MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INC
DEF 14A, 1996-06-17
ELECTRONIC PARTS & EQUIPMENT, NEC
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                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Filed by the Registrant    [x]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant  [ ]

Check the appropriate box:

[ ] Preliminary Proxy Statement      [ ] Confidential, for Use of the Commission
[x] Definitive Proxy Statement           Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[ ] Definitive Additional Materials  
[ ] Soliciting Material Pursuant to Rule 14a-11(c) or Rule 14a-12

                        Microchip Technology Incorporated
                        ---------------------------------
                (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 Rule 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), or 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
                 computer  pursuant  to  Exchange  Act Rule 0-11 (Set  forth the
                 amount on which the filing fee is calculated  and state  how it
                 was determined:

         (4)     Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

         (5)      Total fee paid:  ______________.

[ ]      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 filling.

         (1)      Amount Previously Paid:

         (2)      Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

         (3)      Filing Party:

         (4)      Date Filed:
<PAGE>
                                   MICROCHIP
                      MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED
- - -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                                JULY 26, 1996
- - -----------------------------------------------------------------------------

   The Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Microchip  Technology  Incorporated,  a
Delaware  corporation (the  "Company"),  will be held at 9:00 a.m. local time on
Friday,  July 26,  1996,  at the  Company's  facility at 1200 South 52nd Street,
Tempe, Arizona, for the following purposes:

   1. To elect  directors to serve until the next annual meeting of stockholders
and until their successors are elected and qualified;

   2. To approve an  amendment to the  Company's  1993 Stock Option Plan to: (i)
increase  from  3,000 to 5,000 the  number  of shares of Common  Stock for which
options are  automatically  granted  following the election of directors at each
annual  meeting  of  stockholders;  and (ii)  increase  from 8,000 to 10,000 the
number of shares of Common  Stock for which  options are  automatically  granted
following  a  director's  initial  appointment  or  election  to  the  Board  of
Directors;

   3. To ratify the  appointment  of KPMG Peat  Marwick  LLP as the  independent
auditors of the Company for the fiscal year ending March 31, 1997; and

   4. To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting or
any adjournment thereof.

   The  foregoing  items of  business  are more  fully  described  in the  Proxy
Statement accompanying this Notice.

   Only  stockholders  of record at the close of  business  on May 29,  1996 are
entitled to notice of and to vote at the meeting.

   All stockholders are cordially invited to attend the meeting in person. To
assure your representation at the meeting, however, you are urged to mark,
sign, date and return the enclosed proxy as promptly as possible in the
postage-prepaid envelope enclosed for that purpose. Any stockholder attending
the meeting may vote in person even if he or she previously has returned a
proxy.
                                   Sincerely,


                                   /S/ C. Philip Chapman
                                   ---------------------
                                   C. Philip Chapman
                                   Secretary
Chandler, Arizona
June 17, 1996
<PAGE>
                                   MICROCHIP

                        MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED
                          2355 WEST CHANDLER BOULEVARD
                          CHANDLER, ARIZONA 85224-6199

- - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 PROXY STATEMENT
- - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                            VOTING AND OTHER MATTERS

General

   The  enclosed   proxy  is   solicited  on  behalf  of  Microchip   Technology
Incorporated,  a Delaware corporation (the "Company"), by the Company's board of
directors  (the  "Board  of  Directors")  for  use  at  the  Annual  Meeting  of
Stockholders  to be held at 9:00 a.m.  local time on Friday,  July 26, 1996 (the
"Meeting"),  or at any adjournment  thereof,  for the purposes set forth in this
Proxy   Statement  and  in  the   accompanying   Notice  of  Annual  Meeting  of
Stockholders.  The Meeting will be held at the Company's  facility at 1200 South
52nd Street, Tempe, Arizona.

   These proxy  solicitation  materials  were first  mailed on or about June 17,
1996, to all stockholders entitled to vote at the Meeting.

Voting Securities and Voting Rights

   Stockholders  of record at the close of business on May 29, 1996 (the "Record
Date") are entitled to notice of and to vote at the Meeting. On the Record Date,
34,554,522  shares of the Company's Common Stock, par value $.001 per share (the
"Common Stock") were issued and outstanding.

   The  presence,  in person or by proxy,  of the  holders of a majority  of the
total  number  of  shares  of  Common  Stock  outstanding  on  the  Record  Date
constitutes  a quorum for the  transaction  of  business  at the  Meeting.  Each
stockholder voting at the Meeting, either in person or represented by proxy, may
cast one vote per share of Common  Stock  held on all  matters to be voted on at
the  Meeting.  Assuming  that a quorum is  present,  the  affirmative  vote of a
majority of the shares of Common Stock present in person or represented by proxy
at the Meeting and  entitled  to vote is  required to amend the  Company's  1993
Stock Option Plan, as proposed,  and for the  ratification of the appointment of
the Company's independent  auditors. In the election of directors,  the nominees
receiving the highest number of affirmative votes shall be elected as directors.
Votes  withheld  from any director are counted for purposes of  determining  the
presence or absence of a quorum, but have no other effect under Delaware law.

Voting of Proxies

   Votes  cast in person or by proxy at the  Meeting  will be  tabulated  by the
election  inspector(s)  appointed  for the  Meeting.  When a proxy  is  properly
executed and returned,  the shares it represents will be voted at the Meeting as
directed.  Any proxy that is returned using the form of proxy enclosed and which
is not marked as to a particular  item will be voted:  (i) "FOR" the election of
the nominees set forth
<PAGE>
in this  Proxy  Statement;  (ii)  "FOR"  approval  of each of the other  matters
presented  to  stockholders  in this  Proxy  Statement;  and  (iii) as the proxy
holders  deem  advisable on other  matters  that may come before the Meeting.  A
stockholder  may indicate on the  enclosed  proxy or its  substitute  that it is
abstaining from voting on a particular  matter (an  "abstention").  A broker may
indicate  on the  enclosed  proxy  or its  substitute  that  it  does  not  have
discretionary  authority as to certain shares to vote on a particular  matter (a
"broker  non-vote").   Abstentions  and  broker  non-votes  are  each  tabulated
separately. The election inspector(s) will determine whether a quorum is present
at the Meeting. In general,  Delaware law provides that a majority of the shares
entitled  to vote,  present in person or  represented  by proxy,  constitutes  a
quorum. Abstentions and broker non-votes of shares that are entitled to vote are
treated  as  shares  that are  present  in person  or  represented  by proxy for
purposes of  determining  the  presence of a quorum.  In  determining  whether a
proposal has been  approved,  abstention of shares that are entitled to vote are
treated as present in person or represented by proxy, but not as voting for such
proposal and hence have the same effect as votes  against such  proposal,  while
broker  non-votes of shares that are entitled to vote are not treated as present
in person or represented by proxy, and hence have no effect on the vote for such
proposal.

Revocability of Proxies

   Any person  giving a proxy may revoke the proxy at any time before its use by
delivering to the Company  written notice of revocation or a duly executed proxy
bearing a later date or by attending the Meeting and voting in person.

Solicitation

   The Company will pay all  expenses of this  solicitation.  In  addition,  the
Company may reimburse brokerage firms and other persons representing  beneficial
owners of shares for expenses incurred in forwarding  solicitation  materials to
such  beneficial  owners.  Proxies  also  may be  solicited  by  certain  of the
Company's  directors  and  officers,  personally  or by  telephone  or telegram,
without  additional  compensation.  The Company may also,  at its sole  expense,
retain  a proxy  solicitation  firm  to  assist  in the  distribution  of  proxy
solicitation materials and in the collection of proxies. If so, the Company does
not believe that the expense will exceed $15,000.

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

Nominees

   A board of four directors is to be elected at the Meeting.  Unless  otherwise
instructed, the proxy holders will vote the proxies received by them for each of
the nominees  named below.  All of the nominees are  currently  directors of the
Company.  In the event that any such nominee is unable or declines to serve as a
director at the time of the  Meeting,  the proxies will be voted for any nominee
designated  by the current  Board of Directors  to fill the  vacancy.  It is not
expected that any nominee will be unable or will decline to serve as a director.
The term of office of each  person  elected as a director  at the  Meeting  will
continue until the next annual meeting of stockholders and until a successor has
been elected and qualified.

   The following table sets forth certain information regarding the nominees for
directors of the Company:

 NAME                           AGE   POSITION(S) HELD
 ----                           ---   ----------------
Steve Sanghi .................  40    Chairman of the Board, President and Chief
                                      Executive Officer
Albert J. Hugo-Martinez (1)(2)  50    Director
Jon H. Beedle (1) ............  63    Director
L.B. Day (2) .................  51    Director
- - ----------
(1) Member of the Compensation Committee
(2) Member of the Audit Committee
                                        2
<PAGE>
   Mr.  Sanghi is  currently,  and has been since August 1990,  President of the
Company,  since October 1991,  Chief  Executive  Officer and since October 1993,
Chairman of the Board of  Directors.  He has served as a director of the Company
since August  1990.  He served as the  Company's  Chief  Operating  Officer from
August 1990 through October 1991 and as Senior Vice President of Operations from
February  1990  through  August  1990.  Mr.  Sanghi is also a director of ADFlex
Solutions,   Inc.,  a  U.S.  supplier  of  flexible  circuit-based  interconnect
solutions.

   Mr. Hugo-Martinez has served as a director of the Company since October 1990.
Since March, 1996, he has served as President and Chief Executive Officer of GTI
Corporation,  a manufacturer of ISDN and local area network subcomponents.  From
1987 to 1995,  he served as  President  and Chief  Executive  Officer of Applied
Micro Circuits  Corporation,  a  manufacturer  of  high-performance  bipolar and
bi-CMOS gate arrays.

   Mr. Beedle has served as director of the Company since October 1993. In 1995,
Mr.  Beedle  retired as President of IN-STAT,  Inc., a leading high  technology,
market  research firm, a position in which he had served since 1981.  Currently,
Mr. Beedle  serves as a consultant to IN-STAT.  Mr. Beedle is also a director of
Bell Microproducts, a regional electronics distributor.

   Mr. Day has served as a director  since  December  1994.  Since 1976,  he has
served as President of L.B. Day & Company, Inc. (formerly Day-Floren Associates,
Inc.), a management  consulting firm specializing in  organizational  structure,
development and strategic planning.

Meetings and Committees of the Board of Directors

   The Company's  By-Laws  authorize the Board of Directors to appoint among its
members one or more committees  composed of one or more directors.  The Board of
Directors has appointed a standing Audit  Committee and a standing  Compensation
Committee.  The Company  does not have a nominating  committee or any  committee
that performs the functions of a nominating  committee.  The Audit  Committee is
primarily responsible for appointing the Company's  independent  accounting firm
and for reviewing and  evaluating  the Company's  accounting  principals and its
systems of  internal  controls.  The Audit  Committee  also  reviews  the annual
financial statements, significant accounting and tax issues and the scope of the
annual audit with the Company's independent auditors. The Compensation Committee
reviews and acts on all  matters  relating  to  compensation  levels and benefit
plans for the Company's key executives. See "Board Compensation Committee Report
on Executive Compensation," below.

