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For me, I guess I would do exactly what he did. Hit a savings account first, then start working with a financial planner to set up investment and savings accounts elsewhere to protect the money for the long term.
After that, I think I would need to see a professional for help deciding what to do, especially in regards to what accounts to open. The "not idiotic" decisions is to ask for help when you need it.
I would especially take some of the money and start two scholarship programs: one for young entrepreneurs, and one for students who are having trouble affording college, but are making a dedicated effort to learn about personal finance to help themselves.
Then, I would fully fund my daughter's 529 (I think $65,000 or so?) so that her education would be covered, or mostly covered.
I would get an addition on the house to expand the kitchen and pay cash for it.
That would leave me with about $1.1 million, which I would park in a combination of savings and index funds and just let it grow and not touch it for ten years or so.
Also, without debt we could live on one income so either my wife or I would scale back working or retire.
My wife and I would quit working full-time, of course, and I could pursue my side business full-time to supplement the investment income.
I'd pay off my $260k in debt, put $100,000 in a high-yield savings or money market, buy an acreage for my private residence, and start a youth camp on some property my family owns.
$1.5MM is such a large amount (not for some people, I guess) that I'd have to just carve little parts out ($5,000 for my IRA to start), see what's left ($1,495,000?), and repeat.
Assuming that $1.2 only gains a modest 5% annually, you're bringing in a "free" $60,000 every year. If you're retired and live frugally and with no debts, $60K should be plenty. And if your investments gain more than 5%, you will have the benefit of not only being retired, but also getting richer every day.
The difference in effort between 15 accounts and 17 accounts is minute and would be worth it.
However, I would invest the majority of it in mutual funds anyways, which aren't FDIC insured and therefore this quibble was purely academic ;).
I've thought about this...I'd pay off our debts ($120k), put $20,000 in an emergency account, put about $200,000k in an index fund for retirement, max out my IRA (and while I know the money has to be earned...technically we'd be earning money at our real jobs), put some in a house fund ($250,000 in 3 banks I guess), put some in a college fund ($100,000 to grow) and give the rest away. Oh, maybe pay off the rest of my parents' mortgage....
I would start my foundation for scholarships, since thats my life goal anyway. I would be 1% done achieving it then...
Of course, as many folks mentioned, they would invest inside a brokerage account so FDIC insurance really isn't a factor.
I think a much better approach is a transparant managing your finances at the present, which you do on this blog, and I appreciate.
If Ken Jennings is responsible in the way he manages his Jeopardy! winnings, it is probably because he was responsible in the way he managed his income when his net worth was a lot smaller.