INTERNATIONAL RECTIFIER CORP /DE/
PRE 14A, 1995-09-14
SEMICONDUCTORS & RELATED DEVICES
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<PAGE>
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

                  Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
            the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.    )

    Filed by the Registrant /X/
    Filed by a Party other than the Registrant / /

    Check the appropriate box:
    /X/  Preliminary Proxy Statement
    / /  Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule
         14a-6(e)(2))
    / /  Definitive Proxy Statement
    / /  Definitive Additional Materials
    / /  Soliciting  Material  Pursuant  to  Section  240.14a-11(c)  or  Section
         240.14a-12

                            INTERNATIONAL RECTIFIER CORPORATION
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

/X/  $125 per  Exchange Act  Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii),  14a-6(i)(1), 14a-6(i)(2)  or
     Item 22(a)(2) of Schedule 14A.
/ /  $500  per  each party  to  the controversy  pursuant  to Exchange  Act Rule
     14a-6(i)(3).
/ /  Fee  computed  on   table  below   per  Exchange   Act  Rules   14a-6(i)(4)
     and 0-11.
     1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
        pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which the
        filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):
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     4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
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     5) Total fee paid:
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/ /  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
/ /  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0-11(a)(2)  and identify the  filing for which the  offsetting fee was paid
     previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement  number,
     or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
     1) Amount Previously Paid:
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     4) Date Filed:
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<PAGE>

   [LOGO]   INTERNATIONAL RECTIFIER CORPORATION
            233 KANSAS STREET, EL SEGUNDO, CA  90245  (310) 322-3331

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                          TO BE HELD NOVEMBER 20, 1995

    The  Annual Meeting  of Stockholders of  INTERNATIONAL RECTIFIER CORPORATION
will be held on Monday,  November 20, 1995 at  10 o'clock a.m. Pacific  Standard
Time at the HEXFET America facility of the Company at 41915 Business Park Drive,
Temecula, California.

    The meeting will consider and act upon the following business:

    1.  Election of three Directors.

    2.   Proposed amendment of the  Certificate of Incorporation to increase the
       authorized number of shares of the Company's Common Stock from 30,000,000
       to 150,000,000.

    3.  Ratification of Coopers & Lybrand as independent auditors of the Company
       to serve for fiscal year 1996.

    4.  Such  other business  as may  properly come  before the  meeting or  any
       adjournments thereof.

    The Board of Directors has fixed the close of business on September 22, 1995
as  the record date for  determining those Stockholders who  will be entitled to
vote at the meeting.

    By order of the Board of Directors

                                          Gerald A. Koris
                                          SECRETARY

September 27, 1995

IMPORTANT: PLEASE FILL IN DATE, SIGN AND MAIL PROMPTLY THE ENCLOSED PROXY IN THE
POST-PAID ENVELOPE PROVIDED TO  ASSURE THAT YOUR SHARES  ARE REPRESENTED AT  THE
MEETING.  IF YOU ATTEND THE MEETING, YOU MAY VOTE IN PERSON IF YOU WISH TO DO SO
EVEN THOUGH YOU HAVE SENT IN YOUR PROXY.
<PAGE>
                                PROXY STATEMENT

GENERAL

    The   accompanying  Proxy  is  solicited  by   the  Board  of  Directors  of
International Rectifier  Corporation  (the "Company"),  for  use at  the  Annual
Meeting  of Stockholders  to be  held on November  20, 1995  and any adjournment
thereof. The close  of business  on September  22, 1995  has been  fixed as  the
record  date for the determination of Stockholders  entitled to notice of and to
vote at the  meeting. This Proxy  Statement and the  accompanying Proxy will  be
first mailed to Stockholders on or about September 27, 1995.

    Any  Stockholder who gives  a Proxy has the  power to revoke  it at any time
before it  is exercised  by delivery  of  written notice  of revocation  to  the
Secretary   of  the  Company  prior  to  commencement  of  the  Annual  Meeting.
Stockholders attending  the  Annual Meeting  may  vote their  shares  in  person
whether  or not a Proxy  has been previously executed  and returned. The Company
will bear the cost of solicitation of proxies.