   The Board of Directors met eight times during the fiscal year ended March 31,
1996.  The Company's  Audit  Committee met  separately  once,  and the Company's
Compensation  Committee met separately three times, during the fiscal year ended
March 31, 1996.

Director Compensation and Other Information

   Director Fees

   During  fiscal 1996,  directors  did not receive any fees for services on the
Board of  Directors.  Commencing  in fiscal  1997,  directors  receive a $10,000
annual  retainer,  paid  quarterly,  and $1,000 per meeting for each regular and
special Board of Directors'  meeting.  No  compensation  is paid for  telephonic
meetings of the Board of Directors or for meetings of committees of the Board of
Directors.

   Stock Options

   Under  the  terms of the  Company's  1993  Stock  Option  Plan,  non-employee
directors  receive stock  options to purchase  8,000 shares of Common Stock upon
their first  election to the Board of  Directors  and options to purchase  3,000
shares of Common Stock at the meeting of the Board of Directors held immediately
following each annual stockholders'  meeting.  Following the 1995 annual meeting
of stockholders on July 21, 1995, each of Messrs. Hugo-Martinez,  Beedle and Day
were  granted  options to acquire  3,000  shares of Common  Stock at an exercise
price of $36.00,  such  options  to vest in a series of 12 equal and  successive
monthly installments commencing one month after the grant date.
                                        3
<PAGE>
   As  discussed  below at "Proposal  To Amend The  Company's  1993 Stock Option
Plan," at the Meeting the  stockholders  are being asked to approve an amendment
to the 1993 Stock Option Plan to: (i) increase from 3,000 to 5,000 the number of
shares of Common Stock for which options are automatically granted following the
election of  directors  at each  annual  meeting of the  stockholders;  and (ii)
increase  from 8,000 to 10,000  the  number of shares of Common  Stock for which
options are automatically  granted following a director's initial appointment or
election to the Board of Directors.  Options  granted to directors  following an
annual stockholders' meeting vest in a series of 12 equal and successive monthly
installments  commencing one month after the grant date;  options granted upon a
director's  initial  appointment or election to the Board of Directors vest in a
series of 36 equal and  successive  monthly  installments  commencing  one month
after the grant date. If the proposed amendment is approved by the stockholders,
then following the Meeting, each of the directors elected by the stockholders at
the Meeting,  and at each  subsequently  held meeting of the stockholders  where
directors are elected,  will automatically be granted an option to acquire 5,000
shares of Common Stock at an exercise  price equal to the fair market value of a
share  of the  Common  Stock on the date of the  Meeting,  to vest as  described
above.  If the proposed  amendment is not approved,  the directors so elected at
the Meeting will  automatically be granted an option to purchase 3,000 shares of
Common  Stock at an exercise  price equal to the fair market value of a share of
the Common Stock on the date of the Meeting, to vest as described above.

                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Summary of Cash and Other Compensation

   The following table sets forth the compensation earned by the Company's Chief
Executive  Officer and each of the Company's four other most highly  compensated
executive  officers whose aggregate annual cash  compensation  exceeded $100,000
for services rendered in all capacities to the Company (collectively, the "Named
Executive  Officers") for the three fiscal years ended March 31, 1996,  1995 and
1994:
                           Summary Compensation Table
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          Long-Term
                                 Annual Compensation     Compensation
                            --------------------------- --------------
                                                          Securities
                                                          Underlying     All Other
                                                Bonus    Options/SARs   Compensation
Name and Principal Position  Year  Salary ($)  ($)(1)        (#)           ($)(2)
- - --------------------------- ------ ---------- --------- -------------- --------------
<S>                          <C>    <C>        <C>          <C>            <C>     
Steve Sanghi,                1996   $329,423     9,807       50,000        $168,723
  President and              1995    295,384    84,308      150,000         233,587
  Chief Executive Officer    1994    204,615   236,731      255,000           4,005
Robert A. Lanford,           1996    170,985    50,886       12,000          28,958
  Vice President,            1995    159,015    73,794       37,500          25,725
  Worldwide Sales            1994    136,259    90,064       76,500           2,102
George P. Rigg,              1996    166,730     4,952       15,000          49,148
  Vice President,            1995    152,583    51,854       45,000          52,618
  Advanced Microcontroller   1994    139,418    76,134      120,000           2,696
  and Technology Division
Timothy B. Billington,       1996    165,790    50,554       15,000               0
  Vice President,            1995    153,424    99,224       45,000               0
  Process Development and    1994    121,256    82,112      103,500               0
  Manufacturing
Mitchell R. Little (3),      1996    148,077     4,423       12,000          40,350
  Vice President, Standard   1995    138,715    40,531       37,500          37,001
  Microcontroller and
  ASSP Division
</TABLE>
                                        4
<PAGE>
- - ----------
(1) Includes MICP performance  bonus earned in year shown but not paid until the
    following year, and cash bonus payments under the Company's cash bonus plan.
    See "Board Compensation  Committee Report on Executive  Compensation," below
    for descriptions of the MICP bonus program and the cash bonus plan.
(2) Except  as  otherwise   noted,   consists   of:  (i)  the   Company-matching
    contribution to the Company's  401(k)  retirement  savings plan,  which were
    $3,723 for Mr. Sanghi,  $3,278 for Mr. Lanford,  $3,223 for Mr. Rigg, $0 for
    Mr. Billington and $2,850 for Mr. Little;  and (ii) an additional payment by
    the Company in connection with a split-dollar  life insurance  program which
    is distributable to the individual executive officer when he is no longer an
    employee of the Company,  in the amount of $165,000 for Mr. Sanghi,  $25,680
    for Mr. Lanford, $45,925 for Mr. Rigg, $0 for Mr. Billington and $37,500 for
    Mr.  Little.   See  "Board   Compensation   Committee  Report  on  Executive
    Compensation,"  below for a description of the  split-dollar  life insurance
    program.
(3) Mr. Little was appointed as an executive officer during fiscal 1995.

Compensation Plans

   1993 Stock Option Plan (The "Plan")

   The Plan is the Company's primary equity incentive program for key employees,
non-employee  members of the Board of Directors and independent  contractors who
provide valuable services to the Company. The Plan is more fully discussed below
at "Proposal To Amend The Company's 1993 Stock Option Plan."

   Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the "Purchase Plan")

   The Purchase Plan allows eligible employees of the Company to purchase shares
of Common Stock at semi-annual  intervals  through periodic payroll  deductions.
The  purchase  price per share of Common  Stock  for an  eligible  employee  who
participates  in the  Purchase  Plan is the lower of (i) 85% of the fair  market
value  of a share  of  Common  Stock  on the  employee's  entry  date  into  the
then-current  offering  period under the  Purchase  Plan or (ii) 85% of the fair
market value of a share of Common Stock on the semi-annual purchase date.

Option Grants

   The  following  table  contains  information  concerning  the  grant of stock
options to the Named  Executive  Officers during the fiscal year ended March 31,
1996:

                        Option Grants in Last Fiscal Year
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         Individual Grants
                       ----------------------------------------------------
                                       Percent                                Potential Realizable
                         Number of     of Total                                 Value at Assumed
                         Securities    Options                                Annual Rates of Stock
                         Underlying   Granted to                             Price Appreciation for
                          Options     Employees    Exercise or                     Option Term
                          Granted     in Fiscal    Base Price    Expiration  ----------------------
Name                      (#)(1)        Year        ($/sh)         Date        5%(2)      10%(2)
- - ----------------------  ----------- ------------   -----------   ----------  ---------   --------- 
<S>                       <C>          <C>          <C>           <C>        <C>         <C>      
Steve Sanghi ..........   50,000       7.64%        $36.00        7/21/05    1,132,010   2,868,736
Robert A. Lanford  ....   12,000       1.83%         36.00        7/21/05      271,682     688,496
George P. Rigg ........   15,000       2.29%         36.00        7/21/05      339,603     860,621
Timothy B. Billington .   15,000       2.29%         36.00        7/21/05      339,603     860,621
Mitchell R. Little  ...   12,000       1.83%         36.00        7/21/05      271,682     688,496
</TABLE>
- - ----------
(1) Each stock option becomes  exercisable over a one year vesting period, in 12
    successive  monthly  installments  commencing  on July 21,  1999,  and has a
    maximum term of 10 years from the date of grant.  Vesting may be accelerated
    under certain circumstances in connection with an acquisition of the Company
    or a change of control. The exercise price may be paid in cash, in shares of
    Common Stock  valued at fair market value on the exercise  date or through a
    cashless exercise procedure
                                        5
<PAGE>
    involving a same-day  sale of the purchased  shares.  See "Proposal to Amend
    The Company's 1993 Stock Option Plan -- Description of the Plan," below, for
    a further description of the material provisions of the Plan.
(2) No assurance can be given that the actual stock price  appreciation over the
    10-year option term will be at the assumed 5% and 10% levels or at any other
    defined  level.  The rates of  appreciation  are  specified  by rules of the
    Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  (the "SEC") and are for  illustrative
    purposes only; they do not represent the Company's  estimate of future stock
    price.  Unless the market price of the Common Stock does in fact  appreciate
    over the option term, no value will be realized  from the option grant.  The
    exercise  price of each of the options was equal to the closing  sales price
    of the  Common  Stock as quoted on the  NASDAQ  Stock  Market on the date of
    grant.

Option Exercises And Holdings

   The following  table provides  information on option  exercises in the fiscal
year  ended,  and option  holdings  at,  March 31,  1996 by the Named  Executive
Officers and the value of such officers' unexercised options at March 31, 1996:

                 AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                        AND FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION VALUES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        Number of Securities           Value of Unexercised
                                                   Underlying Unexercised Options     In-The-Money Options
                           Shares                      at March 31, 1996 (#)        at March 31, 1996 ($)(1)
                        Acquired on       Value    ----------------------------- ------------------------------
Name                    Exercise (#) Realized($)(2) Exercisable   Unexercisable  Exercisable(1)  Unexercisable
- - ----------------------  ------------ ------------- ------------- --------------- -------------- ---------------
<S>                       <C>          <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>             <C>
Steve Sanghi ..........   164,431      4,254,706      224,063        358,438        4,062,704       3,623,508
Robert A. Lanford  ....    54,110      1,196,956        8,610        101,531          160,800       1,239,605
George P. Rigg ........    71,950      2,086,148       63,988        104,062        1,185,998         938,691
Timothy B. Billington      71,888      1,872,106       33,959        117,468          622,189       1,288,716
Mitchell R. Little  ...    30,374        741,953        5,065         89,437          101,127         932,841
</TABLE>
- - ----------
(1) Calculated based on $27.50 per share,  which was the closing sales price per
    share of the Common  Stock as quoted on the NASDAQ Stock Market on March 29,
    1996,  multiplied by the number of applicable  shares  in-the-money less the
    total exercise price for such shares.
(2) Calculated  based on the market  price per share of the Common Stock at date
    of exercise  multiplied  by the number of options  exercised  less the total
    exercise price of the options exercised.

