Just remembered. I worked with a guy a couple of years ago, a Charlton fan, dunno if he posts on here, and this question came up. With all seriousness he said if he won the Lotto jackpot, he would buy a fold up table tennis table. When we pointed out that he could buy one anyway, he said 'yes, but it wouldn't be the same, would it?'
I have had a long think about this, it may be boring but:
1. I would buy a large plot of land in the country but near enough to home. About £1m 2. I would have a house built on that plot of land. About £2m 3. I would buy a Dodge Viper and a Tesla.About £120k 4. I'd also take my family on a massive holiday. About £30k 5. I'd put £10m into an account for my daughter that pays out on my death. £10m 6. I'd invest in property and hire a manager to manage my properties. £20m £33.15m) 7. Drugs & Hookers £54.85m
BOOM £88m gone...but with some income from properties... I doubt i'd actually finish spending as I'd die from all the drugs and soreness.
I have had a long think about this, it may be boring but:
1. I would buy a large plot of land in the country but near enough to home. About £1m 2. I would have a house built on that plot of land. About £2m 3. I would buy a Dodge Viper and a Tesla.About £120k 4. I'd also take my family on a massive holiday. About £30k 5. I'd put £10m into an account for my daughter that pays out on my death. £10m 6. I'd invest in property and hire a manager to manage my properties. £20m £33.15m) 7. Drugs & Hookers £54.85m
BOOM £88m gone...but with some income from properties...
I think option 7 might kill you pretty quickly....
I have had a long think about this, it may be boring but:
1. I would buy a large plot of land in the country but near enough to home. About £1m 2. I would have a house built on that plot of land. About £2m 3. I would buy a Dodge Viper and a Tesla.About £120k 4. I'd also take my family on a massive holiday. About £30k 5. I'd put £10m into an account for my daughter that pays out on my death. £10m 6. I'd invest in property and hire a manager to manage my properties. £20m £33.15m) 7. Drugs & Hookers £54.85m
BOOM £88m gone...but with some income from properties...
I think option 7 might kill you pretty quickly....
A GT car and bugger off touring round Europe in it until I get sick of travelling. An acreage close to the mountains in Alberta, Canada with a big workshop to hold lots of toys and do hobbies in. Flat in central London. House on the South Island of New Zealand with a similar setup to the one in Canada. Switch between Canada and New Zealand so as to avoid the winters in each, stop over in London on the way to visit family, catch some football , get some european culture etc. Miscellaneous holidays to interesting parts of the world as the mood takes me.
There was a programme on the radio a few weeks ago that had interviewed several big money lottery winners. None have done since what they said they would do, apart from looking after family, and real friends plus the odd charity.
I have a big plan in place. It's boring, but oh well. Given lottery winners are tens or hundreds of times more likely to be murder victims; robbed; die of a drug overdose; be kidnapped; bankrupted; and so on - I've needed a cast-iron plan.
These numbers, of course, aren't exact.
1a. TELL NO-ONE. (At least, not immediately, despite the likely urge.)
1b. Get on to Camelot. They know what to do. Insist on anonymity when they come round, and all that.
1c. Hire a lawyer. Ideally a proper big nob lawyer, partner at a firm, that sort of thing.
2. Still TELL NO-ONE. I'm not going public. I'm probably not telling family or friends yet, as much as is possible. I will "fall ill", or something.
3a. Tell my lawyer I intend to give £15m of this jackpot to family and friends. This will NOT be in the form of a lump sum. I may, however, clear a few debts (student loans, mortgages, what have you).
Trust funds going through stock indices and what have you shall be set up for my cousins; money shall go toward an annuity from which my brother can pull money out of/house deposit/that sort of thing, if he so wants; and for my parents and other relatives etc etc.
Get lawyer/accountant to sort all that out. This leaves £73m.
3b. I'll take £3m to myself "for the time being" (immediate expenses e.g. my lawyer, maybe an accountant, buying a property quickly so I can do all this in private). This leaves £70m.
(Might have to do 3b immediately post-Camelot as part of step 1, but who knows)
4. If possible, dump £15m in UK government bonds that should be paying at around 2-3% (or another govt, if possible). That should be a bona fide income of, hopefully, £300k-450k a year. That is rock solid money. If the UK stops paying on their government debt, then money is nowhere near our biggest worry. This leaves £55m.
5. Be boring again and dump £30m into an index fund, with low fees. Hopefully said fund will pay out at around 4%. In 20 years, that £30m becomes £65m. Tidy. This leaves £25m.
