Friday, February 22, 2013
Sari Sari store owner wins
6/55 1 winner
Draw date: 2/27/2013
Jackpot Prize 81,670,273.20
11-13-18-20-21-23
6/49 0 winner
Draw date: 2/28/2013
Expected Jackpot Prize 67 million
6/42 0 winner
Draw date: 2/28/2013
Expected Jackpot Prize 25 million
6/45 1 winner
Draw date: 2/15/2013
Jackpot Prize 44,075,287.80
Sari Sari store owner wins
A 53-year-old owner of a sari-sari store in Cagayan Province won the P44,025,287 for picking the winning combination of 8-17-22-24-39-40 for last Friday’s Megalotto 6/45 draw. (Feb.15,2013)
The bettor picked the combination using the birth dates of his 5 children and the karaoke song number of Frank Sinatra’s “My Way”.
Friday, February 15, 2013
Secrets of Filipino tycoons revealed
6/55- 0 winner
Draw date: 2/23/2013
Expected Jackpot Prize 68 million
6/49- 0 winner
Draw date: 2/21/2013
Expected Jackpot Prize 50 million
6/45- 1 winner
Draw date: 2/15/2013
Jackpot Prize 44,075,287.80
8-17-22-24-39-40
MANILA, Philippines - Henry Sy, Lucio Tan, George Ty, John Gokongwei, Andrew Tan and Manuel Villar are some of the richest people in the Philippines.
What is the secret to these tycoons' success? Wilson Lee Flores, a veteran journalist who has interviewed the country's top tycoons, recently shared some anecdotes that sheds some light on how they became the wealthiest men in the country.
In an interview on ANC's On The Money last Wednesday, Wilson said many of these tycoons went through difficult times when they were young.
"I noticed one thing that tycoons, including tycoons in the Philippines, have in common is that many of them have gone through some hardships, whether personal, financial or family," he said.
"(Metrobank owner) George Ty told me, 'everyone who wants success should be able to pay the price whether in terms of hard work or discipline'."
Tycoons such as Lucio Tan, Villar and Gokongwei share a similar rags-to-riches story.
"Lucio Tan and Manny Villar are from the school of hard knocks. They are self-made men... Lucio Tan did not finish college so he went to night school every night but he compensated by working very hard and always reading a lot. He reads a lot of Chinese history and philosophy... Manny Villar is a self-made man who came from a poor family but he went to one of the best schools in the country UP," Flores noted.
Villar, a senator and one of the biggest property developers in the country, was born to a poor family in Manila and helped his mother sell fish in the market. Last year, Forbes estimated Villar's net worth at $720 million.
Gokongwei, who owns Robinsons malls and Cebu Pacific, was born to a wealthy family but after his father's death, he had to drop out of school to sell rice and scrap metal. The net worth of the JG Summit founder was pegged at $3.2 billion.
"(Gokongwei) is not just hardworking but one thing I admire about him is that he is probably the most well-read tycoon in the Philippines... He studies non-stop even though he was a high school dropout because he was poor," Flores said.
Frugality
Another common trait of tycoons is their sense of frugality.
"Frugality is already inculcated in the Chinese culture. One of the tycoons I know, she said throughout her life she has never bought any designer clothes and she's one of the wealthiest in the country," Flores said.
Andrew Tan, who owns Megaworld and the Philippine franchise for McDonald's, used to walk to school because he wanted to save his jeepney fare. His net worth is now estimated at $2.3 billion.
"He used to walk to school to save on jeepney fare... But when you meet him, akala mo he's the son of a wealthy person, he's very refined, and well-off type," he said.
Even Lucio Tan, the second richest man in the country with a net worth of $4.5 billion, didn't fly business class or first class on planes.
"Before Luico Tan became PAL owner, he never flew business or first class. He always rides economy class... I heard one time his executives were in business class and he was in economy," Flores said.
When Gokongwei was a young businessman, he still kept on renting a home, instead of buying one.
"He told me a lot of businessmen in the Philippines, the first thing they do when they become wealthy is they build a big house. His thinking is, inuuna muna niya factories and businesses and he didn't make the house a priority... He would prioritize building factories since they were cash cows," Flores said.
While the tycoons are frugal, it is never to the point of depriving themselves of life's pleasures.
"They lead simple lives," Flores said.