Employment Contracts, Termination of Employment and Change in
Control Arrangements

   The Company has not entered into  employment  contracts with any of the Named
Executive  Officers.  Each of the Named  Executive  Officers has entered into an
Executive  Officer   Severance   Agreement  which  provides  for  the  automatic
acceleration in vesting of all unvested stock options upon the first to occur of
any of the following events:  (i) as of the date immediately  preceding a change
of control  in the event any such stock  options  are or will be  terminated  or
canceled  (except by mutual  consent) or any  successor to the Company  fails to
assume and agree to perform all such stock option agreements at or prior to such
time as any such person becomes a successor to the Company;  (ii) as of the date
immediately preceding such change of control in the event the executive does not
or will not receive upon  exercise of such  executive's  stock  purchase  rights
under any such stock option agreement the same identical securities and/or other
consideration  as  is  received  by  all  other   stockholders  in  any  merger,
consolidation,  sale,  exchange or similar  transaction  occurring upon or after
such  change  of  control;  (iii)  as of  the  date  immediately  preceding  any
involuntary  termination  of such  executive  occurring  upon or after  any such
change of control;  or (iv) as of the date six months  following  the first such
change of control,  provided that the executive  shall have remained an employee
of the Company continuously throughout such six-month period.
                                        6
<PAGE>
Board Compensation Committee Report on Executive Compensation

The Compensation Committee; General

   The Board of Directors  maintains a Compensation  Committee (the "Committee")
comprised  of one or more  outside  directors.  The  Committee  is  comprised of
Messrs. Hugo-Martinez and Beedle. The Committee, with input from Messrs. Day and
Sanghi,  conducted  performance  reviews for fiscal  1996 and made  compensation
decisions for fiscal 1997 with respect to the Company's executive officers other
than Mr.  Sanghi.  The  Committee,  with  input  from  Mr.  Day,  conducted  the
performance  review for fiscal 1996 and made  compensation  decisions for fiscal
1997  with  respect  to  Mr.  Sanghi.   Mr.  Sanghi  does  not   participate  in
deliberations relating to his own compensation.

The Stock Option Committee

   The Board of Directors also maintains a Stock Option  Committee  comprised of
two or more outside directors.  The Stock Option Committee  administers the Plan
and determines,  within the confines of the Plan, the timing, amount and vesting
of stock  options to be granted to the  Company's  executive  officers.  Messrs.
Hugo-Martinez and Beedle currently comprise the Stock Option Committee.

Compensation Policy

   The  Company  bases  its   compensation   policy  on  a   pay-for-performance
philosophy,  not only for executive officers, but for all corporate officers and
key employees.  This philosophy emphasizes variable  compensation,  primarily by
setting base salaries after a review of average base salary levels of comparable
companies in the  semiconductor  industry,  with an opportunity to enhance total
compensation  through  various  incentives.   The  Company  believes  that  this
philosophy  successfully  aligns  an  executive's  total  compensation  with the
Company's  business   objectives  and  performance  and  the  interests  of  the
stockholders and serves to attract, retain and reward individuals who contribute
both to the Company's short-term and long-term success.  Compensation  decisions
also include  subjective  determinations  and a consideration of various factors
with the weight  given to a particular  factor  varying from time to time and in
various  individual  cases.  The  Company  believes  that its  overall  pay-for-
performance philosophy fosters a team environment among the Company's management
that focuses their energy on achieving the Company's  financial and  performance
objectives, consistent with the Company's guiding values.

   The Committee believes that the overall compensation levels for the Company's
executive   officers  for  fiscal  1996  are   consistent   with  the  Company's
pay-for-performance  philosophy  and are  reasonable  in light of the  Company's
fiscal 1996 performance. The Company's net sales increased 37% and 50% in fiscal
1996 and 1995, respectively; its net income increased 44% and 89% in fiscal 1996
and 1995  respectively;  and its return on average  equity was 26.75% and 30.54%
in fiscal 1996 and 1995, respectively.

Elements of Compensation

   There  are  currently  four  major   elements  of  the  Company's   executive
compensation program:  annual base salary,  incentive cash bonuses and long term
compensation  programs,  stock options,  and compensation and employee  benefits
generally available to all Company employees.

   Base  Salaries.  The  Committee  establishes  annual  base  salaries  of  the
Company's executive officers at the beginning of each fiscal year,  primarily by
considering  the  salaries  of  executive  officers  in similar  positions  with
comparably-sized   companies  (the  "Reference  Group").   The  Reference  Group
currently  consists of six companies with $100 million to $300 million in annual
sales, market capitalizations of between $500 million and $1.2 billion, and that
operate in recognized market segments,  such as logic,  memory and mixed-signal,
within the  semiconductor  industry.  Monitoring the Reference  Group provides a
stable and  continuing  frame of reference for reviewing and setting base salary
compensation.  The  composition of the Reference Group is subject to change from
year to year based on the Committee's

- - ----------
(1) Net  income  for fiscal  1996  increased  by 44% over  net income for fiscal
    1995, without giving effect to a one-time write-off of in-process technology
    included  in the  quarter  ended  December  31,  1995.  If the effect of the
    one-time write-down is considered,  then net income in fiscal 1996 increased
    21% over net income for fiscal 1995.

                                        7
<PAGE>
assessment of  comparability,  including the extent to which the Reference Group
reflects changes occurring within the Company and in the semiconductor  industry
as a whole.  In  addition,  consistent  with the  Company's  pay-for-performance
philosophy,  the Committee reviews the performance objectives for the Company as
a whole for the immediately  preceding fiscal year and the upcoming fiscal year,
as well as the  performance  objectives  for  each  of the  individual  officers
relative  to  their  respective  areas  of  responsibility   for  both  periods.
Performance  objectives are initially developed by the individual  officers,  in
conjunction with their  respective  operating units, and then discussed with and
approved  by the Chief  Executive  Officer  to  generate  the  Company's  annual
operating  plan  ("AOP").  The Board of Directors  then reviews and approves the
AOP. In setting base salaries,  the Committee also considers  subjective factors
such as an executive's experience and tenure in the industry and perceived value
of the executive's  position to the Company as a whole.  After  consideration of
all of the  above-described  factors,  average base  salaries for the  Company's
executive  officers increased 9.29% in fiscal 1996. In response to the Company's
performance in the fourth quarter of fiscal 1996, and that of the  semiconductor
industry as a whole,  all merit  increases to base  salaries  for the  Company's
executive  officers and other key employees,  scheduled to take effect beginning
April 1, 1996, were delayed for three months.

   Incentive Cash Bonuses and Long-Term  Compensation  Programs.  Incentive cash
bonuses  may be  payable  to the  Company's  officers,  managers  and  other key
employees under the Company's Management  Incentive  Compensation Plan ("MICP").
The Board of  Directors  approved the MICP for fiscal 1996 as part of the fiscal
1996 AOP at the  beginning of fiscal 1996.  The MICP is an aggregate  bonus pool
derived from a percentage of the Company's annual operating  profit.  This bonus
pool may then be  allocated  among  the  eligible  participants  based  upon the
achievement  of  individual   performance   objectives  and  various  subjective
determinations,  with no particular weight being assigned to any one factor. The
Board of Directors and the Committee  generally give Mr. Sanghi wide  discretion
with respect to the designation of employees eligible to participate in the MICP
and the amount of any MICP bonus to be  awarded to each  participant,  including
executive  officers other than himself.  The Committee  determines the amount of
the  MICP  bonus,  if  any,  to be  awarded  to  Mr.  Sanghi.  In  fiscal  1996,
approximately  155  employees,  including the  executive  officers and the Chief
Executive Officer, participated in the MICP.

   In  conjunction  with the  MICP,  the  executive  officers  are  eligible  to
participate  in a program  designed to provide longer term  compensation  to the
executive officers.  In fiscal 1995, in light of the importance of retaining the
executive  officers  in the  long-term  employ of the  Company and to provide an
alternative to immediately taxable cash bonuses, the Committee decided to create
a longer  term  benefit to key  executives  in the form of a  split-dollar  life
insurance program. The split-dollar life insurance program provides key officers
with an incentive to remain in the long-term employ of the Company, an insurance
benefit, and a cash value benefit payable in the future when the executive is no
longer in the employ of the Company. The Committee determines what portion of an
executive's  overall  MICP  cash  bonus  will  be  paid  in  cash  or  into  the
split-dollar  life  insurance  program.  During  fiscal  1996,  only  one of the
executive  officers received an MICP cash bonus; all of the MICP bonuses for the
other  executive  officers,  including  Mr.  Sanghi,  were  contributed  to  the
split-dollar life insurance program.  See the "Summary  Compensation  Table" and
footnotes thereto, above.

   In establishing the total MICP bonus compensation for fiscal 1996, (including
cash payments and split-dollar  life insurance program  contributions)  numerous
objective and subjective factors were considered,  including the Company's sales
and net income  growth and return on equity.  MICP bonuses for the first half of
fiscal 1996 were paid in October 1995. No bonus  payments (and no  contributions
to the  split-dollar  life  insurance  program) were made for the second half of
fiscal 1996, as a response to the Company's performance in the fourth quarter of
fiscal 1996, and that of the semiconductor industry as a whole. As a result, the
average MICP bonus for the  Company's  six  executive  officers,  excluding  Mr.
Sanghi, was approximately 33% of base salary, a decrease of approximately 27% in
fiscal 1996 as  compared  to fiscal  1995 when the  average  MICP bonus for such
officers,  excluding Mr. Sanghi,  was approximately 60% of base salary.  See the
"Summary  Compensation  Table"  and  footnotes  thereto,  above.  The  Committee
believes that the MICP bonus  compensation  for fiscal 1996 is  consistent  with
Company's pay-for- performance philosophy and is commensurate with the Company's
overall performance, as well as the fiscal 1996 AOP objectives.
                                        8
<PAGE>
   Stock Options. The Company believes that executive officers,  other corporate
officers and key employees should hold  substantial,  long-term equity stakes in
the Company so that their collective  interests will coincide with the interests
of the stockholders. Thus, stock options constitute a significant portion of the
Company's incentive  compensation program. At March 31, 1996,  approximately 70%
of the Company's  employees  worldwide held options to purchase Common Stock. In
granting  stock options to executive  officers  under the Plan, the Stock Option
Committee  considers  numerous  factors,  such as the individual's  position and
responsibilities   with  the  Company,  the  individual's  future  potential  to
influence the Company's mid- and long-term  growth,  the vesting schedule of the
options awarded and the number of options  previously  granted. A description of
the Plan is set forth  below at  "Proposal  To Amend The  Company's  1993  Stock
Option Plan." See the table under "Option Grants -- Option Grants in Last Fiscal
Year," above, for information regarding options to purchase Common Stock granted
to the Named Executive Officers during fiscal 1996.

