DREYFUS PREMIER EQUITY FUNDS INC
497, 2000-12-22
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                                                              December 22, 2000

                     DREYFUS PREMIER EMERGING MARKETS FUND

                           SUPPLEMENT TO PROSPECTUS

               DATED FEBRUARY 1, 2000 AS REVISED APRIL 14, 2000

   THIS   INFORMATION   SUPERSEDES  ANY  CONTRARY  INFORMATION  IN  THE  FUND' S
PROSPECTUS.

   Effective  January 1, 2001, D. Kirk Henry became the fund's primary portfolio
manager.  Mr.  Henry  has  been  employed  as a portfolio manager by The Dreyfus
Corporation  since May 1996.  He also is senior vice president and international
equity portfolio manager of The Boston Company Asset Management, an affiliate of
Dreyfus, a position he has held since May 1994.

   Mr.  Henry  employs  a  value-oriented, research-driven approach. In pursuing
this   approach,   he   identifies   potential   investments  through  extensive
quantitative  and fundamental research. With Mr. Henry as portfolio manager, the
fund  will focus on individual stock selection rather than economic and industry
trends, emphasizing three key factors:

             (pound)   VALUE, or how a stock is valued relative to its intrinsic
worth based on traditional value measures

             (pound)   BUSINESS  HEALTH, or overall efficiency and profitability
as measured by return on assets and return on equity

             (pound)   BUSINESS MOMENTUM, or the presence of a catalyst (such as
corporate restructuring, change in management or spin-off) that potentially will
trigger a price increase near term or midterm

   Value  companies  are  companies that appear underpriced according to certain
financial  measurements  of their intrinsic worth or business prospects (such as
price-to-earnings or price-to-book ratios). For international investing, "value"
is  determined  relative  to  a  company' s  home market and/or to its industry.
Because a stock can remain undervalued for years, value investors often look for
factors    that    could    trigger    a    rise    in    price.

   The  fund typically will sell a stock when it is no longer considered a value
company,  appears  less  likely  to benefit from the current market and economic
environment,  shows  deteriorating  fundamentals or declining momentum, or falls
short    of    the    portfolio    manager'   s    expectations.

   Value  stocks  involve  the risk that they may never reach what the portfolio
manager  believes  is their full market value either because the market fails to
recognize  the stock's intrinsic worth or the manager misgauged that worth. They
also  may  decline in price, even though in theory they are already undervalued.
Because different types of stocks tend to shift in and out of favor depending on
market and economic conditions, the fund's performance may sometimes be lower or
higher  than  that  of  other  types  of funds (such as those emphasizing growth
stocks).

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