Powerball jackpot hits staggering $1.5 billion after no one won $1.2 billion grand prize

No winning tickets were sold for Wednesday night’s Powerball jackpot of $1.2 billion, so the top prize for Saturday night’s drawing will be $1.5 billion, Powerball officials said.

The winning numbers for Wednesday night’s drawing were 02, 11, 22, 35, 60 and a Powerball of 23.

The jackpot grows after every drawing without a winner and now was approaching the record of $1.586 billion won by three Powerball players in 2016. The second– and third-largest prizes were hit by players of the Mega Millions lottery game.

There have now been 39 consecutive draws without a jackpot winner since the last one was won on Aug. 3.

“I think it would be close to being a record if not a record,” said Drew Svitko, the Pennsylvania Lottery’s executive director. “The record of $1.586 billion that we had back in 2016 is within reach, but it really depends on a couple factors.”

The first factor is the number of tickets sold, and they are flying out of lottery machines throughout the country.

For the Monday night drawing, there were 131.6 million Powerball plays sold, said Anna Domoto, a spokeswoman for the Multi-State Lottery Association, which oversees the game. That amounted to 36.3% of all possible number combinations being covered, as millions of players picked the same numbers.

That’s a lot, but considering the odds of winning the jackpot are 1 in 292.2 million, that means about 186 million number combinations weren’t covered, which is why no one won the grand prize.

Although the focus of the game is on the $1.2 billion prize — that is the amount for an annuity, doled out over 29 annual payments — nearly all winners choose a cash prize, which would be $596.7 million.

Still, the advertised prize is based on the annuity, and that’s where the second factor in determining the jackpot comes in as higher interest rates cause annuities to grow more quickly. Put another way, the $596.7 million in cash is funneled into investments that will eventually pay out $1.2 billion, and those investments grow faster as interest rates rise.

“We use investments to fund the annuity to pay that prize, so the investments rely on interest and the degree to which interest rates effect the value of those investments also effect that jackpot,” Svitko said.

For some players, it’s not about the grand prize.

“What’s so fun about it?” Jeff Bennett asked Monday. “It’s the potential for winning, not that you win. It’s the potential — you’re buying hope.”

But even with the massive jackpot, not everyone has caught Powerball fever.

“There’s no use,” a man named Diego said. “I mean, you’ve got a better chance of getting struck by lightning than winning that lotto.”

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