Discipline
Many of the top tycoons are also very good with time management and are very disciplined. Some tycoons like Gokongwei and Ty don't attend any evening parties or social events, and are very athletic.
Ty, the founder Metrobank whose net worth is $1.7 billion, is very disciplined about swimming every day.
"He swims every day for half an hour. He's been swimming since he was in his 20s and now he's 80," Flores said.
"Gokongwei does the treadmill and swims. He also takes a 20 to 30 minute nap, which I think recharges him. He works Monday to Saturday," Flores said.
Filinvest's Andrew and Mercedes Gotianun, whose net worth is around $825 million, are also very low-key and private.
"Andrew and Mercedes Gotianun are very low key but they are extremely hard-working. I heard they hold meetings at 6 a.m. with their executives. They lead disciplined lives," Flores said
Source: Cathy Rose A. Garcia, ABS-CBNnews.com
Friday, February 8, 2013
Philippine charity sweepstakes office
PCSO Main Office:
PICC Secretariat Bldg, CCP Complex,
1307 Roxas Blvd., Pasay City.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Hon. Margarita P. Juico
Chairman of the Board
Hon. Ma. Aleta L. Tolentino Member of the Board |
Hon. Betty B. Nantes Member of the Board |
Hon. Mabel V. Mamba Member of the Board |
Hon. Francisco G. Joaquin III Member of the Board |
Atty. Eduardo G. Araullo
Board Secretary VI
Office of the General Manager
Hon. Jose Ferdinand M. Rojas II
General Manager
Concurrent Department Manager PR & Publicity Department
Winning the lottery: Does it guarantee happiness?
By Elizabeth Landau, CNN
(CNN) -- She was a mother of three living in a small apartment and working four jobs. And then, as if in a fairy tale, she won her state's lottery last year. But the story doesn't have the happy ending you might expect.
She didn't do anything overly extravagant after the $1.3 million got slashed in taxes. She bought a house, got a new wardrobe at the Salvation Army, cut work down to just one job and invested the rest.
And then came the phone calls: promises, marriage proposals, accusations, threats. People who used to volunteer to help her do things wanted money for their trouble. Family members, she says, tried to run her life, and control her money.
"Sometimes I wish I could change my name and go somewhere and hide," said the woman, who asked not to be identified to prevent further attention.
It's fun to think about what you would do if you played lottery numbers that brought in millions of dollars. But, disillusioning as it may seem, big winnings can come with big costs, especially because of the greed of others, experts say.
RELATED TOPICS
McCullar is "not going to know who to trust and whether he can even stay and live in the same hometown," said Steven Danish, professor of psychology and social and behavioral health at Virginia Commonwealth University.
Lottery winners sometimes experience high-profile misfortune. West Virginia businessman Andrew "Jack" Whittaker Jr. is a well-known example; he won $112 million after taxes in 2002. Among his personal tragedies since then, his granddaughter and daughter have both died, and he has allegedly been robbed several times.
Another case is Abraham Shakespeare of Florida, who was slain after winning a $31 million lottery prize. A friend was charged with murder in his death last year and has pleaded not guilty. Shakespeare, Whittaker and other unlucky winners have been featured in documentaries such as E!'s "Curse of the Lottery."
Winning money in a lottery isn't always a "Lost"-style curse, of course. Lee McDaniel, 67, of Stone Mountain, Georgia, won $5 million in the Georgia Lottery last year. He says he has seen no downsides at all and doesn't have anyone in his life after his money. He remodeled his house, bought a large RV and a Jeep, and invested a good chunk of it at low risk.
Aside from those material upgrades, one of the greatest parts of winning, in his view, was being able to help his sister in California, who needed a leg amputation. She would have had to live in a nursing home, but McDaniel gave her enough money to build a ramp in her own home. He and his wife also gave money to other relatives, just because they wanted to.
"I don't feel that I have changed. I am just very secure financially," he said.
If money could bring happiness
Research in psychology and economics has found that people do get happier as their income increases, but only up to a certain level where they are comfortable. One of the more recent studies on the subject, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences last year, found life satisfaction rises with higher incomes up to a household income of about $75,000, and levels off afterward.
In general, the research on the happiness of lottery winners is mixed. A 2006 study in the Journal of Health Economics of lottery winners in Britain who won up to $200,000 found an improvement in their mental well-being two years later. But an often-referenced study from 1978, comparing 22 major lottery winners with people who did not win, found no difference in happiness levels between the two groups.