    The record date for the determination of shares entitled to notice of and to
vote at the meeting is close of business on September 22, 1995. As of  September
5,  1995 there were 25,225,045 shares issued  and outstanding of $1.00 par value
Common Stock of the  Company, the only class  of voting securities  outstanding.
Each  share of Common Stock of the Company  is entitled to one vote; there is no
cumulative voting.

    Votes cast by proxy or  in person at the Annual  Meeting will be counted  by
the  persons appointed  by the  Company to  act as  election inspectors  for the
meeting. The election inspectors will  treat shares represented by Proxies  that
reflect abstentions or include "broker non-votes" as shares that are present and
entitled  to  vote  for  purposes  of  determining  the  presence  of  a quorum.
Abstentions will be counted toward the tabulation of "votes cast" and will  have
the  same effect as negative votes. "Broker  non-votes" do not constitute a vote
"for" or "against"  any matter and  thus will be  disregarded in calculation  of
"votes cast". If a broker or nominee has indicated on the proxy that it does not
have  discretionary authority to vote  certain shares (i.e. "broker non-votes"),
those shares  will be  treated as  not present  and not  entitled to  vote  with
respect  to that matter (even though those  shares may be considered entitled to
vote for quorum purposes and may be entitled to vote on Proposals 1 and 3).

                                       2
<PAGE>
                               SECURITY OWNERSHIP

    The following table shows, as of September 5, 1995, the beneficial ownership
of the Common Stock by owners of more than five percent of the Common Stock,  by
each director or nominee, and by all directors and officers as a group.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   AMOUNT
                                                                                 BENEFICIALLY  PERCENT OF
NAME                                                                              OWNED (1)       CLASS
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------  -----------  -------------
<S>                                                                              <C>          <C>
Eric Lidow (2).................................................................    1,225,035         4.9%
Alexander Lidow (2)............................................................      538,595         2.1
Derek B. Lidow (2).............................................................      306,695         1.2
Donald S. Burns................................................................        6,500        *
George Krsek...................................................................       28,000        *
Robert J. Mueller..............................................................       26,000        *
James B. Plummer...............................................................        4,000        *
Jack O. Vance..................................................................       28,700        *
Rochus E. Vogt.................................................................       22,500        *
All Directors and Officers as a Group (11 persons).............................    2,195,349         8.7%

------------------------
 *   Less than 1%
<FN>
(1)  Amount includes 152,000 shares exercisable under Company stock option plans
     on or within 60 days of the record date.

(2)  There  are 20,913 shares owned by Lidow Foundation of which Eric Lidow is a
     director. Members  of  the Lidow  family  other than  Messrs.  Eric  Lidow,
     Alexander  Lidow and  Derek B.  Lidow are  the beneficial  owners of 88,713
     shares. The Messrs. Lidow disclaim any beneficial ownership in any of  such
     shares.  The 2,159,038  shares beneficially owned  by members  of the Lidow
     family constitute 8.6% of the shares outstanding.
</TABLE>

                             ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
                                  (PROPOSAL 1)

    There are nine directors on the  Company's Board. The directors are  divided
into  three  classes, and  the directors  in each  class serve  three-year terms
expiring in successive years. At the 1995 Annual Meeting, the term of office  of
Class  One expires, and  three directors are  expected to be  elected with terms
expiring upon the  election and qualification  of their successors  at the  1998
Annual Meeting of Stockholders.

    It is intended that Proxies received by the Board of Directors will be voted
for  the election of the nominees for directors named below, unless authority to
do so is withheld. Messrs. George Krsek, Jack O. Vance and Derek B. Lidow are at
present directors of the Company. It  is not contemplated that any nominee  will
be  unable to serve as a director, but if that contingency should occur prior to
the Annual Meeting, the holders of  Proxies reserve the right to substitute  and
vote for another person of their choice.

