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Lottery Winners: Don’t Take the Money and Run
“Take the money and run”
-Steve Miller Band
Brett Arends at the Wall Street Journal wrote a column
titled, Take the Money and Run.
He said that lottery winners should take the lump sum
instead of annual payments.
It was terrific advice for someone who lives in a vacuum or
on a desert island. It was bad advice for lottery winners.
Arends made some excellent economic points. He said that taking the lump sum now would
net more than normal. Many lotteries
base their lump sum calculations on U.S. Treasury Bonds rates.
Thanks to Ben Bernanke and his pals at the Federal Reserve,
Treasury Bonds are extremely low. If you plan on winning the lottery, make sure
to win it this week.
Arends assumed that
taxes will be higher in future years. It
is a 50/50 guess. I don’t think he has a
magic ball. If he does, I want him to help make my Kentucky Derby picks.
Anders noted that taking the lottery payments over 20 years would net a 5.7% rate
of return. In a year when the stock
markets is in free fall and foreclosures are everywhere, 5.7% doesn’t sound so
bad. Not to Anders. He had one word to describe it to describe
the 20 year payout.
Yuck.
I can’t find much about Arends so I don’t know if he knows an actual
lottery winner. I do. I grew
up around gamblers. Arends wrote a book
about sports betting so he must know something about the breed.
Lottery winners are the last people who should be getting a lump sum. It is like giving opium to a drug addict.
Look at the history of people who have won the lottery.
With lottery winners, the primary concern is to keep them
from running through the money.
Like Will Rogers said, “It is not return ON my money, but
return OF my money, that I am most interested in.
5.7% would look good to those who blew their lottery lump
sum. Right now, they have zero.
There is a disconnect between people on Wall Street and people who
live in the real world. A good example
is the products Wall Street created to package sub prime mortgages. They were supposed to improve up returns.
Instead, they lost billions.
I’ve spent the last 25 years working with people who get
large lump sums. I’ve watched hundreds
blow through every dime.
I often use payout annuities to keep people away from their worst
enemy: Themselves.
The people on Wall Street don’t get it.
I spent many years
affiliated with a financial company
based in New York. About once a month, some Ivy League MBA would fire off a memo outlining some complicated and convoluted
investment scheme . The plan would propose
a response to some complicated
and convoluted plan that a competitor was offering.
I threw the memos in the trash.
I never saw one that showed me how to stop
people from going on wild
spending sprees. That was the
real rate of return issue.
If Jack Whitaker had taken the Powerball prize over 20
years, he wouldn’t have had been carrying $600,000 in cash when he was robbed
at a strip club. If David Edwards had
taken his $27 million jackpot in annual payments, he might not have been evicted from
his house and living in storage bin.
I suggest annual payments for one reason. If a person run
through all their money in the first
year, they get 19 more chances to get it right.
The biography of Arends said that he had been living in London. The one in England,
not in Kentucky.
He might have missed an American idea
called dollar cost averaging.
The concept is simple.
Instead of dropping all your money in the market at once, you invest
over time, like on a weekly or monthly basis.
The returns are usually better than timing the market.
Annual payments from the lottery set up perfectly for dollar
cost averaging. If a person was smart
and invested each year, the ultimate returns should not cause an observer to
say Yuck.
I like the annual payments. The worst encouragement a lottery winner can get
would be to take the money and run.
Don McNay is the
Chairman of the Board for McNay Settlement Group and the author of Son of a Son
of a Gambler: Winners, Losers and What
To Do When You Win The Lottery. You can
write to him at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
or read
his award winning column at www.donmcnay.com
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