   As  described  above,  the grant of stock  options  to  employees  is but one
critical    element    in   the    Company's    pay-for-performance,    variable
compensation-based philosophy that provides a competitive incentive to remain in
service to the Company.  In April 1996, the Company  eliminated MICP bonuses for
all employees  for the second half of fiscal 1996,  and cash bonus plan payments
for all  employees  for the  fourth  quarter of fiscal  1996.  In light of these
actions,  the Committee  reviewed the terms of recent stock option grants to the
employee population at large, excluding the executive officers and non- employee
directors.  The Committee determined that a large portion of such grants were of
little or no  incentive  value to the  affected  employees  because the exercise
prices  were  well in excess  of the  current  value of the  Common  Stock.  The
Committee concluded that a significant competitive  disadvantage would result to
the Company if this situation were not remedied.  To counteract this competitive
disadvantage,  the Committee  adopted an option exchange  program (the "Exchange
Program").  Pursuant to the terms of the Exchange  Program,  employees  who held
options  with an  exercise  price in excess of $30.00  per share  were given the
opportunity  to exchange  those options for a stock option grant dated April 30,
1996 at an exercise price of $25.50 per share. None of the executive officers or
the non-employee directors were eligible to participate in the Exchange Program.

   Compensation  and  Employee  Benefits  Generally  Available  to  All  Company
Employees.  The Company  maintains  compensation and employee  benefits that are
generally available to all Company employees, including medical, dental and life
insurance  benefits,  the Purchase Plan, a 401(k) retirement  savings plan and a
cash bonus plan.  The cash bonus plan awards each  eligible  employee with up to
five days of pay, based on base salary,  every six months,  if the Company meets
certain  operating   profitability   objectives  established  by  the  Board  of
Directors.  For the first three quarters of fiscal 1996, each eligible  employee
received the maximum  cash bonus  permitted  under the cash bonus plan.  No cash
bonus plan  payments  will be made for the fourth  quarter  of fiscal  1996,  in
response to the Company's  performance in the fourth quarter of fiscal 1996, and
that of the  semiconductor  industry as a whole,  consistent  with the Company's
pay-for-performance philosophy. 

Chief Executive Officer Compensation

   The Committee  uses the same factors and criteria  described  above in making
compensation  decisions regarding the Chief Executive Officer.  For fiscal 1996,
Mr. Sanghi's base salary was increased by 11.5%. The Committee  believes this is
an  appropriate  increase  considering  the base  salaries  of  chief  executive
officers in the Reference Group, and the Company's  significant sales growth and
performance.  In response to the Company's  performance in the fourth quarter of
fiscal 1996, and that of the  semiconductor  industry as a whole,  Mr.  Sanghi's
merit increase to his base salary,  scheduled to take effect  beginning April 1,
1996, was delayed for three months. Mr. Sanghi's aggregate MICP bonus for fiscal
1996 was determined after considering numerous objective and subjective factors,
including the Company's  performance  in the fourth  quarter of fiscal 1996, and
that of the semiconductor industry as a whole and resulted in a total MICP bonus
payment for the first half of fiscal 1996 (which was made as a  contribution  to
the split-dollar life insurance program in October 1995) of approximately 53% of
his base salary.  No MICP bonus payment (and no contribution to the split-dollar
life  insurance  program)  was made to Mr.  Sanghi for the second half of fiscal
1996.  As a result,  the fiscal  1996 MICP bonus for Mr.  Sanghi  represented  a
decrease of approximately 53% in fiscal 1996 as compared to fiscal 1995 when Mr.
Sanghi's MICP bonus was
                                        9
<PAGE>
approximately 106% of his base salary. See the "Summary  Compensation Table" and
footnotes  thereto,  above. The Committee believes that Mr. Sanghi's fiscal 1996
MICP bonus was (i) consistent with Company's pay-for-performance  philosophy and
is commensurate  with the Company's overall  performance,  as well as the fiscal
1996  AOP  objectives;  and  (ii)  reasonable  based  on the  Company's  overall
performance in fiscal 1996, that  performance as compared to the Reference Group
and Mr. Sanghi's  leadership and influence over the Company's  performance.  See
the table under "Option Grants -- Option Grants in Last Fiscal Year," above, for
information regarding the options to purchase Common Stock granted to Mr. Sanghi
during fiscal 1996.  These options  become  exercisable  over a one year vesting
period in 12  successive  monthly  installments  commencing  July 21, 1999.  The
amount of this  grant and the  vesting  terms  were  determined  to  provide  an
appropriate  long term  incentive  for Mr.  Sanghi.  

Deductibility  of Executive Compensation

   Beginning in 1994,  Section  162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended (the "Code"), limits the deductibility by the Company for federal income
tax purposes of compensation  paid to the Company's Chief Executive  Officer and
to each of the Company's other four most highly  compensated  executive officers
to $1,000,000 each. The Company  anticipates that a substantial  portion of each
executive   officer's   compensation   will  be   "qualified   performance-based
compensation,"  that is not limited under Code Section  162(m).  The  Committee,
therefore,   does  not  currently   anticipate  that  any  executive   officer's
compensation will exceed that limitation of deductibility in fiscal 1997.

   By the Board of Directors, including its Compensation and Stock Option
Committees:

Steve Sanghi       Albert J. Hugo-Martinez       Jon H. Beedle          L.B. Day

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

   The Board of Directors maintains a Compensation Committee comprised of one or
more members who are outside directors.  The Compensation  Committee consists of
Messrs.  Hugo-Martinez and Beedle. Except as described below, neither of Messrs.
Hugo-Martinez  or Beedle  had any  contractual  or other  relationship  with the
Company  during  fiscal 1996 except as a director and neither has ever served as
an officer or employee of the  Company.  As described  above under  "Election of
Directors -- Nominees,"  Mr. Beedle is a consultant  to, and during a portion of
fiscal 1996 served as President  of,  IN-STAT,  Inc., a leading high  technology
market  research  firm.  During fiscal 1996,  the Company  subscribed to various
market research  services  offered by IN-STAT,  Inc. at a cost of  approximately
$52,000.

Performance Graph

   The following graph shows a comparison of cumulative total stockholder return
for: (i) the Common Stock; (ii) a self-constructed Peer Group Index comprised of
six companies that operate in recognized market segments,  such as logic, memory
and mixed-signal,  within the semiconductor industry and which have annual sales
between  $100 and $300  million  and a market  capitalization  of  between  $500
million and $1.2  billion  (the "Peer  Group");  and (iii) the CRSP Total Return
Index for the NASDAQ Stock Market (U.S.).  The Peer Group is comprised of Altera
Corporation, Atmel Corporation,  Linear Technology Corporation, Maxim Integrated
Products, Inc., Xilinx, Inc., and Zilog, Inc.

   The Peer Group is identical to the  Reference  Group used by the Committee in
reviewing executive  compensation.  See "Board Compensation  Committee Report on
Executive Compensation."

   In preparing  the following  graph,  it was assumed that $100 was invested in
the Common Stock at the initial  offering  price on March 22, 1993,  the date on
which shares of Common Stock were first publicly traded.  No cash dividends have
been declared or paid with respect to the Common Stock.

   Note that historic stock price  performance is not necessarily  indicative of
future stock performance.
                                       10
<PAGE>
                    FY 1996 Relative Stock Price Performance
    Among Microchip Technology Inc., Peer Group Index and Broad Market Index
               
        BROAD MARKET INDEX    PEER GROUP INDEX     MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY    
        ------------------    ----------------     --------------------    
                                                                           
              100.000              100                   100               
              102.028              105.1266              113.1649          
               97.673              103.3694              149.1228          
              103.509              121.013               163.1579          
              103.987              124.0267              205.2632          
              104.110              130.0756              200               
              109.491              145.7273              326.3158          
              112.752              159.8179              364.9123          
              115.286              145.8465              449.1228          
              111.848              143.1883              449.1228          
              114.965              165.3656              547.3684          
              118.454              177.07                557.8947          
              117.347              187.6775              624.5614          
              110.130              178.0632              536.8421          
              108.701              196.7486              589.4526          
              108.967              181.0818              652.6105          
              104.981              169.6947              742.1053          
              107.135              160.7686              673.6737          
              113.965              187.6767              773.6842          
              113.674              196.3394              826.2947          
              115.908              219.892               976.9895          
              112.063              213.243               939.4737          
              112.378              221.915               868.4211          
              113.009              214.0483              706.5789          
              118.984              244.5509              797.3684          
              122.510              256.313               888.1579          
              172.338              289.3687              892.1053          
              129.628              305.8608              939.4737          
              140.131              349.1703             1148.684           
              150.426              418.2179             1215.789           
              153.468              448.5491             1200               
              157.006              463.367              1196.053           
              156.107              453.4184             1253.305           
              159.772              420.5793             1278.947           
              158.944              376.5077             1152.632           
              159.758              435.7217             1050               
              165.892              437.0289              876.3158          
              166.350              384.7217              868.4211          

           SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDERS, DIRECTORS
                            AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

   The following table sets forth certain  information  regarding the beneficial
ownership  of the Common  Stock as of April 26, 1996 by: (i) each  director  and
nominee  for  director;  (ii) each of the Named  Executive  Officers;  (iii) all
directors and executive  officers as a group;  and (iv) each person who is known
to the Company to own  beneficially  more than five percent of the Common Stock:

                                                Number of Shares     
                                                  Beneficially       Percent of
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner              Owned(1)(2)       Common Stock
- - ------------------------------------            ----------------    ------------
FMR Corp. (3) ..................................    2,918,500           8.48%
Fred Alger Management, Inc. (4) ................    2,085,725           6.06%
Steve Sanghi (5) ...............................     872,433            2.52%
George P. Rigg (6) .............................     163,251                *
Robert A. Lanford (7) ..........................      59,565                *
Timothy B. Billington (8) ......................      45,643                *
Jon H. Beedle (9) ..............................      30,000                *
Albert J. Hugo-Martinez (10) ...................      22,958                *
Mitchell R. Little (11) ........................      14,697                *
L.B. Day (12) ..................................       6,528                *
All directors and executive officers as a group    
 (nine persons) (13) ...........................   1,254,341            3.59%
- - ----------
 * Less than 1% of the outstanding shares of Common Stock.
 (1) Except as otherwise indicated in the  footnotes to  this table and pursuant
     to applicable community
                                       11
<PAGE>
     property  laws,  the  persons  named in this  table  have sole  voting  and
     investment power with respect to all shares of Common Stock.
 (2) Includes shares of Common Stock issuable to the identified  person pursuant
     to stock options and stock purchase rights that may be exercised  within 60
     days of April 26, 1996. In calculating  the  percentage of ownership,  such
     shares are  deemed to be  outstanding  for the  purpose  of  computing  the
     percentage  of shares  of Common  Stock  owned by such  person  but are not
     deemed to be  outstanding  for the purpose of computing  the  percentage of
     shares of Common Stock owned by any other stockholder.
 (3) 82 Devonshire Street, Boston,  Massachusetts 02109. Information is based on
     a Schedule  13G filed with the SEC by FMR Corp.  dated  February  14, 1996.
     Various  persons  have the right to  receive  or the  power to  direct  the
     receipt of dividends  from, or the proceeds from the sale of, Common Stock.
     The interest of one person in the Common Stock,  Fidelity Magellan Fund, an
     investment  company  registered  under the Investment  Company Act of 1940,
     amounted to 1,753,200 shares.
 (4) 75 Maiden Lane, New York, NY 10038.  Information is based on a Schedule 13G
     filed with the SEC by Fred Alger Management, Inc. dated January 17, 1996.
 (5) Includes  253,594 shares  issuable upon exercise of options.  Also includes
     207,480  shares  held of record by Steve  Sanghi and Maria  Sanghi as joint
     tenants  and  214,431  shares  held of record by Steve  Sanghi and Maria T.
     Sanghi as Trustees of Declaration of Trust.
 (6) Includes 72,894 shares issuable upon exercise of options.
 (7) Includes 19,156 shares issuable upon exercise of options.
 (8) Includes 44,787 shares issuable upon exercise of options,  468 of which are
     subject to repurchase rights of the Company.
 (9) Includes 30,000 shares issuable upon exercise of options.
 (10)Includes  19,010 shares  issuable  upon exercise of options.  Also includes
     3,948  shares  held  of  record  by  Albert  J.  Hugo-Martinez  and S.  Gay
     Hugo-Martinez as trustees of the Martinez Family Trust.
 (11)Includes 12,658 shares  issuable upon exercise of options.  All shares held
     of  record  are held by  Mitchell  R.  Little  and Jean E.  Little as joint
     tenants.
 (12)Includes 6,528 shares issuable upon exercise of options.
 (13)Includes  494,561 shares issuable upon exercise of options,  5,038 of which
     are subject to repurchase rights of the Company.

                COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 16 OF THE EXCHANGE ACT

   Section  16(a) of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of  1934,  as  amended  (the
"Exchange  Act")  requires the Company's  directors and officers and persons who
own more  than  10% of a class  of  registered  class  of the  Company's  equity
securities to file reports of ownership  and changes in ownership  with the SEC.
Officers,  directors  and  greater  than 10%  stockholders  are  required by SEC
regulation  to furnish the Company  with copies of all Section  16(a) forms they
file.

   Based solely on the Company's  review of the copies of such forms received by
it during the fiscal year ended March 31, 1996, and written representations that
no other reports were required,  the Company believes that,  except as described
below,  each person who,  at any time during such fiscal  year,  was a director,
officer or beneficial owner of more than 10% of the Common Stock,  complied with
all Section 16(a) filing requirements.  A stock option exercise by Mr. Sanghi in
December 1994 was inadvertently omitted from Mr. Sanghi's otherwise timely filed
Form 5 for the fiscal year ended March 31,  1995.  Mr.  Sanghi has amended  such
Form 5 to reflect the option exercise.

             PROPOSAL TO AMEND THE COMPANY'S 1993 STOCK OPTION PLAN

Description of the Proposed Amendment and The Automatic Option Grant Program

   The Proposed Amendment; Purpose of Proposed Amendment. The Board of Directors
has  approved  a  proposal  to  amend  the  Plan,  subject  to  approval  by the
stockholders,  to:  (i)  increase  from  3,000 to 5,000 the  number of shares of
Common Stock with respect to which options are automatically granted
                                       12
<PAGE>
to non-employee  directors  following each annual meeting of  stockholders;  and
(ii)  increase  from 8,000 to 10,000  the  number of shares of Common  Stock for
which  options  are  automatically   granted  following  a  director's   initial
appointment or election to the Board of Directors, all as provided for under the
Plan's Automatic Option Grant Program. Currently,  following each annual meeting
of the  stockholders,  non- employee  directors are granted an option to acquire
3,000 shares of Common Stock at the fair market value of the Common Stock on the
date of such stockholder meeting. Also, the Plan currently provides that, upon a
director's  initial  appointment  or  election to the Board of  Directors,  they
receive an option to acquire  8,000  shares of Common  Stock at the fair  market
value per share of the Common Stock on the date of such appointment or election.
If approved, the amendment would take effect immediately such that all directors
(re)elected at the Meeting would  automatically  be granted an option to acquire
5,000 shares of the Common Stock  following the Meeting at the fair market value
of the Common Stock on the date of the Meeting.

   In general, the Plan is intended to promote the best interests of the Company
by providing  key  employees,  non-employee  members of the Board of  Directors,
consultants and other  independent  contractors who provide valuable services to
the Company with the opportunity to acquire, or otherwise increase, their equity
interest in the Company as an  incentive to remain in service to the Company and
to align their collective interests with those of the stockholders.

   The proposed  amendment to the Plan specifically  acknowledges that the grant
of stock  options to  non-employee  directors is necessary to  compensate  those
qualified  individuals  who are willing to serve on the board of  directors of a
public company.  The Automatic Option Grant Program currently  provides that the
number of shares automatically issued to non-employee  directors does not change
in the case of certain organic events,  such as stock  dividends,  stock splits,
etc.  Thus,  the 3,000 share annual grant and the 8,000 share  initial grant has
not been changed since the adoption of the Automatic Option Grant Program by the
stockholders  in December 1993,  despite the fact that the Company has undergone
two stock splits in the form of stock dividends since such adoption. The Company
believes  that  adjusting  these  numbers as proposed will create parity for the
current  directors  who have served the Company over the last few years and will
ensure  that the  Company  remains  competitive  in  attracting,  retaining  and
motivating such individuals.  The Board of Directors believes that a competitive
disadvantage  would  result if the Company  does not  enhance  its stock  option
program for non-employee  directors.  Thus, the Board of Directors believes that
it is in the best interests of the Company to increase the number of shares with
respect to which options are  automatically  granted to  non-employee  directors
under the Automatic Option Grant Program.

   The Automatic Option Grant Program.  Only  non-employee  directors,  of which
there are currently  three,  are entitled to participate in the Plan's Automatic
Option Grant Program. The  non-discretionary  feature is intended to satisfy the
requirements  of rules  adopted  under the Exchange  Act.  Currently,  under the
Automatic Option Grant Program,  options to acquire 3,000 shares of Common Stock
are automatically  granted to each  non-employee  director at the meeting of the
Board of Directors held  immediately  after each annual meeting of stockholders,
with  such  options  to vest in a series  of 12  equal  and  successive  monthly
installments  commencing  one month after the annual  automatic  grant date.  In
addition,  new  non-employee  members  of the  Board  of  Directors  receive  an
automatic  grant of options to acquire  8,000 shares of Common Stock on the date
of their first appointment or election to the Board of Directors.  Those options
become  exercisable  and vest in a series  of 36 equal  and  successive  monthly
installments commencing one month after the automatic grant date. A non-employee
member of the Board of  Directors  is not  eligible  to receive  the 3,000 share
automatic  option  grant if that  option  grant  date is  within 30 days of such
non-employee  member  receiving the 8,000 share  automatic  option grant. If the
Company is acquired by merger,  consolidation  or asset sale,  or in  connection
with a change in control of the  Company by tender  offer or proxy  contest  for
board  membership,  each  outstanding  option under the  Automatic  Option Grant
Program will automatically accelerate and immediately vest in full.

   The  Board of  Directors  recommends  a vote  "FOR"  the  foregoing  proposed
amendment to the Plan.

Description of the Plan

   The Plan is the Company's primary equity incentive  program.  The Plan, which
is a successor  plan to the Company's  1989 Stock Option Plan (the "1989 Plan"),
was adopted by the Board of Directors in
                                       13
<PAGE>
January  1993 and  approved by the  stockholders  in February  1993.  Currently,
9,931,651  shares of Common Stock are currently  reserved for issuance under the
Plan. Of this total and as of the Record Date,  3,979,535  have been  previously
issued upon exercise of options,  4,196,034 are currently subject to outstanding
options and 1,756,082 are shares with respect to which options may be granted in
the future.

   The Plan is divided  into the  Discretionary  Option  Grant  Program  and the
Automatic Option Grant Program.  The Automatic Option Grant Program is described
above under  "Description  of the Proposed  Amendment and the  Automatic  Option
Grant Program -- The Automatic  Option Grant  Program."  Option grants under the
Discretionary  Option Grant Program may be made to employees (including officers
and directors), and consultants and independent contractors who provide valuable
services to the Company. As of April 26, 1996, the Company's 1,665 employees and
its  independent  contractors  and  consultants  would  have  been  eligible  to
participate  under the Plan's  Discretionary  Option Grant Program.  The Plan is
administered  by the Stock Option  Committee,  which is  presently  comprised of
Messrs. Hugo-Martinez and Beedle.

   Options  granted under the  Discretionary  Option Grant Program may be either
incentive  stock  options  meeting  the  requirements  of  Code  Section  422 or
non-statutory options. If any outstanding option (including options incorporated
from the 1989 Plan) expires or terminates prior to exercise,  the shares subject
to that option may become the subject of subsequent  grants under the Plan.  The
expiration date,  maximum number of shares  purchasable and the other provisions
of the options granted under the Discretionary  Option Grant Program,  including
vesting provisions, are established at the time of grant. Options may be granted
for terms of up to 10 years and  become  exercisable  in whole or in one or more
installments  at such time as may be  determined  by the Stock Option  Committee
upon the grant of the options.  The exercise prices of options are determined by
the Stock  Option  Committee,  but may not be less than 100% of the fair  market
value of the  Common  Stock at the time of the grant for both  nonstatutory  and
incentive  options  (in the case of  incentive  options,  110% if the  option is
granted  to a  stockholder  who at the time the  option is  granted  owns  stock
possessing  more than 10% of the total  combined  voting power of all classes of
stock of the Company or of its subsidiaries). The per share closing price of the
Common Stock on the NASDAQ Stock Market was $24.875 on June 5, 1996.

   If the  Company is  acquired by merger,  consolidation  or asset  sale,  each
outstanding  option under the  Discretionary  Option Grant  Program which is not
assumed by the  successor  corporation  or otherwise  replaced with a comparable
option will automatically accelerate and become exercisable in full. Any options
so assumed may be accelerated if the optionee's  employment is terminated within
a designated  period following the  acquisition.  In connection with a change in
control of the Company by tender  offer or proxy  contest for board  membership,
the Stock Option Committee can accelerate  outstanding options. The Stock Option
Committee also has authority to extend these  acceleration  provisions to one or
more outstanding options under the 1989 Plan incorporated into the Plan.

   Options granted under the Plan are  nontransferable  other than by will or by
the laws of descent and  distribution  upon the death of the option  holder and,
during the lifetime of the option holder,  are  exercisable  only by such option
holder.  Termination of employment at any time for cause immediately  terminates
all options held by the terminated employee.