    The  affirmative vote of  holders of a  majority of shares  of the Company's
Common Stock represented at  the meeting in  person or by  Proxy is required  to
elect any nominee for director.

                                       3
<PAGE>
NOMINEES FOR DIRECTORS

    The following persons are nominees for director with terms expiring in 1998.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                  DIRECTOR
          NAME                 AGE                               PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION                               SINCE
-------------------------      ---      -----------------------------------------------------------------------  -----------
<S>                        <C>          <C>                                                                      <C>
CLASS ONE
TERM ENDING 1998
George Krsek                       74   President, Konec, L.L.C., a management consulting firm                         1979
Jack O. Vance                      70   Managing Director, Management Research, a management consulting firm           1988
Derek B. Lidow (1)                 42   Chief Executive Officer of the Company                                         1994

CLASS TWO
TERM ENDING 1996
Rochus E. Vogt                     65   R. Stanton Avery Distinguished Service Professor and Professor of              1984
                                         Physics, California Institute of Technology
Robert J. Mueller                  66   Executive Vice President -- External Affairs and Business Development          1990
Alexander Lidow (1)                40   Chief Executive Officer of the Company                                         1994

CLASS THREE
TERM ENDING 1997
Eric Lidow (2)                     82   Chairman of the Board of the Company                                           1947
Donald S. Burns                    70   President, Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Prestige         1993
                                         Holding, Ltd.
James D. Plummer                   50   John M. Fluke Professor of Electrical Engineering and Director of              1994
                                         Integrated Circuits Laboratory, Stanford University
<FN>
------------------------
(1)  Alexander Lidow and Derek B. Lidow are sons of Eric Lidow.

(2)  Eric  Lidow resigned as  Chief Executive Officer and  President on March 6,
     1995. Mr.  Lidow continues  as Chairman  of the  Board and  also serves  as
     Chairman of the Executive Committee.
</TABLE>

    The  above named directors  have held their  respective employment positions
during the past five years except for  George Krsek who was President of  Houba,
Inc.  a pharmaceutical firm, from 1975  to July 1994. Messrs. Mueller, Alexander
Lidow and Derek B. Lidow  have been employed by the  Company for more than  five
years in various executive officer positions.

COMMITTEES AND MEETINGS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

    The  Company's  Board of  Directors  has Audit,  Compensation  and Executive
Committees, but not  a Nominating Committee.  Both the Audit  Committee and  the
Compensation Committee currently consist of Messrs. Burns, Krsek, Plummer, Vance
and  Vogt,  each  of  whom  is  not  an  officer  or  employee  of  the  Company
("Non-Employee Director"). The Executive Committee consists of Messrs. E. Lidow,

                                       4
<PAGE>
A. Lidow,  D.  Lidow,  Mueller  and Vance.  The  Audit  Committee  monitors  the
Company's  basic accounting policies, reviews  audit and management reports, and
makes recommendations regarding the appointment of the independent auditors. The
Audit Committee  held  three  meetings  in the  fiscal  year.  The  Compensation
Committee  has the responsibility for setting key executive compensation and for
granting  stock  options.  (See  "Compensation  Committee  Report"  below).  The
Compensation  Committee  met three  times.  The Executive  Committee,  formed in
March, 1995, exercises  many of the  powers and  authority of the  Board in  the
management  of the business affairs of  the corporation. The Executive Committee
met one time. The Board of Directors  met four times. No director attended  less
than 75% of meetings of the Board of Directors and of all committees on which he
served during the fiscal year.