------------
So - I have now, hopefully, guaranteed myself an income of at least £300k a year unless the Bank of England is burning; provided for family and friends in a way they would never have imagined; and I have a huge pot in the form of an index fund that will keep growing at market rates.
Life is good, so step 6:
------------
6a. Donate perhaps £10m, if that, to charity. Likely contenders are Anthony Nolan, Alzheimers Research, and NSPCC.
6b. Tell everyone I've won £8m* on the lottery, and do what I want! Buy a couple of houses here and abroad, go on holidays to wherever, party with mates, maybe invest in a couple of fun-looking startups, maybe even go back to university.
(*£8m being roughly the sort of amount I reckon would set oneself up for life - I'd still have £7m left.)
I have a big plan in place. It's boring, but oh well. Given lottery winners are tens or hundreds of times more likely to be murder victims; robbed; die of a drug overdose; be kidnapped; bankrupted; and so on - I've needed a cast-iron plan.
These numbers, of course, aren't exact.
1a. TELL NO-ONE. (At least, not immediately, despite the likely urge.)
1b. Get on to Camelot. They know what to do. Insist on anonymity when they come round, and all that.
1c. Hire a lawyer. Ideally a proper big nob lawyer, partner at a firm, that sort of thing.
2. Still TELL NO-ONE. I'm not going public. I'm probably not telling family or friends yet, as much as is possible. I will "fall ill", or something.
3a. Tell my lawyer I intend to give £15m of this jackpot to family and friends. This will NOT be in the form of a lump sum. I may, however, clear a few debts (student loans, mortgages, what have you).
Trust funds going through stock indices and what have you shall be set up for my cousins; money shall go toward an annuity from which my brother can pull money out of/house deposit/that sort of thing, if he so wants; and for my parents and other relatives etc etc.
Get lawyer/accountant to sort all that out. This leaves £73m.
3b. I'll take £3m to myself "for the time being" (immediate expenses e.g. my lawyer, maybe an accountant, buying a property quickly so I can do all this in private). This leaves £70m.
(Might have to do 3b immediately post-Camelot as part of step 1, but who knows)
4. If possible, dump £15m in UK government bonds that should be paying at around 2-3% (or another govt, if possible). That should be a bona fide income of, hopefully, £300k-450k a year. That is rock solid money. If the UK stops paying on their government debt, then money is nowhere near our biggest worry. This leaves £55m.
5. Be boring again and dump £30m into an index fund, with low fees. Hopefully said fund will pay out at around 4%. In 20 years, that £30m becomes £65m. Tidy. This leaves £25m.
------------
So - I have now, hopefully, guaranteed myself an income of at least £300k a year unless the Bank of England is burning; provided for family and friends in a way they would never have imagined; and I have a huge pot in the form of an index fund that will keep growing at market rates.
Life is good, so step 6:
------------
6a. Donate perhaps £10m, if that, to charity. Likely contenders are Anthony Nolan, Alzheimers Research, and NSPCC.
6b. Tell everyone I've won £8m* on the lottery, and do what I want! Buy a couple of houses here and abroad, go on holidays to wherever, party with mates, maybe invest in a couple of fun-looking startups, maybe even go back to university.
(*£8m being roughly the sort of amount I reckon would set oneself up for life - I'd still have £7m left.)
I have a big plan in place. It's boring, but oh well. Given lottery winners are tens or hundreds of times more likely to be murder victims; robbed; die of a drug overdose; be kidnapped; bankrupted; and so on - I've needed a cast-iron plan.
These numbers, of course, aren't exact.
1a. TELL NO-ONE. (At least, not immediately, despite the likely urge.)
1b. Get on to Camelot. They know what to do. Insist on anonymity when they come round, and all that.
1c. Hire a lawyer. Ideally a proper big nob lawyer, partner at a firm, that sort of thing.
2. Still TELL NO-ONE. I'm not going public. I'm probably not telling family or friends yet, as much as is possible. I will "fall ill", or something.
3a. Tell my lawyer I intend to give £15m of this jackpot to family and friends. This will NOT be in the form of a lump sum. I may, however, clear a few debts (student loans, mortgages, what have you).
Trust funds going through stock indices and what have you shall be set up for my cousins; money shall go toward an annuity from which my brother can pull money out of/house deposit/that sort of thing, if he so wants; and for my parents and other relatives etc etc.
