The Truth on Preserving Lottery Winnings - YouTube

Channel: Pablito's Way

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Here are the steps to take after you win a huge lottery!
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9 - Pick the Lump Sum or Annuity
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Sometimes a little bit of self discipline can go a long long ways.
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That’s especially true for people who win the lottery.
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I mean, let’s say you win a crap ton of money, like 200 million dollars
.cue up
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the Dr. Evil laugh.
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But seriously, that qualifies as a life changing event.
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And while it would be tempting to cash the winning ticket for for 200 million dollars,
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well considerably less once the government takes their cut.
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Depending on who you are, it’s wiser to take the annuity rather than a lump sum.
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Why?
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Basically, it’s to protect yourself

.from yourself.
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Why do so many lottery winners go broke?
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Why do so many professional athletes go broke?
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Basically it’s just the fact that they spend more than they earned!
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The cash isn’t forever.
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Basically, if you can’t keep the same lifestyle after life-changing money, well, the annuity
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is probably the best option to take.
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It sounds like it’s an easy concept, live below your means, but it’s harder than it
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sounds.
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An annuity is basically like letting the government hold onto your winnings for a while and invest
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it for you, without taxing the return on the said investment.
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The annuity also continues AFTER you lie, assuming you pass on to the afterlife within
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30 years of your winnings.
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So it becomes a part of your estate, and once you die, your estate can take out a lump sum
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so the IRS can only tax the estate once.
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Of course, if you have insane self-discipline and you understand finance pretty well, then
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yes, taking the lump sum makes much more sense because, let’s be for real, the numbers
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don’t lie.
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Or do what I’d do, take the lump sum, and don’t touch the principal and live off whatever
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the principal makes!
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8 - Hire a Team Mo money mo problems.
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Biggie wasn’t lying!
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You definitely will want to hire a team of professionals to help you manage that money.
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You’ll basically want an accountant, a fiduciary, and an attorney.
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A fiduciary is obligated to give you objective advice about how to go about managing your
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new fortune.
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They can also be the “bad guy” along with your attorney.
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As Jason Kurland, an attorney who specializes in helping lotto winners explained to Vice
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News, people will come out of the woodwork to give all sorts of quote, “great investments”
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for you.
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A series of bad investments can drain your winnings pretty quickly and it’s hard to
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know when to say “no.”
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You can simply let one person on your team be the bad guy who decides when or when not
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to invest and be the one who says no.
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Your attorney and tax accountant will help you set up and navigate all the legal hurdles
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to protect your nest egg and minimize your taxes, because let’s face it, who wants
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to do that on their own with that type of fortune when time is more valuable than money
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at that point?
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Every state has different lottery rules and tax laws, so you’ll definitely want to talk
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to someone who can specifically analyze your situation and give you the best advice possible.
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Hire that team, and make sure it’s not just your uncle Ted without any qualifications!
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7 - Stay Anonymous The easiest way to save yourself from a lot
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of trouble after winning a giant lottery is to stay as anonymous as possible.
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Don’t tell anyone that you won the lottery!
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First thing you’ll want to do is to set up a trust.
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It’s a way to remain anonymous that way when people look up who won x lottery, they
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just see the trust.
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I mean think about it.
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Let’s say you win hundreds of millions of dollars.
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Then people find out.
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Best case scenario, a bunch of your friends and family start hitting you up to borrow
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money and it’s just really annoying.
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Worst case scenario?
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Shady business people constantly hound you for to invest in their horrific business ideas.
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Online scammers consistently try to cheat you out of your money, or worse, people try
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to blackmail you or even threaten to harm your family for ransom.
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This all sounds crazy, but it’s all happened before.
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First things first, sign the back of your ticket.
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As lotto attorney Jason Kurland explains to Vice, “technically whoever hands the ticket
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in is declared the winner.
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If you sign the back of it, you secure that it’s yours.”
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Okay, so there’s that.
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Forbes contributor Robert Pagliarini, an expert on sudden wealth, recently wrote about something
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called a “Claiming Trust.”
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This means that as the lottery winner, you assign the ticket to a trust, which then claims
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the prize and holds it for a short period of time.
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You then set up what’s called a bridge trust, which ultimately transfers the money to you.
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All this may sound like a lot of headache, but this “trust within a trust” method
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shields winners from the public and other people you don’t want to know.
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6 - Don’t Buy Anything
.for a while Here’s where your self control and discipline
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will REALLY be tested.
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If you win the lottery, don’t make any major purchases that you wouldn’t normally make
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for at least three months up to a year, and that time period really varies from person
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to person.
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Really, it’s probably just best to do a year.
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You gotta get used to the money, and let that initial shock wear off.
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It’ll take awhile for everything to get back to normal.
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But if all of the sudden you start living this new fancy life, chock full of champagne,
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limos, and crazy expensive clothes and cars, you’ll be setting yourself up for failure.
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I’m not even mentioning what the money can do to your relationships, and how with a new
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flash lifestyle, people start to look at you differently.
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In other words, live your normal life for a while.