    Non-Employee  Directors receive fees of  $30,000 per annum for participation
on the Board  and its  Committees. In addition,  Mr. Vance  receives $3,000  per
meeting  of the Executive Committee. Under the current Stock Option Plan of 1992
(as amended) Non-Employee Directors are automatically granted stock options  for
2,500  shares of Common Stock on each January 1 during the term of this Plan. In
addition, each Non-Employee Director  elected after the  1994 Annual Meeting  of
Stockholders  is  automatically  granted  upon  initial  election  an  option to
purchase 20,000 shares. Each Non-Employee Director  in office on August 9,  1994
was  automatically granted, in addition to  the option to purchase 10,000 shares
granted to  him upon  initial Stockholder  approval of  the Plan,  an option  to
purchase  10,000 shares. Notwithstanding the  foregoing, the aggregate number of
shares for which options may be granted to any Non-Employee Director under  both
this  Plan  and the  Stock  Option Plan  of  1984 cannot  exceed  50,000 shares.
Non-Employee Directors are not eligible to  receive any other options under  the
Stock  Option Plan  of 1992 (as  amended). Non-Employee  Director options become
exercisable at the rate of 20% per annum commencing on the first anniversary  of
the date of grant; vesting may accelerate under certain circumstances.

                                       5
<PAGE>
                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

    The   following  table  and  accompanying   notes  summarize  the  aggregate
compensation of the Company, and the stock option grants awarded to each of  the
five highest paid executive officers for each of the last three fiscal years.

               SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE -- ANNUAL COMPENSATION

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                              LONG TERM
                                                                           OTHER ANNUAL     COMPENSATION
             NAME AND                FISCAL       SALARY        BONUS      COMPENSATION        OPTIONS
        PRINCIPAL POSITION            YEAR        ($) (2)        ($)            ($)              (#)
----------------------------------  ---------  -------------  ---------  -----------------  -------------
<S>                                 <C>        <C>            <C>        <C>                <C>
Eric Lidow (1)                           1995     627,008       420,000         --               50,000
 Chairman of the Board                   1994     557,200       110,000         --               60,000
                                         1993     564,177        --             --               --
Alexander Lidow                          1995     345,277       411,000         --               50,000
 Chief Executive Officer                 1994     307,200        60,000         --               40,000
                                         1993     312,969           400         --               --
Derek B. Lidow                           1995     345,277       411,000         --               50,000
 Chief Executive Officer                 1994     307,200        60,000         --               40,000
                                         1993     312,969        --             --               --
Robert J. Mueller                        1995     333,777       200,000         --               --
 Executive Vice President --             1994     299,000        59,800         --               15,000
 External Affairs and Business           1993     310,842        --             --               --
 Development
Michael P. McGee                         1995     221,316       197,000         --               --
 Vice President,                         1994     188,214        40,000         --               15,000
 Chief Financial Officer                 1993     128,600        --             --                1,500
<FN>
------------------------
(1)  The  Company entered into an executive  agreement with Eric Lidow dated May
     15, 1991. See "Executive Agreement" below.

(2)  Each years salary includes an automobile allowance granted key  executives.
     The  1993 total included  an amount reflecting a  difference in pay periods
     that year.
</TABLE>

                                       6
<PAGE>
                       OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

    The following table and accompanying notes summarize options granted to each
executive  officer  of  the  Company  in  fiscal  1995  and  projects  potential
realizable  gains at hypothetical assumed annual compound rates of appreciation.
There were no grants of SARs to the executive officers in fiscal 1995.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   POTENTIAL REALIZABLE
                                                                                          VALUE
                                                                                    AT ASSUMED ANNUAL
                                                                                          RATES
                                         PERCENT OF                                   OF STOCK PRICE
                                        TOTAL OPTIONS                                  APPRECIATION
                         OPTIONS         GRANTED TO        EXERCISE                FOR OPTION TERM (4)
                         GRANTED        EMPLOYEES IN         PRICE    EXPIRATION  ----------------------
        NAME            (#)(1)(2)        FISCAL YEAR        ($/SH)     DATE (3)    5% ($)      10% ($)
---------------------  -----------  ---------------------  ---------  ----------  ---------  -----------
<S>                    <C>          <C>                    <C>        <C>         <C>        <C>
Eric Lidow                 50,000             18.8%           23.625    3/6/05      742,800    1,882,800
Alexander Lidow            50,000             18.8%           23.625    3/6/05      742,800    1,882,800
Derek B. Lidow             50,000             18.8%           23.625    3/6/05      742,800    1,882,800
Robert J. Mueller          --                --               --          --         --          --
Michael P. McGee           --                --               --          --         --          --
In addition, 115,600 options were granted to other employees of the Company.
<FN>
------------------------
(1)  Options become exercisable  at a rate  of 20% per  annum commencing on  the
     first anniversary of the date of grant.