There's not an extensive amount of study in this area, but experts have a few ideas about how to make that initial thrill of winning last longer and increase overall satisfaction.
Have a plan
You've probably fancifully imagined what you might do with lottery earnings, but those who do well have serious plans for where they want to be in five years. Lottery winnings can help them get there, said Danish, the psychology professor.
Those who don't have clear life goals are more likely to feel overwhelmed and fumble with the money, even more than before winning, he said.
Be a giver, not a lender
It's a common experience that giving away money makes people feel good, and science backs that up. A 2008 study in Science found that people were happier spending $20 on others than they were on themselves. In general, research supports the idea that people feel good when they feel they are making an impact with their money in a personal way and a sense of shame when they are stingy.
Indeed, most iReporters said they would use $380 million to help the world, if they won that kind of money in the lottery.
But if someone asks you for help paying a bill, that's a different story. If a friend owes you money, and you see him or her go have a nice dinner, you feel offended, said Michael Norton, associate professor of business administration at Harvard Business School, who co-authored the Science study.
"When you become the rich person, who other people look to, it can actually erode the social bond that you have with people, because it changes your relationship from friendship into almost like a transaction," Norton said.
Invest in making memories
It's a personal decision, of course, but research supports spending money on experiences rather than material possessions. Not only do going places and seeing things lead to more happiness, but experience-oriented people are better liked by others than those who are materialistic, a 2010 study found.
And that's partly because once we buy something, we get used to having it around, and it no longer gives us the pleasure it did in the first few days following a purchase. An experience, on the other hand, can be enjoyed again and again when you remember it and tell others about it. Likewise, if you suddenly get a lot of money and spend it all at once, you might not get as much happiness as you would if you spread it out over time.
If you slowly change your lifestyle so that you keep appreciating that new money, you'll most likely be happier than if you quickly make large adjustments at once, Norton said. For example, you could make a point to take a big trip once a year, rather than putting it all into a house.
And that might be why Harvard economist Guido Imbens found that lottery winners who received annual payouts averaging $20,000 (in 1986 dollars) were happier on average -- the recipients got to have the excitement of getting more money each year, rather than adjusting to one lump sum.
Does money change you?
It's not clear that winning money changes personality, and it's impossible to know how people's lives would have gone otherwise had they not won, Norton said.
The woman who used to work four jobs said she doesn't feel that she's changed -- but a lot of people around her have. She's grateful for what she has but feels scared to lose it.
"I don't know whether 'happy' is the word," she said. "I'm still trying to grasp it."
Friday, February 1, 2013
The unlucky winner
6/49- 1 winner
Draw date: 1/31/2013
Jackpot Prize P69,103,170.00
11-14-23-39-45-47
9 Jackpot winners for the month of Jan. 2013
6/55 - 2 winners
6/49 - 2 winners
6/45 - 1 winner
6/42 - 4 winners
6/42- 1 winner
Draw date: 1/24/2013
Jackpot Prize P13,641,613.20 million
A worker from Baguio City who took care of his ailing eldest brother until he died and sent his four nephews and nieces to school won the P13,641,613.20 jackpot in the Lotto 6/42 draw last Thursday.
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He will buy a house and lot and engage in business in Benguet.
The winner used his and his brother’s children’s birthdates.
The unlucky winner
By: Nick Carbone
“Winning the lottery is the worst thing that ever happened to me.
Winnings: $31 million
Time until bust: 20 months
Billie Bob Harrell, Jr. thought his problems were over when he won the $31 million Texas Lotto jackpot in June 1997.
Nearly broke and constantly moving between low-paying jobs, with a wife and three children to support, the first of his $1.24 million annual payouts seemed like the light at the end of the tunnel. Instead, it was the beginning of an annus horribilis for the 47-year-old Texan.
It started out joyful: he quit his job at Home Depot, took his family to Hawaii, donated tens of thousands of dollars to his church, bought cars and houses for friends and family, and even donated 480 turkeys to the poor.
But his lavish spending attracted unwanted attention, and he had to change his phone number several times after strangers called to demand donations. He also made a bad deal with a company that gives lottery winners lump-sum payments in exchange for their annual checks that left him with far less than what he had won.
When Harrell and his wife Barbara Jean separated less than a year later, it was the straw that broke the camel’s back. His son found him dead inside his home from a self-inflicted gunshot wound on May 22, 1999, shortly before he was set to have dinner with his ex-wife.