   The Plan will remain in force until January 19, 2003.  The Board of Directors
at any time may suspend,  amend or terminate  the Plan except that,  without the
approval of the affirmative vote of the stockholders, the Board of Directors may
not: (i) increase, except in the case of certain organic changes to the Company,
the maximum  number of shares of Common Stock  subject to the Plan;  (ii) reduce
the exercise  price at which  options may be granted or the  exercise  price for
which any  outstanding  option may be  exercised;  (iii)  extend the term of the
Plan;  (iv)  change the class of persons  eligible  to receive  options;  or (v)
materially  increase the benefits  accruing to participants  under the Plan. The
Board of  Directors,  however,  may amend the Plan from time to time as it deems
necessary  in order to meet the  requirements  of any  amendments  to Rule 16b-3
under the Exchange Act without the consent of the stockholders of the Company.

   The grant of options under the Discretionary Option Grant Program,  including
grants to the Named  Executive  Officers,  is subject to the  discretion  of the
Stock Option Committee. As of the date of this
                                       14
<PAGE>
Proxy  Statement,  there has been no determination by the Stock Option Committee
with respect to future awards under the Plan. Accordingly,  future discretionary
awards are not determinable.

   The future  award of options  under the  Automatic  Option  Grant  Program to
non-employee  directors is subject to the  (re)election  of such  individuals as
directors  and the fair  market  value of the Common  Stock on the  (re)election
date.

   The  following  table sets  forth  information  with  respect to the grant of
options  during  the  fiscal  year ended  March 31,  1996 to:  (i)  non-employee
directors;  (ii) Named Executive Officers;  (iii) all current executive officers
as a group; and (iv) all other employees as a group:

                              AMENDED PLAN BENEFITS
                           1993 STOCK OPTION PLAN (1)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    Number of
                                                               Shares Subject to
Name of Individual or Identity of Group and Position           Options Granted(#)  Grant Price ($)
- - -------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------   ---------------
<S>                                                                 <C>               <C>
Steve Sanghi
 Director, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer  ...      50,000           $36.00 
Robert A. Lanford
 Vice President, Worldwide Sales ..............................      12,000            36.00 
George P. Rigg 
 Vice President, Advanced Microcontroller and 
 Technology Division ..........................................      15,000            36.00 
Timothy B. Billington 
 Vice President, Process Development and Manufacturing  .......      15,000            36.00 
Mitchell R. Little  
 Vice President, Standard Microcontroller and 
 ASSP Division ................................................      12,000            36.00 
All current executive officers as a group (6 people)  .........     117,000            36.00  
All current directors who are not executive officers as a 
 group (3 people) .............................................       9,000            36.00 
All other employees as a group (2) ............................     528,555            35.76  
</TABLE>
- - ----------
(1) See also the table under "Option Grants," above.
(2) Represents weighted average per share grant price.

   On the  Record  Date,  4,196,034  shares  of Common  Stock  were  subject  to
outstanding options under the Plan.

Federal Income Tax Consequences for Stock Options

   Certain  options  granted  under  the Plan will be  intended  to  qualify  as
incentive  stock options under Code Section 422.  Accordingly,  there will be no
taxable  income to an employee when an incentive  stock option is granted to him
or when that option is  exercised.  The amount by which the fair market value of
the shares at the time of exercise  exceeds the option price  generally  will be
treated as an item of preference in computing the  alternative  minimum  taxable
income of the  optionholder.  If an  optionholder  exercises an incentive  stock
option and does not dispose of the shares within either two years after the date
of the grant of the option or one year of the date the shares  were  transferred
to the optionholder,  any gain or loss realized upon disposition will be taxable
to the  optionholder  as a capital gain or loss.  If the  optionholder  does not
satisfy the applicable  holding  periods,  however,  the difference  between the
option  price and the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise of
the option will be taxed as  ordinary  income,  and the balance of the gain,  if
any, will be taxed as capital gain. If the shares are disposed
                                       15
<PAGE>
of before the  expiration  of the  one-year or  two-year  periods and the amount
realized  is less  than  the fair  market  value  of the  shares  at the date of
exercise,  the employee's ordinary income is limited to the amount realized less
the option  exercise price paid. The Company will be entitled to a tax deduction
only to the extent the  option-holder has ordinary income upon the sale or other
disposition of the shares.

   Options issued under the Plan also may be  nonqualified  options.  The income
tax  consequences of  nonqualified  options will be governed by Code Section 83.
Under Code  Section 83, the excess of the fair market value of the shares of the
Common  Stock  acquired  pursuant to the  exercise of any option over the amount
paid for such stock (hereinafter referred to as "Excess Value") must be included
in the gross income of the  optionholder.  In  calculating  Excess  Value,  fair
market value is generally determined on the date of the acquisition.  Generally,
the  Company  will be  entitled to a federal  income tax  deduction  in the same
taxable  year that the  optionholder  recognizes  income.  The  Company  will be
required to withhold  taxes with respect to income  reportable  pursuant to Code
Section 83 by an optionholder who is also an employee of the Company.  The basis
of the shares acquired by an  optionholder  will be equal to the option price of
those shares plus any income recognized  pursuant to Code Section 83. Subsequent
sales of the  acquired  shares will produce  capital gain or loss.  Such capital
gain or loss  will be long term if the stock has been held for one year from the
date the substantial risk of forfeiture  lapsed, or, if a Section 83(b) election
is made, one year from the date the shares were acquired.

             RATIFICATION OF APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

   The  Board of  Directors  has  appointed  KPMG  Peat  Marwick  LLP  ("KPMG"),
independent  certified public accountants,  to audit the consolidated  financial
statements  of the  Company  for the  fiscal  year  ending  March  31,  1997 and
recommends  that  stockholders  vote  in  favor  of  the  ratification  of  such
appointment. In the event of a negative vote on such ratification,  the Board of
Directors will reconsider its selection. The Board of Directors anticipates that
representatives  of  KPMG  will  be  present  at  the  Meeting,  will  have  the
opportunity to make a statement if they desire, and will be available to respond
to appropriate questions.

                DEADLINE FOR RECEIPT OF STOCKHOLDERS PROPOSALS

   Stockholder  proposals that are intended to be presented by such stockholders
at the annual meeting of  stockholders of the Company for the fiscal year ending
March 31, 1997 must be received by the Company no later than  February  17, 1997
in order to be considered for possible inclusion in the proxy statement and form
of proxy relating to such meeting.

                                OTHER MATTERS

   The Company knows of no other matters to be submitted to the Meeting.  If any
other  matters  properly  come before the  Meeting,  it is the  intention of the
persons  named in the enclosed  proxy card to vote the shares they  represent as
the Board of Directors may recommend.
                                                          Dated: June 17, 1996
                                       16
<PAGE>
PROXY                                                                      PROXY
                       MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED

          This Proxy is Solicited on behalf of The Board of Directors

                      1996 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

     The  undersigned  stockholder  of  MICROCHIP  TECHNOLOGY  INCORPORATED,   a
Delaware corporation (the "Company"),  hereby acknowledges receipt of the Notice
of Annual Meeting of Stockholders and Proxy Statement of the Company, each dated
June 17, 1996 and hereby appoints Steve Sanghi and C. Phillip Chapman,  and each
of them, proxies and attorneys-in-fact, with full power to each of substitution,
on behalf and in the name of the  undersigned,  to represent the  undersigned at
the 1996 Annual Meeting of Stockholders  of the Company,  to be held on July 26,
1996, at 9:00 a.m.,  local time,  at the  Company's  facility at 1200 South 52nd
Street,  Tempe,  Arizona, and at any adjournment or adjournments thereof, and to
vote all shares of Common Stock which the undersigned  would be entitled to vote
if then and there personally present, in the matters set forth below:

     A majority of such  attorneys or  substitutes as shall be present and shall
act at said meeting or any adjournment or  adjournments  thereof (or if only one
shall be present and act, then that one) shall have and may excercise all of the
powers of said attorneys-in-fact hereunder.

                 (Continued and to be signed on reverse side.)

- - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
- - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                       MICHROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED
     PLEASE MARK VOTE IN OVAL IN THE FOLLOWING MANNER USING DARK INK ONLY.



1. Election of Directors:     
   Nominees:  Steve Sanghi; Jon H. Beedle; Albert J. Hugo-Martinez; L.B Day

                             FOR  WITHHOLD  FOR ALL 
                             ( )     ( )      ( )  
                                                   
  (Except Nominee(s)  
    written below)    -------------------------------------------------- 


2.  Proposal to Amend the the  Company's  1993 Stock Option Plan to  (a)Increase
    from 3,000 to 5,000 the number of shares of Common  Stock for which  options
    are automatically granted following the election of directors at each annual
    meeting of  Stockholders;and  (b)Increase from 8,000 to 10,000 the number of
    shares for which options are  automatically  granted  following a director's
    initial appointment or election to the Board of Directors;

                              FOR  AGAINST  ABSTAIN 
                              ( )    ( )      ( )   


3.  Proposal  to  ratify  the  appointment  of  KPMG  Peat  Marwick  LLP  as the
    Independent auditors of the Company.

                              FOR  AGAINST  ABSTAIN
                              ( )    ( )      ( )  

This Proxy will be voted as directed or, If no contrary  direction is Indicated,
will be voted for the Election of Directors,  for the amendment to the Company's
1993 Stock Option  Plan;for the  ratification  of the  appointment  of KPMG Peat
Marwick LLP as the Independent  auditors of the Company;and as said proxies deem
advisable on such other matters as may come before the meeting.

                                                Dated______________________,1995

Signature(s)____________________________________________________________________



- - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(This Proxy should be dated,signed by the  stockholder(s)  exactly as his or her
name  appears  hereon,  and returned  promptly in the enclosed  envelope.Persons
signing in a fiduciary  capacity should so Indicate.If  shares are held by joint
tenants or as community property,both stockholders should sign.)

- - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
================================================================================









                        MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED










                             1993 STOCK OPTION PLAN

                         AMENDED THROUGH APRIL 23, 1996









================================================================================
<PAGE>
                        MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY INCORPORATED
                             1993 STOCK OPTION PLAN
                         AMENDED THROUGH APRIL 26, 1995


                                    ARTICLE I
                                     GENERAL
                                     -------

         1.1      PURPOSE OF THE PLAN

                  (a)  Amendment.  On January 19,  1993,  the Board of Directors
(the "Board") of Microchip Technology Incorporated,  a Delaware corporation (the
"Corporation")  adopted the 1993 Stock Option/Stock  Issuance Plan. On April 23,
1993 and September 14, 1993, the Board amended the Plan  authorizing  additional
available  shares of Common  Stock.  On October 7, 1993,  the Board  amended and
restated the Plan as stated  herein.  On April 18, 1994,  the Board  amended the
Plan  authorizing  additional  available  shares of  Common  Stock,  subject  to
stockholder  approval.  On January 20, and April 26, 1995, the Board amended the
Plan  authorizing,  among other matters,  additional  available shares of Common
Stock, subject to stockholder approval and the elimination of the stock issuance
portion  of the  Plan.  Any  options  outstanding  under  the Plan  before  this
amendment shall remain valid and unchanged.

