I think it's your 8th AND 10th.
Worth recognising that there are two basic ways of becoming a millionaire:
- working hard or creatively to build the fortune.
- lucking into it by the lottery or inheritance.
To me someone who wants a millionaire husband (or trophy wife) would have strong aims and ambitions to go and pursue that type of person. Probably strong mars/saturn/pluto to give the persistence and drive. To an extent this would also be the case for the inheritance - you'd have to be 'targetting' someone above loving them.
As to marrying someone who happens into money, I'd guess that's much more Jupiter/Venus related.
Just a few comments on the second way.
1. Anyone's odds of winning a lottery (or somesuch) are incredibly small. Sure, somebody's going to win it, but the odds of it being you are teeny-tiny.
Ditto for gambling wins: for the "mathematically challenged." Astrologically, you may be able to tell if your odds are greater than most. Gambling is a 5th house matter. But if the ruler of your 5th is in the 12th, badly challenged, &c., forget it. My friends who enjoy casino gambling set a cap on how much they are prepared to lose (as payment for entertainment), and when they've spent it, they're done.
2. Getting an inheritance is usually not "lucking into it."
Normally it means your parents have to die. Or someone else you really care about.
The notion of a long-lost great-uncle dying and leaving you a fortune is the stuff of fiction, not reality.
3. In either case, people with no money management skills generally have difficulty hanging on to large sums of money if they get them through a lottery or an inheritance. They end up in debt. Why? Because they have no money management skills. They tend to spend the money, not save it.
The best thing we can do is develop some personal finance skills at whatever income level we are at. Some people also have a talent at investing their money and making it grow; but that talent usually is bolstered with serious financial homework; and not spending money on luxuries they don't need--let alone luxuries purchased with a credit card.
BTW my absolute favourite personal finance guru is Suze Orman
www.suzeorman.com . She's not an advisor for people with the bank surplus and knowledge to choose sophisticated investments, but an advisor for the rest of us.