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Keep your day job, stay in the same house, and don’t deviate too far from your normal
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spending habits.
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Sure, maybe you’ll splurge on a nice dinner a bit more often, but for the most part, the
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more you maintain your usual routine, the better off you’ll be in the long run.
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5 - Pay Off Debts If you have any debts, the first spending
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you should do with the money is to start paying off all your debts if you have any.
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Credit Card bills, student loans, etc.
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Yep, even paying off your mortgage is smart, unless your interest rate is ridiculously
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low and it’s lower than the return you’d earn in some other investment.
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That’s another discussion really.
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According to Forbes writer Deborah L Jacobs, paying off your debt is really the best investment
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a person can possibly make, and that’s something I’d have to agree with.
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She said quote, “When you’ve paid down a dollar of debt, that’s a dollar you no
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longer owe.
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When you invest a dollar, you can’t be sure whether it will grow or shrink.”
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True!
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4 - Make and Live on a Budget Generally speaking, making a budget and abiding
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by it is a good practice to live by no matter how much money you have.
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But when you suddenly win a whole bunch of money, it can be easy to think that the money
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can just last forever, and not worry about a budget at all.
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The truth is, no matter how much money you have, you’ll always have to manage it, and
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you’ll always need to be smart with your finances.
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By the way, you can totally spend some money on yourself and friends after the initial
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waiting period is over.
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It’s okay to take a vacation, buy a new car, enjoy a fancy dinner now and again.
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The key is to figure out how you can make the money last a lifetime, maybe more, and
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basically, let the money work for you.
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Even with millions of dollars, it’s really easy to light it on fire and blow through
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a few million in a very short time.
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Setting, weekly, monthly and yearly boundaries will help you avoid the pitfalls of spending
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too lavishly and burning through all of the money.
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Like I said earlier, the safest bet is to not touch the principal for spending.
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Just think, you’ve made it this far without spending crazy amounts of money, so why not
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keep that going and save your newly acquired fortune?
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3 - Make the right picks We’ve always been taught to invest our money.
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Let our money work for us.
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Let’s not forget, Warren Buffett made 99% of his money AFTER he turned 50, because of
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the magic of compound interest on the hundreds of millions he already made.
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However, you’ll want to avoid BAD investments.
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Now what exactly constitutes a bad investment?
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Hmmm, well if your friends suddenly start coming up with new business ideas after you
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win the lottery, chances are, it’s a really bad investment.
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In fact, most new businesses fail.
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You gotta invest your money and let your nest egg grow, but you don’t need to swing for
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the fences.
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Just like baseball, focus on solid contact and you’ll hit a lot of singles and doubles
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with some home runs mixed in.
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Matthew Goff, a Houston based financial advisor, told Market Watch that lottery winners should
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divest their fortunes after they set up an annuity and pay their taxes.
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He recommends putting most of the money in a short term corporate bonds.
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This alone can generate millions of dollars every year.
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There’s also a short term municipal bond, that according to Goff, offers tax free incentives
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and can generate additional hundreds of thousands of dollars every year.
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Now I could go on and on with different ways of investing the money, but the right investment
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depends on the investment goals of the individual.
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You just gotta make sure you have someone who’s qualified helping you make the right
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decisions so you can reach your financial goals.
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2 - No New Friends/Practice Saying No If you happen to win the lottery one day,
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you’ll notice a very odd trend.
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You’ll suddenly have a lot of people who wanna be friends with you all of a sudden.
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Now, it very well may be the case that they’re drawn to your winning personality.
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However, more often than not, these people are after your money.
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Just don’t be their friends.
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CNBC reported in 2017 that lottery winners are far more likely to file for bankruptcy
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within three to five years than everyone else.
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One reason is that not only do new quote “friends” appear, but existing friends and family members
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tend to ask for money pretty often as well.
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And while it can be difficult to say “no” you’re gonna have to get used at it.
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Remember that attorney Jason Kurland?
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Like he said...let someone on your team be the bearer of bad news.
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If you’re having a hard time saying no, simply defer all of those decisions to that
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person and let them be the ones to turn your friends down.
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After all, if someone only likes you for your money, are they really your friends?
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And if you go broke you can’t help anyone...including yourself.
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1 - Set up Asset Protection Strategies Even though I just went over practice saying
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no, sometimes you’ll wanna say yes, but just know that the times you do say yes, you’ll
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probably never see the money again, and just be okay with that.
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Once you figure out who the most important people to you are, and who you actually wanna
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help, you’ll want to set up some sort of long term asset protections plan.
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We’ve already discussed annuities and blind trusts.
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But you may also wanna reconsider your will, to ensure that whoever you picked to help
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will be able to get some of your money once you pass on to the great beyond.
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If you don’t even trust yourself, you can set up something called an irrevocable trust,
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which turns control of the money over to the trust, which shields you from outside influences.
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A great example of this would be an asset protection trust, which you regain control
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of years later.
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This insulates your money from creditors and regulations that could adversely affect your
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money.
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Here’s what’s next!