(2)  Under  the terms of the 1992  Stock Option Plan (Amended), the Compensation
     Committee retains discretion, subject to  plan limits, to modify the  terms
     of outstanding options and to reprice the options.

(3)  Subject  to earlier termination in certain events related to termination of
     employment.

(4)  These values are  solely the mathematical  results of hypothetical  assumed
     appreciation of the market value of the underlying shares at an annual rate
     of 5% and 10% over the full ten-year term of the options, less the exercise
     price. Actual gains, if any, will depend on future stock market performance
     of  the Company's  Common Stock,  market factors  and conditions,  and each
     Optionee's continued employment through the applicable vesting periods. The
     Company makes no prediction as to the  future value of these options or  of
     its Common Stock, and these values are provided solely as examples required
     by the proxy reporting rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
</TABLE>

                                       7
<PAGE>
OPTIONS

    The  following  table shows  for  each of  the  five highest  paid executive
officers the shares acquired on exercise  of options in fiscal 1995 and  certain
required  information regarding outstanding  options held by them  at the end of
fiscal 1995.

                   OPTION EXERCISES AND YEAR-END VALUE TABLE
                AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                            AND FY-END OPTION VALUE

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            NUMBER OF
                                                           SECURITIES
                                                           UNDERLYING       VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                       UNEXERCISED OPTIONS  IN-THE-MONEY OPTIONS
                                                          AT FY-END (#)         AT FY-END ($)
                                                       -------------------  ---------------------
                       SHARES ACQUIRED      VALUE         EXERCISABLE/          EXERCISABLE/
        NAME           ON EXERCISE (#)  REALIZED ($)      UNEXERCISABLE       UNEXERCISABLE (6)
---------------------  ---------------  -------------  -------------------  ---------------------
<S>                    <C>              <C>            <C>                  <C>
Eric Lidow                   50,000        831,250(1)      52,000/108,000       645,000/1,392,500
          "                  10,000        165,000(2)
          "                   5,000         82,500(2)
Alexander Lidow              20,000        365,000(2)       36,000/89,000       444,500/1,079,875
Derek B. Lidow               20,000        340,000(3)       24,800/86,200       322,700/1,049,425
Robert J. Mueller            15,000        249,375(4)       11,000/14,000         139,500/231,750
Michael P. McGee              2,500         34,063(5)        5,900/13,100          96,137/243,362
<FN>
------------------------
(1)  Based on market value of $23.625 on the date of exercise.

(2)  Based on market value of $25.25 on the date of exercise.

(3)  Based on market value of $24.00 on the date of exercise.

(4)  Based on market value of $23.625 on the date of exercise.

(5)  Based on market value of $25.125 on the date of exercise.

(6)  Based on market value of $32.50 at the end of fiscal 1995, minus the
     exercise price of "in the money" options.
The exercise price of outstanding options ranges from $11.00 to $23.625.
</TABLE>

EXECUTIVE AGREEMENT

    The Company entered into  an executive agreement with  Eric Lidow dated  May
15, 1991, providing for his continued employment with the Company for a six-year
period as Chief Executive Officer and President or in such other position as the
Board of Directors may determine. The agreement provides for an annual salary of
$500,000,  which may  be increased  at the  discretion of  the Board.  It was so
increased in May  1992 to  $550,000 and  in August  1994 to  $632,500. Upon  Mr.
Lidow's  retirement from the  Company (or a  change in control)  he will receive
annual payments  of 90%  of his  then current  salary. Upon  Mr. Lidow's  death,
payments  will be continued to his wife, if she survives him, in an amount equal
to two-thirds  of his  retirement benefits  for the  remainder of  her life.  At
fiscal  year end Mr. Lidow  was entitled to receive  upon retirement, $728,249 a
year for  the  remainder of  his  life and  his  wife would  thereafter  receive
approximately    $485,499   a   year   for    the   remainder   of   her   life.

