In the last 48 hours, Donald J. Trump has made three important cabinet selections: W.W.E. founder Linda McMahon for the Small Business Administration, fast-food kingpin Andy Puzder for Secretary of Labor, and, maybe, venture capitalist Jim O’Neill for the Food and Drug Administration. On the surface, these picks signal the president-elect’s desire to (1) keep his relationship with the wrestling community intact; (2) raise both of his middle fingers to advocates of a $15 an hour minimum wage; and (3) potentially put a person with no medical experience in charge of an agency where you really want someone with medical experience, respectively. Most important, though, they collectively add almost $2 billion to his circle of advisers’ already sizable net worth.

Since wealth is obviously of utmost importance to the next president (he told supporters at an Iowa stop on his victory tour yesterday that he wants to be surrounded by “people that made a fortune”)—and because really rich people are better than just semi-rich people—we’ve compiled this wealth ranking for easy reference. Clearly, one of his top priorities in office will be making sure state dinner seating arrangements flow from richest (next to him) to poorest (as far away as humanly possible).

Todd Ricketts: Ricketts will be the deputy commerce secretary; his father founded TD Ameritrade and his family, which is worth about $5.3 billion, owns the Chicago Cubs. Trump would be fine with having Ricketts to his left or right.

Betsy DeVos: Trump’s pick for secretary of education is the daughter of a wealthy industrialist and the wife of Richard DeVos Jr., who is an heir to a $5.1 billion fortune. Her father-in-law founded AmWay and owns the Orlando Magic. She gets to sit across from The Don.

Wilbur Ross: The “King of Bankruptcy” is set to be the next secretary of commerce and has a net worth of approximately $2.9 billion. Qualifies to breathe the same air as DJT.

Linda McMahon: The first lady of wrestling, who Trump wants to run his Small Business Administration, founded W.W.E. with her husband, Vincent, whose head Trump once shaved after body-slamming him in the ring. The fake sport has helped McMahon amass a net worth of around $1.6 billion. Trump’s got to respect that and seat her accordingly.

Rex Tillerson: The longtime Exxon Mobile C.E.O., who is widely expected to be named this week as Trump’s pick for secretary of state, may not be a billionaire, but he’s comfortable. According to The Washington Post, the 64-year-old oil exec and longtime Putin ally is sitting on about $218 million in Exxon stock, plus a pension worth about $70 million. If he’s confirmed to lead State, Tillerson can expect the value of his stock holdings to soar on expectations that the U.S. will drop those pesky economic sanctions on Russia, where Exxon has a massive $300 billion deal with the state-controlled Russian oil giant Rosneft. Won’t be relegated to the kids’ table.

Steven Mnuchin: Recently Trump’s appointee for treasury secretary, Mnuchin compiled a nice pile of cash working at Goldman Sachs, founding a hedge fund, investing in movies, and running “a foreclosure machine” that reportedly kicked a 90-year-old woman out of her home over 27 cents. His exact worth is unknown but thought to be many millions. Nothing to write home about, but not so embarrassing that Trump will make him stand during meetings.