While family members disputed the idea that Harrell could have committed suicide, he clearly wasn’t happy with his life; he’d told a financial adviser shortly before his death that “Winning the lottery is the worst thing that ever happened to me.”
Friday, January 25, 2013
Sad stories of lotto winners
6/49- 0 winner
Draw date: 1/31/2013
Estimated Jackpot Prize P68 million
6/45- 1 winner
Draw date: 1/25/2013
6-19-27-29-34-45
Jackpot Prize P55,536,805.80
6/42- 1 winner
Draw date: 1/24/2013
12-19-24-33-34-41
Jackpot Prize P13,641,613.20
6/55- 1 winner
Draw date: 1/23/2013
8-16-21-23-24-54
Jackpot Prize P 40,940,528.40
As of Dec -2012, PCSO has 3,035 lotto terminal outlets all over the Philippines.
Sad stories of lotto winners
Blowing money on blow:
Want to know how to fritter away a multi-million lottery fortune? Ask Michael Carroll: The unemployed Brit has blown a £9.7 million jackpot he won in 2002 (approximately $15 million at the time) and as of 2010, was hoping to get his old job back as a garbageman. At first, Carroll lavished gifts on friends and family, but soon started spending on less admirable causes: Cocaine, parties, cars, and, at one point, up to four prostitutes a day. "The party has ended," he told the UK's Daily Mail, "and it's back to reality. That's the way I like it. I find it easier to live off £42 dole than a million."
Philanthropic pauper:
Janite Lee, a wigmaker who immigrated from North Korea to St. Louis, won an $18 million lotto jackpot in 1993. She used the winnings to better her community, sinking millions into the construction of a nondenominational church and a reading room at Washington University. She also donated so much to the Democrat National Committee that she was ranked 31st on a list of "soft money" donors — right beneath Boeing. Several of Lee's investments turned sour; she spent hundreds of thousands on gambling. Lee filed for bankruptcy in 1997.
Money can buy haplessness:
After winning $16.2 million in the Pennsylvania lottery in 1988, William 'Bud' Post should have had it made, but that was hardly the case for the shotgun-toting rough rider of Erie, Pa. "His problems," reported The Washington Post, "included a brother who tried to hire a contract murderer to kill him and his sixth wife; a landlady who forced him to give her one-third of the jackpot; and a conviction on an assault charge, after Mr. Post fired a shotgun at a man trying to collect a debt at his deteriorating dream house in northwestern Pennsylvania." In 1996, the cash-strapped former millionaire auctioned off the rights to his remaining lotto payments. After repaying his lenders, he was again in the clear — that is, until he bought two homes, a truck, a luxury camper, computers, and a $260,000 sailboat. "I was much happier when I was broke," he said. He died in 2006, on a $450-per-month disability check.
The guy who couldn't catch a break:
Vietnam veteran Wayne Schenk thought the $1 million New York lotto he won would pay for his costly lung cancer treatments, but he was wrong. New York lottery officials rejected his request to receive the amount in a lump sum. He only received one $50,000 payment — well short of the $125,000 initial outlay required for the specialized care — before he passed away in 2007.
Fool me once, shame on you:
In a bizarre twist of luck, New Jersey resident Evelyn Adams won the state's lottery twice — and managed to squander her $5.4 million total winnings. Adams, a compulsive gambler, spent the bulk of her payout at Atlantic City casinos. She wound up in a trailer. "Winning the lottery isn't always what it's cracked up to be," she later told reporters.
Source: The week.
Friday, January 18, 2013
First Five millionaires of 2013
6/49- 1 winner
Draw date: 1/3/2013
Jackpot Prize P16 million
Ex seaman wins.
A fifty-five-year-old ex-seaman is this year’s first instant millionaire after he won the P16-million lotto jackpot of the January 3 draw.
The winner from Valenzuela City hit the 6/49 jackpot, matching the winning numbers, 3-9-11-18-23-25. With his money safe in the bank. he plans to donate to his local church, share with his brothers and sisters, and invest in a business.
Married, he has two children and a lotto bettor since 1995.
On Jan.3, he had P40 for two 6/49 bets using birth dates of family members.
6/42- 1 winner
Draw date: 1/15/2013
Jackpot Prize P9,994,768.20
A lone bettor who placed a bet in Makati City won the P9,994,768.20 jackpot in the Lotto 6/42 draw last Tuesday. Jan 15, 2013
The winner is the fifth lotto instant millionaire this month.