                                       8
<PAGE>
In connection with  the executive  agreement $1,068,000 was  expensed in  fiscal
1995.  The  agreement  was  amended  on April  12,  1995  to  provide  that upon
retirement Mr. Lidow's pension would be based, in addition to his salary, on the
average of  the prior  three years'  cash  bonuses, if  any. The  pension  would
further  be adjusted annually to account for  any increase in the Consumer Price
Index.

TRANSACTIONS WITH MANAGEMENT/FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS

    The Company leases two parcels of  real property in El Segundo,  California,
owned  by Alexander Lidow and paid rent  totaling $83,052 during the 1995 fiscal
year. One lease  had a five  year term which  expired July 31,  1995; the  other
lease has a ten year term expiring March 31, 1996.

    The   following  information  contained  under  the  captions  "Compensation
Committee Report" and "Stock Price Performance" shall not be deemed  "soliciting
material"  or "filed" with the Securities  and Exchange Commission and shall not
be deemed  to  be  incorporated  into  any  filing  by  International  Rectifier
Corporation  under the Securities Act of 1933  or the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 in the absence of specific reference to such captions and information.

                         COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT

    The Compensation  Committee  of the  Board  of Directors  (the  "Committee")
currently  consists  of  the five  Non-Employee  Directors of  the  Company. The
compensation of  the five  officers who  comprise the  Executive Team,  the  top
management  operating group of the Company,  is determined by the Committee (see
"Executive Compensation" above). The Committee  also reviews (but does not  set)
the  salaries of all  other employees having annual  compensation of $150,000 or
more.

    The Company's  executive  compensation  program  includes  competitive  base
salaries,  annual bonuses  and stock options.  The Committee's policy  is to set
base salaries generally within  the competitive range  for similar positions  in
high  technology  companies,  based on  information  of  a broad  range  of such
companies obtained from an independent survey of executive compensation. A  cash
bonus  is  a variable  and  performance-reflective portion  of  the compensation
package. In general, cash bonuses are  subjective, but the Committee takes  into
consideration  such  factors as  profitability  in the  particular  fiscal year,
Company stock performance, outstanding achievements (for example in new  product
introduction),  and  improvement in  market share  and industry  position. Stock
options are granted to provide long-term incentives linked to an increase in the
market price of Company stock  by awarding options at  the fair market value  on
the  day of grant. Outstanding  options become exercisable at  a rate of 20% per
annum commencing on the first anniversary of the date of grant. The Company  has
not  established a policy with respect to Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue
Code.

    Based on  a  survey  of  other high  tech  companies  and  improved  Company
performance  in  the prior  fiscal  year (ended  June  30, 1994),  the Committee
increased the  annual base  compensation levels  by  15% for  each of  the  five
highest  paid executive officers  in August 1994. Salaries  and bonus awards for
FY95 are listed above under "Executive Compensation". In making the bonus awards
the Committee took into consideration the strong rise in the Company's earnings,
as well as the Company's stock performance.

    The base  compensation  payable  to  Eric  Lidow  is  described  above  (see
"Executive  Agreement" above). Mr. Lidow resigned  as Chief Executive Officer in
March 1995  while retaining  the position  of Chairman  of the  Board. The  base
salaries  of Alexander  Lidow and  Derek B.  Lidow were  not changed  upon their
election as Chief Executive Officers in March 1995 from those in their  previous
positions as

                                       9
<PAGE>
Executive  Vice Presidents. The grant of stock options to the Messrs. Lidow (see
"Option Grants in Last Fiscal Year" above) was based on a subjective analysis by
the Committee and upon the  fact that the new  Chief Executive Officers did  not
receive any increase in base salary upon their elevation.

