck that....gimme all mines.
 
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