I had the same idea the other night while deep in thought regarding my lotto winnings. I'd rather win 9 million than 900 million. Then about 30 seconds later...nah I'll take me chances.
RogerFurlong said:
A friend of my dad's has his son's trust fund setup to where he get's a match of the previous year's W-2. So if he makes 200k he gets 200k, if he makes 25K he only get's 25K. Pretty good idea to keep them from getting spoiled living off your hard work. I would setup something like that.
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Somebody in New Jersey won the mega millions to the tune of $1.13 Billion.
100% bonus depreciation is getting phased downward each year. For 2023 it is limited to 80% of the cost of the asset, then 60% in 2024, etc. There was a bill passed in the House restoring it to 100%, but don't think it has passed the Senate.LostInLA07 said:
I imagine you'd have to somehow tie the yacht to a business and maybe there's a way to take a huge deduction to offset a bunch of income?
I always thought this strategy worked best with cash flow producing and fast depreciation schedule assets though. No clue where a yacht falls. I think you still get bonus depreciation on jets though…so maybe you start a jet charter business, buy a $250MM jet, bonus depreciate the whole thing, and then borrow against it. Charter the jet out to cover the (deductible) interest expense and convert $250MM in taxable income to tax free income with the lease or charter fees covering the loan?
I do know you can use bonus depreciation to wipe out a bunch of taxable income when using a loan to purchase…because you can bonus depreciate based on the full eligible purchase price or cost, not the amount of equity you inject. So you basically get a big write off using the banks money.
Of course that's recaptured whenever you sell, but I suspect you can just use a 1031 exchange perpetually?
Surely some wise CPA can give us the 30,000ft explanation of something like this.
When you look at it that way it's not even worth it.txaggie_08 said:
$865MM Powerball tonight, $416MM cash value. About $262MM after taxes in Texas.
Funny that it's advertised everywhere as 1.13 billion and you end up with less than a third of that in the bank.Spaceship said:Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Somebody in New Jersey won the mega millions to the tune of $1.13 Billion.
Cash payout of $537.5 million
After tax deposit of $338.6 million
Earn 4% per year and that's $13 million per year to live off and never touch the principal.
Pretty crazy.