Get lawyer/accountant to sort all that out. This leaves £73m.
3b. I'll take £3m to myself "for the time being" (immediate expenses e.g. my lawyer, maybe an accountant, buying a property quickly so I can do all this in private). This leaves £70m.
(Might have to do 3b immediately post-Camelot as part of step 1, but who knows)
4. If possible, dump £15m in UK government bonds that should be paying at around 2-3% (or another govt, if possible). That should be a bona fide income of, hopefully, £300k-450k a year. That is rock solid money. If the UK stops paying on their government debt, then money is nowhere near our biggest worry. This leaves £55m.
5. Be boring again and dump £30m into an index fund, with low fees. Hopefully said fund will pay out at around 4%. In 20 years, that £30m becomes £65m. Tidy. This leaves £25m.
------------
So - I have now, hopefully, guaranteed myself an income of at least £300k a year unless the Bank of England is burning; provided for family and friends in a way they would never have imagined; and I have a huge pot in the form of an index fund that will keep growing at market rates.
Life is good, so step 6:
------------
6a. Donate perhaps £10m, if that, to charity. Likely contenders are Anthony Nolan, Alzheimers Research, and NSPCC.
6b. Tell everyone I've won £8m* on the lottery, and do what I want! Buy a couple of houses here and abroad, go on holidays to wherever, party with mates, maybe invest in a couple of fun-looking startups, maybe even go back to university.
(*£8m being roughly the sort of amount I reckon would set oneself up for life - I'd still have £7m left.)
Sorted.
Not sure you've thought about this enough, Paddy.
What about the coke and tarts?
That's what the £7m that I've not told anyone about is for. And one of the startups I might invest in could be a brothel.
A GT car and bugger off touring round Europe in it until I get sick of travelling. An acreage close to the mountains in Alberta, Canada with a big workshop to hold lots of toys and do hobbies in. Flat in central London. House on the South Island of New Zealand with a similar setup to the one in Canada. Switch between Canada and New Zealand so as to avoid the winters in each, stop over in London on the way to visit family, catch some football , get some european culture etc. Miscellaneous holidays to interesting parts of the world as the mood takes me.
A GT car and bugger off touring round Europe in it until I get sick of travelling. An acreage close to the mountains in Alberta, Canada with a big workshop to hold lots of toys and do hobbies in. Flat in central London. House on the South Island of New Zealand with a similar setup to the one in Canada. Switch between Canada and New Zealand so as to avoid the winters in each, stop over in London on the way to visit family, catch some football , get some european culture etc. Miscellaneous holidays to interesting parts of the world as the mood takes me.
A GT car and bugger off touring round Europe in it until I get sick of travelling. An acreage close to the mountains in Alberta, Canada with a big workshop to hold lots of toys and do hobbies in. Flat in central London. House on the South Island of New Zealand with a similar setup to the one in Canada. Switch between Canada and New Zealand so as to avoid the winters in each, stop over in London on the way to visit family, catch some football , get some european culture etc. Miscellaneous holidays to interesting parts of the world as the mood takes me.
Buy Duchatelets neighbour's house Never live in it. Play loud house music remotely all day every day. Dig a bloody great ditch at the bottom of the garden and do nothing with it. Allow couples to come round and have sex on the front lawn. Watch it all unfold live from cctv beambacks to my UK den.
I have a big plan in place. It's boring, but oh well. Given lottery winners are tens or hundreds of times more likely to be murder victims; robbed; die of a drug overdose; be kidnapped; bankrupted; and so on - I've needed a cast-iron plan.
These numbers, of course, aren't exact.
1a. TELL NO-ONE. (At least, not immediately, despite the likely urge.)
1b. Get on to Camelot. They know what to do. Insist on anonymity when they come round, and all that.
1c. Hire a lawyer. Ideally a proper big nob lawyer, partner at a firm, that sort of thing.
2. Still TELL NO-ONE. I'm not going public. I'm probably not telling family or friends yet, as much as is possible. I will "fall ill", or something.
3a. Tell my lawyer I intend to give £15m of this jackpot to family and friends. This will NOT be in the form of a lump sum. I may, however, clear a few debts (student loans, mortgages, what have you).
Trust funds going through stock indices and what have you shall be set up for my cousins; money shall go toward an annuity from which my brother can pull money out of/house deposit/that sort of thing, if he so wants; and for my parents and other relatives etc etc.
Get lawyer/accountant to sort all that out. This leaves £73m.