            Donald S. Burns                          Jack O. Vance
              George Krsek                           Rochus E. Vogt
            James D. Plummer

                                       10
<PAGE>
                            STOCK PRICE PERFORMANCE

    The  following graph compares the Company's cumulative stockholder return on
its Common Stock  (i.e. change in  stock price plus  reinvestment of  dividends)
measured  against the  cumulative total  return of  the Standard  and Poor's 500
Stock Index and Standard and Poor's High Technology Composite Index peer  group.
The  stock price performance shown in this graph which assumes $100 was invested
on June 30, 1990, is not necessarily  indicative of and not intended to  suggest
future stock price performance.

EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                   06/30
<S>              <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
                      1990       1991       1992       1993       1994       1995
The Company         100.00     132.61      69.57     109.78     130.43     282.61
S&P 500             100.00     107.40     121.80     138.40     140.35     176.94
S&P High Tech       100.00      94.11      99.90     116.68     126.36     205.59
</TABLE>

                                       11
<PAGE>
               PROPOSED AMENDMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
                           INCREASE IN CAPITAL STOCK
                                  (PROPOSAL 2)

    The  Board  of  Directors has  proposed  that the  Company's  Certificate of
Incorporation be amended to increase the  number of shares of Common Stock,  par
value  $1, from 30,000,000  shares to 150,000,000  shares. The full  text of the
proposed amendment is contained  in Exhibit A hereto.  As of September 5,  1995,
25,225,045  shares were outstanding, 815,880 were reserved for issuance upon the
exercise of  outstanding stock  options and  360,075 shares  were available  for
grant,  948,734  shares were  reserved for  issuance  under the  Company's stock
purchase plan for employees. Therefore, as of September 5, 1995, only  2,650,266
shares  were  available  which had  not  been  issued or  committed  for further
issuance.

    The Board of Directors  believes that it is  advisable and in the  Company's
best  interest that  additional shares  be made available  so that  the Board of
Directors and management can act  with flexibility and speed when  opportunities
to  strengthen the Company arise. The additional  shares could be used from time
to time for  such things  as possible  stock splits,  possible stock  issuances,
raising  additional capital,  acquisitions, and other  corporate purposes. Under
certain circumstances, the additional shares  of Common Stock authorized by  the
proposed  amendment could be  used to create voting  impediments or to frustrate
persons seeking to  effect a merger  or otherwise gain  control of the  Company.
Additional  shares of Common Stock could,  for example, be privately placed with
purchasers who might side with management of the Company in opposing a tender or
other acquisition offer made by a third party.

    The affirmative vote of holders of  a majority of all outstanding shares  of
Common  Stock of the Company  entitled to vote thereon  at the Annual Meeting is
required in order for the proposed amendment to the Certificate of Incorporation
to be adopted.  The Board of  Directors recommends  a vote FOR  approval of  the
Amendment of the Certificate of Incorporation.

                            INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
                                  (PROPOSAL 3)

    The  Board  of  Directors, on  the  recommendation of  the  Audit Committee,
proposes that Coopers &  Lybrand, independent auditors of  the Company for  many
years,  be elected  as independent  auditors of the  Company to  serve until the
Annual Meeting of Stockholders in 1996. A representative of Coopers & Lybrand is
expected to be present at the Annual  Meeting, will be given the opportunity  to
make  a  statement  if  he so  desires,  and  will be  available  to  respond to
appropriate questions.

    Although this appointment is not required to  be submitted to a vote of  the
Stockholders,  the Board  believes it  is appropriate as  a matter  of policy to
request that the Stockholders ratify the appointment. If the Stockholders do not
ratify the  appointment by  the affirmative  vote of  a majority  of the  shares
represented either in person or by proxy at the Annual Meeting, the selection of
another independent auditor will be considered by the Board of Directors.

    The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR this proposal.

