KIM: Despite Powerball mania, lottery is lousy investment

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KimI’ll admit nobody was more excited than I was in January when the Powerball jackpot grew so big it exceeded the billboards’ digital capacity of $999 million.

If it seems like these ginormous jackpots are becoming more frequent, you’re right. According to The New York Times, four of the 10 biggest jackpots in U.S. history have occurred in 2016, including the $1.58 billion Powerball jackpot on Jan. 13.

Was this the result of the “luck of the draw”? Hardly. It was an “engineered outcome intended to generate mind-boggling big winners,” created by combining math and human nature to “stimulate more gambling.”

State-run lotteries are a huge business in the United States, generating sales in 2015 of $73.8 billion. Since only roughly 60 percent of sales are paid out as prizes, the remaining 40 percent is an important source of funds for the 44 states (and D.C.) with lotteries.

Powerball started as Lotto America in 1988 and Mega Millions in 1996 as the Big Game. In 2010, a cross-selling agreement between Powerball and Mega Millions went into effect, resulting in players now having the opportunity to play four times per week—Tuesday and Friday (Mega Millions) and Wednesday and Saturday (Powerball).

The enormous jackpots resulted from redesigns of Mega Millions in 2013 and Powerball in October 2015. Winning the Powerball jackpot requires matching all five white balls plus the red Powerball. By making a small adjustment in the number of white balls (from 59 to 69—doubling the available combinations of white balls) and Powerballs (from 35 to 26), Powerball decreased the odds of winning the jackpot from an infinitesimal 1 in 175 million to an even more infinitesimal 1 in 292 million (while making it slightly easier to match just the Powerball, which yields the smallest prize).

The “genius” in the redesign, according to a July 2015 piece by Walt Hickey on stats guru Nate Silver’s FiveThirtyEight.com (a fascinating website that uses statistical analysis to tell compelling stories about politics, sports, science and economics) was that it increased the odds of jackpots growing to $1 billion by 7.5 times. Sure enough, Hickey’s prediction came true within four months of the redesign.

It’s fun to fantasize, but the harsh math of lotteries makes them a losing proposition. You can expect to lose a whopping 40 cents on every dollar you spend, a 40 percent “house advantage” that would make casinos blush (roulette is a casino’s favorite game, with a 5 percent house advantage).

The Times guessed that as many as 50 million U.S. adults are swallowing net losses averaging $1,000 a year (about $20 a week). Further, if that $1,000 were instead invested every year from the investor’s age of 20 until 65 and earned a very attainable 5 percent annually, you would have a very real nest egg of about $167,000.

Successful investors focus on process, not outcome. Somebody did win that billion-dollar jackpot, but that doesn’t mean betting one dollar with the expectation of losing 40 cents is wise. The best way to make money investing is slowly. It’s human nature to want to win the jackpot with a lucky ticket or discovering the “next Facebook,” but that’s a dream bound to end badly.•

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Kim is the chief operating officer and chief compliance officer for Kirr Marbach & Co. LLC. He can be reached at (812) 376-9444 or mickey@kirrmar.com.

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