                  (b)  Purpose.  This 1993 Stock Option  Plan,  amended  through
April 26, 1995 ("Plan") is intended to promote the interests of the  Corporation
by providing (i) key employees  (including  officers) of the Corporation (or its
parent or  subsidiary  corporations)  who are  responsible  for the  management,
growth and  financial  success of the  Corporation  (or its parent or subsidiary
corporations), (ii) non-employee members of the Corporation's Board of Directors
(the "Board") and (ii) consultants and other independent contractors who provide
valuable services to the Corporation (or its parent or subsidiary  corporations)
the opportunity to acquire a proprietary  interest,  or otherwise increase their
proprietary  interest,  in the corporation as an incentive for them to remain in
the service of the Corporation (or its parent or subsidiary corporations).

                  (c)  Effective  Date.  The Plan became  effective on the first
date on which the shares of the Corporation's  common stock are registered under
Section  12(g) of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  as amended (the "1934
Act").  Such date is hereby  designated as the Effective  Date of the Plan.  The
effective  date of any  amendments  to the Plan shall be as of the date of Board
approval.  Notwithstanding the foregoing,  certain amendments  referenced herein
must be approved by the stockholders of the Corporation.
<PAGE>
                  (d)  Successor  to 1989  Plan.  This Plan  shall  serve as the
successor to the Corporation's  1989 Stock Option Plan (the "1989 Plan"), and no
further option grants or stock  issuances shall be made under the 1989 Plan from
and after the Effective  Date of this Plan.  All options  outstanding  under the
1989 Plan on such  Effective  Date are  hereby  incorporated  into this Plan and
shall  accordingly be treated as outstanding  options under this Plan.  However,
each outstanding  option so incorporated shall continue to be governed solely by
the express terms and conditions of the instrument evidencing such grant, and no
provision of this Plan shall be deemed to affect or otherwise  modify the rights
or obligations of the holders of such incorporated options with respect to their
acquisition  of  shares  of  the  Corporation's  common  stock  thereunder.  All
outstanding  unvested share  issuances  under the 1989 Plan shall continue to be
governed  solely  by  the  express  terms  and  conditions  of  the  instruments
evidencing  such  issuances,  and no  provision  of this Plan shall be deemed to
affect or  otherwise  modify the rights or  obligations  of the  holders of such
unvested shares.

                  (e)  Parent/Subsidiaries.   For  purposes  of  the  Plan,  the
following   provisions  shall  be  applicable  in  determining  the  parent  and
subsidiary corporations of the Corporation:

                           (i) Any corporation  (other than the  Corporation) in
an  unbroken  chain  of  corporations  ending  with  the  Corporation  shall  be
considered to be a parent of the corporation,  provided each such corporation in
the  unbroken  chain  (other  than  the  Corporation)  owns,  at the time of the
determination,  stock  possessing  fifty  percent  (50%)  or more  of the  total
combined  voting power of all classes of stock in any other  corporation in such
chain.

                           (ii) Each corporation (other than the Corporation) in
an  unbroken  chain of  corporations  beginning  with the  Corporation  shall be
considered to be a subsidiary of the Corporation, provided each such corporation
(other than the last corporation) in the unbroken chain owns, at the time of the
determination,  stock  possessing  fifty  percent  (50%)  or more  of the  total
combined  voting power of all classes of stock in any other  corporation in such
chain.

                  (f) All references  herein to number of shares of Common Stock
have been restated to reflect a 2-for-1 stock split of the Common Stock effected
on September  14, 1993,  a 3-for-2  stock split of the Common Stock  effected on
April 4, 1994,  and a 3-for-2 split of the Common Stock  effected on November 8,
1994.

         1.2      STRUCTURE OF THE PLAN

                  (a)      Stock Programs.  The Plan shall be divided into two
separate components:  the Discretionary Option Grant Program

                                        2
<PAGE>
specified  in Article II and the  Automatic  Option Grant  Program  specified in
Article IV. Under the Discretionary  Option Grant Program,  eligible individuals
may, at the discretion of the Plan Administrator, be granted options to purchase
shares of Common Stock in  accordance  with the  provisions of Article II. Under
the Automatic  Option Grant Program,  non-employee  members of the Board will be
automatically  granted  options  to  purchase  shares  of the  Common  Stock  in
accordance with the provisions of Article IV.

                  (b) General  Provisions.  Unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise,  the provisions of Articles I and V shall apply to the  Discretionary
Option  Grant  Program  and  the  Automatic  Stock  Grant  Program,   and  shall
accordingly govern the interests of all individuals under the Plan.

         1.3      ADMINISTRATION OF THE PLAN

                  (a) Bifurcation of Administration.  The eligible persons under
the  Discretionary  Option  Grant  Program  shall be divided into two groups and
there  shall be a separate  administrator  for each  group.  One group  shall be
comprised of eligible persons that are  "Affiliates."  For purposes of the Plan,
the term  "Affiliates"  shall mean (i) all "executive  officers" as that term is
defined in Rule 16a-1(f)  promulgated  under the  Securities and Exchange Act of
1934 as amended (the "1934 Act"),  (ii) all directors of the Company,  and (iii)
all persons who own 10% or more of the Company's  issued and outstanding  common
stock. The other group shall be comprised of all eligible persons under the Plan
that are not Affiliates ("Non-Affiliates").

                  (b)  Affiliate  Administration.  The power to  administer  the
Discretionary  Option Grant  Program  with respect to eligible  persons that are
Affiliates shall be vested with a committee (the "Senior  Committee") of two (2)
or more non-employee Board members appointed by the Board. No Board member shall
be eligible to serve on the Senior  Committee if such individual has, within the
relevant  period  designated  below,  received an option  grant or direct  stock
issuance  under this Plan (not  including any option grants made pursuant to the
Automatic  Option Grant Program set forth in Article IV) or any other stock plan
of the Corporation (or any parent or subsidiary corporation):

                           (i) for each of the initial members of the Committee,
the period  commencing  with the Effective  Date of the Plan and ending with the
date of his or her appointment to the Senior Committee, or

                           (ii) for any  successor  or  substitute  member,  the
twelve-month period immediately  preceding the date of his or her appointment to
the Senior Committee or (if shorter) the period

                                        3
<PAGE>
commencing  with the Effective  Date of the Plan and ending with the date of his
or her appointment to the Senior Committee.

                  (c) Non-Affiliate Administration.  The power to administer the
Discretionary Option Grant Program with respect to eligible persons that are not
Non-Affiliates  shall be vested with the Board. The Board,  however,  may at any
time appoint a committee (the  "Employee  Committee") of one or more persons who
are members of the Board and delegate to such Employee  Committee the power,  in
whole or in part, to  administer  the  Discretionary  Stock Option Grant Program
with respect to the Non-Affiliates.

                  (d) Term on Committee. Members of the Senior Committee and the
Employee  Committee  shall  serve  for  such  period  of time as the  Board  may
determine and shall be subject to removal by the Board at any time. The Board at
any time may terminate the functions of the Employee  Committee and reassume all
powers and authority previously delegated to such Committee.

                  (e) Authority of Plan Administrators.  The Board, the Employee
Committee,  and the Senior  Committee,  whichever is  applicable,  shall each be
referred to herein as a "Plan Administrator." Each Plan Administrator shall have
the authority and discretion,  with respect to its administered group, to select
which eligible persons shall participate in the Plan. Unless otherwise  required
by law,  decisions  among members of a Plan  Administrator  shall be by majority
vote. With respect to each administered group, the applicable Plan Administrator
shall have full power and  authority  (subject to the express  provisions of the
Plan) to establish such rules and regulations as it may deem appropriate for the
proper administration of the Discretionary Option Grant Program and to make such
determinations  under, and issue such interpretations of, the provisions of such
programs and any outstanding  option grants or stock issuances  thereunder as it
may deem  necessary or  advisable.  All decisions  made by a Plan  Administrator
shall be final and binding on all parties in its administered  group who have an
interest in the  Discretionary  Option Grant Program or any  outstanding  option
thereunder.  The Plan Administrator shall also have full authority to determine,
with respect to the option grants made under the  Discretionary  Option Program,
the number of shares to be covered by each such grant, the status of the granted
option as either an incentive stock option ("Incentive  option") which satisfies
the  requirements of Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code or a non-statutory
option not intended to meet such  requirements,  the time or times at which each
granted  option  is to become  exercisable  and the  maximum  term for which the
option may remain outstanding.

                  (f)  Indemnification.  In  addition  to such  other  rights of
indemnification as they may have, the members of each Plan  Administrator  shall
be indemnified and held harmless by the

                                        4
<PAGE>
Company, to the extent permitted under applicable law, for, from and against all
costs and expenses  reasonably  incurred by them in connection  with any action,
legal  proceeding to which any such member thereof may be a party,  by reason of
any action taken or failed to be taken,  under or in connection with the Plan or
any  rights  granted  thereunder,  and  against  all  amounts  paid  by  them in
settlement  thereof or paid by them in  satisfaction  of a judgment  of any such
action, suit or proceeding, except a judgment based upon a finding of bad faith.

         1.4      ELIGIBLE PERSONS UNDER THE PLAN

                  (a) Discretionary  Option Grant Program.  The persons eligible
to participate in the Discretionary Option Grant Program under Article II are as
follows:

                           (i)   officers   and  other  key   employees  of  the
Corporation (or its parent or subsidiary corporations) who render services which
contribute to the  management,  growth and financial  success of the Corporation
(or its parent or subsidiary corporations);

                           (ii)  non-employee  members  of the Board  (excluding
those current members of the Senior Committee); and

                           (iii)   those   consultants   or  other   independent
contractors who provide  valuable  services to the Corporation (or its parent or
subsidiary corporations).

                  (b) Automatic  Option Grant Program.  The persons  eligible to
participate  in  the  Automatic   Option  Grant  Program  shall  be  limited  to
non-employee Board members. A non-employee Board member shall not be eligible to
participate in the Automatic Option Grant Program,  however,  if such individual
has at any time been in the prior  employ of the  Corporation  (or any parent or
subsidiary corporation).  Unless otherwise provided in the Plan, persons who are
eligible  under the  Automatic  Option  Grant  Program  may also be  eligible to
receive  option  grants under the  Discretionary  Option Grant Program in effect
under this Plan.


         1.5      STOCK SUBJECT TO THE PLAN

                  (a)  Amendment.   Under  the  Plan,   4,048,151   shares  were
originally  authorized  to be  issued  under  the Plan  (constituting  3,710,651
authorized  shares  under  the 1989  Plan and  rolled  over  into this Plan plus
337,500 additional shares authorized by the Board on January 19, 1993). On April
23, 1993, an additional  1,462,500 shares were authorized by the Board,  subject
to stockholder  approval at the next stockholders'  meeting.  At that point, the
total available authorized shares were 5,510,651. On

                                        5
<PAGE>
September 14, 1993,  the Board  authorized  the number of shares of Common Stock
issuable under the Plan to be increased by 1,521,000  shares. On April 18, 1994,
the Board  authorized  the number of shares of Common Stock  issuable  under the
Plan to be  increased  by  1,950,000  shares.  On January 20, 1995 and April 26,
1995,  the Board  authorized the number of shares of Common Stock issuable under
the Plan to be increased by 950,000  shares,  subject to  Stockholder  approval,
such that the maximum  number of shares  issuable for the term of the Plan shall
be as set forth in Section 1.5(b) below.