                                       12
<PAGE>
                         STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 1996

    Eligible Stockholders' proposals for the 1996 Annual Meeting of Stockholders
of the Company must be received at the Company's office at 233 Kansas Street, El
Segundo, California 90245 no later than June 7, 1996.

                                 MISCELLANEOUS

    Management  does not  know of  any business to  be presented  other than the
matters set forth in the Notice  of Meeting. However, if other matters  properly
come  before  the  meeting,  it is  the  intention  of the  Proxies  to  vote in
accordance with their best judgment on such matters.

    The expense of preparing, assembling, printing and mailing the Proxy and the
material used in the solicitation of Proxies will be borne by the Company. It is
contemplated that Proxies will be solicited  principally through the use of  the
mails, but the officers and regular employees of the Company may solicit Proxies
personally  or by  telephone or  by special  letter. The  Company will reimburse
banks, brokerage  houses, and  other custodians,  nominees and  fiduciaries  for
their reasonable expenses in forwarding proxy material to their principals.

    A copy of the Annual Report of the Company for the year ended June 30, 1995,
including financial statements for the year then ended, is transmitted herewith.

                                          By Order of the Board of Directors
                                          Gerald A. Koris
                                          SECRETARY

September 27, 1995

                                       13
<PAGE>
                                                                       EXHIBIT A

                ARTICLE FOUR OF THE CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
                      AS PROPOSED TO BE ADDED BY AMENDMENT
                                  (PROPOSAL 2)
                                  ARTICLE FOUR

    The  total  number  of shares  of  stock  which the  corporation  shall have
authority to issue is 150,000,000 shares of Common Stock and 1,000,000 preferred
shares. The par value of each of  the common and preferred shares is One  Dollar
($1.00) each.

                                       14
<PAGE>
    GRAPH  DESCRIPTION: a  map showing the  Los Angeles area  freeway system and
directions to the Company's Annual Meeting of Stockholders.

                                   [CRC Map]

                                       15

<PAGE>
                      INTERNATIONAL RECTIFIER CORPORATION
             Proxy Solicited on Behalf of the Board of Directors of
                 the Company for Annual Meeting November 20, 1995


The undersigned hereby constitutes and appoints Eric Lidow and Gerald A. Koris,
and each of them, his true and lawful agents and proxies with full power of
substitution in each, to represent the undersigned at the Annual Meeting of
Stockholders of International Rectifier Corporation to be held at the HEXFET
America facility of the Company, 41915 Business Park Drive, Temecula,
California, at 10:00 a.m., Pacific Standard Time, on the 20th day of November,
1995, and at any adjournments thereof, on all matters coming before said
meeting.

See Reverse Side

<PAGE>
-------
Common
                          VOTE FOR                    VOTE WITHHELD
                        all nominees                     from all
                        listed below                     nominees
     1. ELECTION OF       / /                              / /
         DIRECTORS

Nominees:       George Krsek, Derek B. Lidow and Jack O. Vance

VOTE WITHHELD
from the following nominee(s)

-------------------------------

Please mark your choices like this /x/

     2. Proposed Amendment of the Certificate of Incorporation to increase the
authorized number of shares of the Company's Common Stock from 30,000,000 to
150,000,000.

       FOR                    AGAINST                   ABSTAIN
       / /                      / /                       / /

     3. To ratify Coopers & Lybrand as independent auditors of the Company to
serve for fiscal year 1996.

       FOR                    AGAINST                   ABSTAIN
       / /                      / /                       / /



THIS PROXY WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED WILL BE VOTED IN THE MANNER DIRECTED HEREIN BY
THE UNDERSIGNED STOCKHOLDER. IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED
FOR PROPOSALS 1, 2, AND 3.


PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE, AND RETURN THE PROXY CARD PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED
ENVELOPE.


Signature(s)______________________________________  Date________________, 1995

THIS PROXY MUST BE SIGNED EXACTLY AS NAME APPEARS HEREON. Executors,
administrators, trustees, etc. should give full title as such. If signer is a
corporation, please sign full corporate name by duly authorized officer.





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