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We did the math to see if it's worth buying a Powerball lottery ticket

Even though Wednesday's Powerball has the second-highest jackpot ever, it still doesn't make mathematical sense to buy a ticket.

Buying a Powerball ticket probably isn't worth it.

The Powerball jackpot for Wednesday's drawing is up to $700 million as of 10:00 a.m. ET Wednesday. The jackpot grew after no one won Saturday's drawing.

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That is a pretty huge chunk of money. However, when the jackpot was $535 million, taking a closer look at the underlying math of the lottery shows that it's probably a bad idea to buy a ticket.

When trying to evaluate the outcome of a risky, probabilistic event like the lottery, one of the first things to look at isexpected value.

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The expected value of a randomly decided process is found by taking all the possible outcomes of the process, multiplying each outcome by its probability, and adding all those numbers up. This gives us a long-run average value for our random process.

Expected value is helpful for assessing gambling outcomes. If my expected value for playing the game, based on the cost of playing and the probabilities of winning different prizes, is positive, then,in the long run, the game will make me money. If expected value is negative, then this game is a net loser for me.

Lotteries are a great example of this kind of probabilistic process. InPowerball, for each $2 ticket you buy, you choose five numbers between 1 and 69 (represented by white balls in the drawing) and one number between 1 and 26 (the red "powerball"). Prizes arebased onhow many of the player's chosen numbers match the numbers drawn.

Match all five of the numbers on the white balls and the one on the red powerball, and you win the jackpot. After that, smaller prizes are given out for matching some subset of the numbers.

The Powerball website helpfully providesa list of the odds and prizesfor each of the possible outcomes. We can use those probabilities and prize sizes to evaluate the expected value of a $2 ticket.

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Take each prize, subtract the price of our ticket, multiply the net return by the probability of winning, and add all those values up to get our expected value:

Looking at just the headline prize is a vast oversimplification.

First, the $700 million jackpot is paid out as an annuity, meaning that rather than getting the whole amount all at once, it's spread out in smaller — but still multimillion-dollar — annual payments over 30 years. If you choose instead to take the entire cash prize at one time, you get much less money up front: The cash payout value at the time of writing is $443.3 million.

If we take the lump sum, then, we end up seeing that the expected value of a ticket drops below zero, to -$0.16, suggesting that a ticket for the lump sum is a bad deal:

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The question of whether to take the annuity or the cash is somewhat nuanced. ThePowerball websitesays the annuity option's payments increase by 5% each year, presumably keeping up with and somewhat exceeding inflation.

On the other hand, the state is investing the cash somewhat conservatively, in a mix of US government and agency securities. It's quite possible, although risky, to get a larger return on the cash sum if it's invested wisely.

Further, having more money today is frequently better than taking in money over a long period, since a larger investment today will accumulate compound interest more quickly than smaller investments made over time. This is referred to as thetime value of money.

In addition to comparing the annuity with the lump sum, there's also the big caveat of taxes. While state income taxes vary, it's possible that combined state, federal, and, in some jurisdictions, local taxes could take as much as half of the money.

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Factoring this in, if we're taking home only half of our potential prizes, our expected-value calculations move deeper into negative territory, making our Powerball investment an increasingly bad idea.

Here's what we get from taking the annuity, after factoring in our estimated 50% in taxes. The expected value drops to -$0.48:

Another potential problem is the possibility of multiple jackpot winners. Bigger pots, especially those that draw significant media coverage, tend to bring in more customers for lottery tickets. And more people buying tickets means a greater chance that two or more will choose the magic numbers, leading to the prize being split equally among all winners.

It should be clear that this would be devastating to the expected value of a ticket. Calculating expected values factoring in the possibility of multiple winners is tricky, since this depends on the number of tickets sold, which we won't know until after the drawing. However, we saw the effect of cutting the jackpot in half when considering the effect of taxes. Considering the possibility of needing to cut the jackpot in half again, buying a ticket is almost certainly a losing proposition if there's a good chance we'd need to split the pot.

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One thing we can calculate fairly easily is the probability of multiple winners based on the number of tickets sold. The number of jackpot winners in a lottery is a textbook example of abinomial distribution, a formula from basic probability theory. If we repeat some probabilistic process some number of times, and each repetition has some fixed probability of "success" as opposed to "failure," the binomial distribution tells us how likely we are to have a particular number of successes.

In our case, the process is filling out a lottery ticket, the number of repetitions is the number of tickets sold, and the probability of success is the 1-in-292,201,338 chance of getting a jackpot-winning ticket. Using the binomial distribution, we can find the probability of splitting the jackpot based on the number of tickets sold:

It's worth noting that the binomial model for the number of winners has an extra assumption: That lottery players are choosing their numbers at random. Of course, not every player will do this, and it's possible that some numbers are more frequently chosen than others. That would make the odds of splitting the jackpot slightly higher if a more popular number is drawn Wednesday night. Still, the above graph gives us at least a good idea of the chances of a split jackpot.

Most Powerball drawings don't have too much of a risk of multiple winners — the average in 2017 so far has sold about 22 million tickets, according to our analysis ofrecords from LottoReport.com, leaving only about a 0.3% chance of a split pot.

Larger prizes, however, tend to draw more contenders. Saturday's drawing, when the jackpot was $535 million, sold about 114 million tickets, according to. That still leaves only about a 6% chance of two or more winners.

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However, in January 2016, when the jackpot topped $1 billion — and eventually $1.5 billion — a whopping 635 million tickets were sold. In that drawing, it would have been surprising if there hadn't been a split pot, with a nearly 2-in-3 chance of two or more winners. In the end,three people won the jackpot.

With the jackpot now getting closer to that historic high, this week's drawings could bring in hundreds of millions of customers, increasing the possibility of a split pot.

That leads to a conundrum: Ever huger jackpots, which should lead to a better expected value of a ticket, could have the unintended consequence of bringing in too many new players, increasing the odds of a split jackpot and damaging the value of a ticket.

To anyone still playing the lottery despite all this, good luck!

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