3b. I'll take £3m to myself "for the time being" (immediate expenses e.g. my lawyer, maybe an accountant, buying a property quickly so I can do all this in private). This leaves £70m.
(Might have to do 3b immediately post-Camelot as part of step 1, but who knows)
4. If possible, dump £15m in UK government bonds that should be paying at around 2-3% (or another govt, if possible). That should be a bona fide income of, hopefully, £300k-450k a year. That is rock solid money. If the UK stops paying on their government debt, then money is nowhere near our biggest worry. This leaves £55m.
5. Be boring again and dump £30m into an index fund, with low fees. Hopefully said fund will pay out at around 4%. In 20 years, that £30m becomes £65m. Tidy. This leaves £25m.
------------
So - I have now, hopefully, guaranteed myself an income of at least £300k a year unless the Bank of England is burning; provided for family and friends in a way they would never have imagined; and I have a huge pot in the form of an index fund that will keep growing at market rates.
Life is good, so step 6:
------------
6a. Donate perhaps £10m, if that, to charity. Likely contenders are Anthony Nolan, Alzheimers Research, and NSPCC.
6b. Tell everyone I've won £8m* on the lottery, and do what I want! Buy a couple of houses here and abroad, go on holidays to wherever, party with mates, maybe invest in a couple of fun-looking startups, maybe even go back to university.
(*£8m being roughly the sort of amount I reckon would set oneself up for life - I'd still have £7m left.)
Sorted.
£7m you say?? Just enough to pay off the ex-directors and get the takeover back on track
I have a big plan in place. It's boring, but oh well. Given lottery winners are tens or hundreds of times more likely to be murder victims; robbed; die of a drug overdose; be kidnapped; bankrupted; and so on - I've needed a cast-iron plan.
These numbers, of course, aren't exact.
1a. TELL NO-ONE. (At least, not immediately, despite the likely urge.)
1b. Get on to Camelot. They know what to do. Insist on anonymity when they come round, and all that.
1c. Hire a lawyer. Ideally a proper big nob lawyer, partner at a firm, that sort of thing.
2. Still TELL NO-ONE. I'm not going public. I'm probably not telling family or friends yet, as much as is possible. I will "fall ill", or something.
3a. Tell my lawyer I intend to give £15m of this jackpot to family and friends. This will NOT be in the form of a lump sum. I may, however, clear a few debts (student loans, mortgages, what have you).
Trust funds going through stock indices and what have you shall be set up for my cousins; money shall go toward an annuity from which my brother can pull money out of/house deposit/that sort of thing, if he so wants; and for my parents and other relatives etc etc.
Get lawyer/accountant to sort all that out. This leaves £73m.
3b. I'll take £3m to myself "for the time being" (immediate expenses e.g. my lawyer, maybe an accountant, buying a property quickly so I can do all this in private). This leaves £70m.
(Might have to do 3b immediately post-Camelot as part of step 1, but who knows)
4. If possible, dump £15m in UK government bonds that should be paying at around 2-3% (or another govt, if possible). That should be a bona fide income of, hopefully, £300k-450k a year. That is rock solid money. If the UK stops paying on their government debt, then money is nowhere near our biggest worry. This leaves £55m.
5. Be boring again and dump £30m into an index fund, with low fees. Hopefully said fund will pay out at around 4%. In 20 years, that £30m becomes £65m. Tidy. This leaves £25m.
------------
So - I have now, hopefully, guaranteed myself an income of at least £300k a year unless the Bank of England is burning; provided for family and friends in a way they would never have imagined; and I have a huge pot in the form of an index fund that will keep growing at market rates.
Life is good, so step 6:
------------
6a. Donate perhaps £10m, if that, to charity. Likely contenders are Anthony Nolan, Alzheimers Research, and NSPCC.
6b. Tell everyone I've won £8m* on the lottery, and do what I want! Buy a couple of houses here and abroad, go on holidays to wherever, party with mates, maybe invest in a couple of fun-looking startups, maybe even go back to university.
(*£8m being roughly the sort of amount I reckon would set oneself up for life - I'd still have £7m left.)
Sorted.
Blimey Paddy, you haven't half made a potentially enjoyable thing seem like hard work. Don't think I'll bother getting a ticket, now.
Aside for from the obvious, nice house, nice car, lots of nice holidays, I'd like to set my boys up in business. Perhaps If I could buy some middle ranking football club one would like to be the CEO and the other one chief scout.