The winner placed a bet in a lotto outlet in a mall on Chino Roces Ave. (formerly Pasong Tamo St.). It matched the winning combination of 1-5-9-10-18-22.
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Source: Edd K. Usman
Tempo
First Five millionaires of 2013
The first five lotto instant millionaires as of Jan 17, 2013.
6/49 draw 1 winner
Jan 3, 2013 prize P 16 million
6/55 draw 1 winner
Jan.5, 2013 prize P 94,226,263.20
6/42 draw 3 winners
Jan. 5, 2013 prize P10,363,059.00
Jan 8, 2013 prize P3,390,093.00
Jan. 15,2013 prize P 9,994,768.20
Friday, January 11, 2013
New millionaires
6/55- 1 winner
Draw date: 1/5/2013
Jackpot Prize P94,226,263.20
13-28-38-39-41-55
A lone lotto bettor placed the winning bet in Muntinlupa City.
6/42- 1 winner
Draw date: 1/5/2013
Jackpot Prize P10,363,059
15-19-23-28-31-33
The Lotto 6/42 winner placed the winning bet in Caloocan City.
6/49- 1 winner
Draw date: 1/3/2013
Jackpot Prize P16-million
3-9-11-18-23-25
A lone bettor who placed a bet in Karuhatan, Valenzuela City is the first instant millionaire this year.
I found a lotto news about an old man looking for his lost lotto ticket.
A 76 years old man trapped looking for lottery ticket.
AMSTERDAM — A 76-year-old man trapped himself in an underground waste paper container in Amsterdam after he clambered in to hunt for a lottery ticket.
Police said in a statement the elderly man managed to open the container and climb in Thursday because he feared he had tossed out a lottery ticket along with other used paper.
Passers-by heard him calling for help and alerted the police who freed him with the help of firefighters.
The bad news? The man didn't find his lottery ticket.
A lesson to be learned ...... Always have a secret safekeeping place for your lotto tickets.
Source: lottery post
Friday, January 4, 2013
Lotto winner has 8 children
6/55- 1 winner
Draw date: 1/5/2013
Jackpot Prize P94,226,263.20
13-28-38-39-41-55
Father of 8 is the newest millionaire
The saying “Basta driver, sweet lover (Drivers are sweet lovers)” seems to hold true in the case of the man who bagged the jackpot in the Dec. 20 6/42 Lotto draw.
When he went to the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office (PCSO) in Pasay City on Friday to collect the check for his winnings of P40.6 million, the 48-year-old taxi driver from Novaliches, Quezon City, admitted that he has sired eight children with four different live-in partners.
The man revealed this information about himself as he explained to PCSO officials where he got the winning combination of 01-12-18-37-40-42.
According to him, some of the numbers were based on the birth dates of his previous partners whom he met when they rode in his taxi cab.
The man told PCSO officials that for the past 17 years, he had been betting on the lotto using this combination, the agency said in a statement.
The country’s newest millionaire, however, has promised PCSO
officials that aside from using his money to invest in a transportation business and purchase a house and lot, he will also look for his children to fulfill some of his obligations to them.
6/49- 2 winners
Draw date: 12/30/2012
Jackpot Prize P56,969,928 million
A young man who recently graduated from college and a single mother who owns a sari-sari (retail) store are off to a good start this year.
The two bagged the almost P57-million jackpot in the 6/49 Super Lotto 6/49 draw on Dec. 30.
The new millionaires claimed their winnings at the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office in Pasay City yesterday, the first working day after the long holiday break.
Both the 24-year-old fresh graduate from Manila and the 31-year-old mother from Antique province shelled out only P20 each on lotto bets.
Still, they managed to pick the winning number combination of 03-31-24-17-12-47 to take home P28.4 million each.
The college graduate told PCSO General Manager Jose Ferdinand Rojas II that he had been placing lotto bets for four years whenever he had some money saved from his allowance.
Now, less than a year after finishing his studies, he is set to buy his family a house and lot, invest in a small business and help send his three siblings to school.
The sari-sari store owner from Antique, meanwhile, said she had been placing bets for 10 years. She plans to spend her money on her parents, siblings and only child, as well as make a contribution to the church.
Source: Jaymee T.Gamil
Philippine Daily Inquirer
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