A look at some of the leading racehorse owners for the 2003-04 National Hunt season.
JP McManus
JP, Limerick's favourite son, started out as an on-course bookmaker before stepping up a notch to operate as a currency dealer on the global stage.
A tax exile living in Geneva, McManus has a large string of horses trained in England, Ireland and France.
He bought the famous Jackdaws Castle in 2001 and installed Jonjo O'Neill as trainer.
McManus is best known for his triple Champion Hurdle winner Istabraq.
He is always guaranteed to be well represented at Cheltenham and has hit the bookies there for six with some huge gambles, which have earned him the nickname "the Sundance Kid".
Leading horses: First Gold, Flagship Uberalles
Jim Lewis
Lewis came third in the owners' championship last season, despite having many fewer horses than the two men who finished above him.
But among his string were Gold Cup winner Best Mate and former Champion Chase hero Edredon Bleu.
No wonder his nickname is 'Lucky Jim.'
Yet few would begrudge him any luck for the chirpy Brummie is one of the nicest men in the business, who wears his love of National Hunt on his sleeve.
His second passion is football and his colours are based on an Aston Villa FA Cup-winning side.
His partnership with trainer Henrietta Knight came about after he read an article about her in a magazine and wrote a letter asking her to train one of his horses.
Leading horses hopes: Best Mate, Edredon Bleu, Impek.
David Johnson
His 30 or so horses provide the backbone of Martin Pipe's yard and last season saw a second consecutive owner-trainer-jockey championship treble for the Pond House Stables.
The son of an East End docker, Johnson now runs a finance company.
He first dabbled in owning Flat horses - including Mister Majestic, who won the Group One Middle Park Stakes in 1986.
But he teamed up with Pipe in the early 1990s and has landed many winners - and big gambles - since then - but is yet to own a real superstar.
Leading horses: Iris Bleu
Sir Robert Ogden
Champion owner for three seasons in a row before David Johnson took his crown.
A leading northern industrialist, Ogden was given a CBE in 1983 and knighted in 2001 for his services to charity.
His horses are pretty evenly spread among a few trainers, including Nicky Henderson, Paul Nicholls and Martin Todhunter.
A down-to-earth Yorkshireman, Ogden shuns the limelight, letting racing manager Barry Simpson do his on-track talking.
Leading horses: Marlborough, Ad Hoc
Trevor Hemmings
Hemmings began his working life as a bricklayer but now has a vast empire spanning a range of leisure pursuits from casinos to holiday camps.
One of his companies also owns Blackpool Tower, although Hemmings himself lives in the Channel Islands.
Like most National Hunt owners, Hemmings dreams of winning the Grand National but the race has had produced nothing but tragedy for him so far.
The Last Fling was killed in the 2002 Aintree marathon while Goguenard perished in 2003.
Leading horses: Chives
Macca & Growler Partnership
Better known as top footballers Steve McManaman and Robbie Fowler.
The Scouse double act have several horses with Martin Pipe, many of whom have been bought from Germany by ex-jockey Graham Bradley.
Leading horses: Seebald, Samon.