Seriously though, my dream would be to buy a lot of land, maybe a farm, maybe an ex-industrial brownfield site and convert it into haven for wildlife; plant new woodlands, dig lakes, grow meadows and hedges...
Comments
With all seriousness he said if he won the Lotto jackpot, he would buy a fold up table tennis table.
When we pointed out that he could buy one anyway, he said 'yes, but it wouldn't be the same, would it?'
1. I would buy a large plot of land in the country but near enough to home. About £1m
2. I would have a house built on that plot of land. About £2m
3. I would buy a Dodge Viper and a Tesla.About £120k
4. I'd also take my family on a massive holiday. About £30k
5. I'd put £10m into an account for my daughter that pays out on my death. £10m
6. I'd invest in property and hire a manager to manage my properties. £20m
£33.15m)
7. Drugs & Hookers £54.85m
BOOM £88m gone...but with some income from properties... I doubt i'd actually finish spending as I'd die from all the drugs and soreness.
Nah coke and whores!
An acreage close to the mountains in Alberta, Canada with a big workshop to hold lots of toys and do hobbies in.
Flat in central London.
House on the South Island of New Zealand with a similar setup to the one in Canada.
Switch between Canada and New Zealand so as to avoid the winters in each, stop over in London on the way to visit family, catch some football , get some european culture etc.
Miscellaneous holidays to interesting parts of the world as the mood takes me.
http://forum.charltonlife.com/discussion/82863/if-you-could-own-any-car-what-would-it-be#latest
and get them painted iron bru tartan just because I could
Then I would buy them.
Then I would close them down.
These numbers, of course, aren't exact.
1a. TELL NO-ONE. (At least, not immediately, despite the likely urge.)
1b. Get on to Camelot. They know what to do. Insist on anonymity when they come round, and all that.
1c. Hire a lawyer. Ideally a proper big nob lawyer, partner at a firm, that sort of thing.
2. Still TELL NO-ONE. I'm not going public. I'm probably not telling family or friends yet, as much as is possible. I will "fall ill", or something.
3a. Tell my lawyer I intend to give £15m of this jackpot to family and friends. This will NOT be in the form of a lump sum. I may, however, clear a few debts (student loans, mortgages, what have you).
Trust funds going through stock indices and what have you shall be set up for my cousins; money shall go toward an annuity from which my brother can pull money out of/house deposit/that sort of thing, if he so wants; and for my parents and other relatives etc etc.
Get lawyer/accountant to sort all that out. This leaves £73m.
3b. I'll take £3m to myself "for the time being" (immediate expenses e.g. my lawyer, maybe an accountant, buying a property quickly so I can do all this in private). This leaves £70m.
(Might have to do 3b immediately post-Camelot as part of step 1, but who knows)
4. If possible, dump £15m in UK government bonds that should be paying at around 2-3% (or another govt, if possible). That should be a bona fide income of, hopefully, £300k-450k a year. That is rock solid money. If the UK stops paying on their government debt, then money is nowhere near our biggest worry. This leaves £55m.
5. Be boring again and dump £30m into an index fund, with low fees. Hopefully said fund will pay out at around 4%. In 20 years, that £30m becomes £65m. Tidy. This leaves £25m.
------------
So - I have now, hopefully, guaranteed myself an income of at least £300k a year unless the Bank of England is burning; provided for family and friends in a way they would never have imagined; and I have a huge pot in the form of an index fund that will keep growing at market rates.
Life is good, so step 6:
------------
6a. Donate perhaps £10m, if that, to charity. Likely contenders are Anthony Nolan, Alzheimers Research, and NSPCC.
6b. Tell everyone I've won £8m* on the lottery, and do what I want! Buy a couple of houses here and abroad, go on holidays to wherever, party with mates, maybe invest in a couple of fun-looking startups, maybe even go back to university.
(*£8m being roughly the sort of amount I reckon would set oneself up for life - I'd still have £7m left.)
Sorted.
What about the coke and tarts?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-45199034
And I'm sure there will be ways around that if you're actually living in the house 6 months of the year.
Never live in it.
Play loud house music remotely all day every day.
Dig a bloody great ditch at the bottom of the garden and do nothing with it.
Allow couples to come round and have sex on the front lawn.
Watch it all unfold live from cctv beambacks to my UK den.
Seriously though, my dream would be to buy a lot of land, maybe a farm, maybe an ex-industrial brownfield site and convert it into haven for wildlife; plant new woodlands, dig lakes, grow meadows and hedges...