                  (b) Available Shares. Shares of the Corporation's common stock
(the "Common Stock") shall be available for issuance under the Plan and shall be
drawn from either the  Corporation's  authorized  but unissued  shares of Common
Stock or from reacquired shares of Common Stock, including shares repurchased by
the Corporation on the open market. The maximum number of shares of Common Stock
which may be issued over the term of the Plan shall not exceed 8,981,650 shares,
subject to  adjustment  from time to time in accordance  with the  provisions of
this Section 1.5. To the extent one or more  outstanding  options under the 1989
Plan which have been incorporated into this Plan (as adjusted for the 1993 Stock
Dividend) are subsequently  exercised,  the number of shares issued with respect
to each such option shall  reduce,  on a  share-for-share  basis,  the number of
shares available for issuance under this Plan.

                  (c) Adjustments for Issuances.  Should one or more outstanding
options  under  this Plan  (including  outstanding  options  under the 1989 Plan
incorporated  into  this  Plan)  expire or  terminate  for any  reason  prior to
exercise in full,  then the shares  subject to the portion of each option not so
exercised  shall be available for  subsequent  option grant under the Plan.  All
share  issuances  under the Plan,  whether or not the  shares  are  subsequently
repurchased by the Corporation pursuant to its repurchase rights under the Plan,
shall  reduce on a  share-for-share  basis the number of shares of Common  Stock
available for subsequent  option grants under the Plan. In addition,  should the
exercise  price of an  outstanding  option under the Plan  (including any option
incorporated  from the 1989 Plan) be paid with shares of Common  Stock or should
shares of Common  Stock  otherwise  issuable  under the Plan be  withheld by the
Corporation in satisfaction of the withholding taxes incurred in connection with
the exercise of an outstanding  option under the Plan, then the number of shares
of Common Stock  available  for issuance  under the Plan shall be reduced by the
gross  number of shares  for which the option is  exercised,  and not by the net
number of shares of Common Stock actually issued to the option holder.

                  (d) Adjustments for Organic Changes. Should any change be made
to the Common Stock issuable under the Plan by reason of

                                        6
<PAGE>
any stock  split,  stock  dividend,  recapitalization,  combination  of  shares,
exchange of shares or other change  affecting the outstanding  Common Stock as a
class  without the  Corporation's  receipt of  consideration,  then  appropriate
adjustments  shall be made to (i) the maximum  number and/or class of securities
issuable  under the Plan,  (ii) the number and/or class of securities  and price
per share in effect under each option outstanding under either the Discretionary
Option Grant Program or the Automatic  Option Grant Program and (iii) the number
and/or class of securities and price per share in effect under each  outstanding
option  incorporated  into this Plan from the 1989 Plan. Such adjustments to the
outstanding  options  are to be effected in a manner  which shall  preclude  the
enlargement  or  dilution  of  rights  and  benefits  under  such  options.  The
adjustments determined by the Board shall be final, binding and conclusive.  The
amount of options granted automatically under the Automatic Option Grant Program
on the Annual Automatic Grant Date and on the Initial Automatic Grant Date shall
not be adjusted  regardless  of any  organic  changes  made to the Common  Stock
issuable under the Plan.

                  (e)  Limitations on Grants to Employees.  Notwithstanding  any
other provision herein to the contrary, the following limitations shall apply to
grants of options to Employees:

                           (i) No employee shall be granted,  in any fiscal year
of the  Corporation,  options  to  purchase  more than  three  hundred  thousand
(300,000) shares.

                           (ii)  In   connection   with   his  or  her   initial
employment,  an Employee may be granted  options to purchase up to an additional
five hundred  thousand  (500,000) shares which shall not count against the limit
set forth in subsection (i) above.

                           (iii) The  foregoing  limitations  shall be  adjusted
proportionately   in   connection   with  any   change   in  the   Corporation's
capitalization as described in Section 1.5(d).

                           (iv) If an option  is  cancelled  in the same  fiscal
year of the  Corporation  in  which  such  option  was  granted  (other  than in
connection with a transaction described in Section 1.5(d)), the cancelled option
will be  counted  against  the limit set forth in  Section  1.5(e)(i).  For this
purpose, if the exercise price of an option is reduced,  the transaction will be
treated as a cancellation of the option and the grant of a new option.


                                   ARTICLE II
                       DISCRETIONARY OPTION GRANT PROGRAM
                       ----------------------------------

         2.1      TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF OPTIONS

                                        7
<PAGE>
                  (a) General. Options granted to eligible persons ("Optionees")
pursuant to the Discretionary  Option Grant Program set forth in this Article II
shall be  authorized  by  action  of the  Plan  Administrator  and,  at the Plan
Administrator's  discretion,  may be either  Incentive  Options or non-statutory
options.  Individuals  who are not Employees of the Corporation or its parent or
subsidiary  corporations may only be granted non-statutory options. Each granted
option shall be evidenced by one or more instruments in the form approved by the
Plan Administrator;  provided,  however,  that each such instrument shall comply
with the terms and conditions  specified  below.  Each instrument  evidencing an
Incentive Option shall, in addition,  be subject to the applicable provisions of
Section 2.2 hereof.

                  (b) Option Price. The option price per share shall be fixed by
the Plan Administrator in accordance with the following provisions:

                           (i) The option  price per share of the  Common  Stock
subject  to an  Incentive  Option  shall in no event  be less  than one  hundred
percent  (100%) of the fair market value of such Common Stock on the grant date;
and

                           (ii) The option  price per share of the Common  Stock
subject  to a  non-statutory  stock  option  shall in no event be less  than one
hundred  percent  (100%) of the fair market  value of such  Common  Stock on the
grant date.

                  (c) Payment of Option  Price.  The option  price shall  become
immediately  due upon  exercise of the option and shall be payable in one of the
following alternative forms specified below:

                           (i)  full  payment  in cash  or  check  drawn  to the
Corporation's order;

                           (ii) full  payment in shares of Common Stock held for
the requisite period necessary to avoid a charge to the  Corporation's  earnings
for financial reporting purposes and valued at fair market value on the Exercise
Date (as such term is defined below);

                           (iii)  full  payment  in a  combination  of shares of
Common Stock held for the  requisite  period  necessary to avoid a charge to the
Corporation's  earnings  for  financial  reporting  purposes  and valued at fair
market value on the Exercise  Date and cash or check drawn to the  Corporation's
order; or

                           (iv) full payment  through a  broker-dealer  sale and
remittance   procedure   pursuant  to  which  the  Optionee  (A)  shall  provide
irrevocable  written  instructions to a designated  brokerage firm to effect the
immediate sale of the purchased shares and remit

                                        8
<PAGE>
to the Corporation,  out of the sale proceeds  available on the settlement date,
sufficient  funds to cover the aggregate  option price payable for the purchased
shares  plus all  applicable  Federal  and State  income  and  employment  taxes
required to be withheld by the  Corporation in connection with such purchase and
(B)  shall  provide  written  directives  to  the  Corporation  to  deliver  the
certificates  for the purchased  shares directly to such brokerage firm in order
to complete the sale transaction.

For purposes of this  Section  2.1(c),  the  Exercise  Date shall be the date on
which  written  notice of the option  exercise is delivered to the  Corporation.
Except to the extent the sale and remittance procedure is utilized in connection
with the exercise of the option,  payment of the option price for the  purchased
shares must accompany such notice.

                  (d) Fair  Market  Value.  The fair  market  value per share of
Common Stock shall be determined in accordance with the following provisions:

                           (i) If the Common  Stock is not at the time listed or
admitted to trading on any national  stock  exchange but is traded on the NASDAQ
National  Market  System,  the fair market value shall be the closing  price per
share  on the  date in  question,  as such  price is  reported  by the  National
Association of Securities  Dealers  through the NASDAQ National Market System or
any  successor  system.  If there is no reported  closing  selling price for the
Common Stock on the date in question, then the closing selling price on the last
preceding date for which such quotation  exists shall be  determinative  of fair
market value.

                           (ii) If the  Common  Stock is at the time  listed  or
admitted to trading on any national stock  exchange,  then the fair market value
shall be the  closing  selling  price per share on the date in  question  on the
exchange  determined by the Plan  Administrator to be the primary market for the
Common  Stock,  as such  price is  officially  quoted in the  composite  tape of
transactions  on such exchange.  If there is no reported sale of Common Stock on
such  exchange on the date in question,  then the fair market value shall be the
closing  selling price on the exchange on the last preceding date for which such
quotation exists.

                  (e) Term and Exercise of Options.  Each option  granted  under
this  Discretionary  Option Grant Program shall be  exercisable  at such time or
times and during such period as is determined by the Plan  Administrator and set
forth in the instrument  evidencing the grant.  No such option,  however,  shall
have a maximum term in excess of ten (10) years from the grant date.  During the
lifetime of the Optionee,  the option shall be exercisable  only by the Optionee
and shall not be assignable or transferable by the

                                        9
<PAGE>
Optionee other than by will or by the laws of descent and distribution following
the Optionee's death.

                  (f)  Termination of Service.  The following  provisions  shall
govern the exercise  period  applicable to any  outstanding  options held by the
Optionee at the time of cessation of Service or death:

                           (i) Should an Optionee  cease  Service for any reason
(including  permanent  disability as defined in Section 22(e)(3) of the Internal
Revenue  Code but not  including  death) while  holding one or more  outstanding
options  under this Article II, then none of those  options shall (except to the
extent otherwise  provided pursuant to Section 2.1(g) below) remain  exercisable
for more  than a ninety  (90) day  period  (or such  shorter  or  longer  period
determined by the Plan Administrator and set forth in the instrument  evidencing
the grant,  but not to exceed twelve (12) months) measured from the date of such
cessation of Service.

                           (ii)  Any  option  held by the  Optionee  under  this
Article II and  exercisable  in whole or in part on the date of his or her death
may be subsequently  exercised by the personal  representative of the Optionee's
estate or by the person or persons to whom the option is transferred pursuant to
the Optionee's will or in accordance with the laws of descent and  distribution.
Such exercise,  however, must occur prior to the earlier of six months following
the date of  optionee's  death or the  specified  expiration  date of the option
term.  Upon the occurrence of the earlier event,  the option shall terminate and
cease to be outstanding.

                           (iii) Under no circumstances, however, shall any such
option be exercisable after the specified expiration date of the option term.

                           (iv)  During  the  applicable  post-Service  exercise
period,  the option shall not be exercisable  for more than the number of shares
(if any) in which the Optionee is vested at the time of his or her  cessation of
Service (less any option shares subsequently  purchased by the Optionee prior to
death). Upon the expiration of the limited  post-Service  exercise period or (if
earlier) upon the specified expiration date of the option term, each such option
shall  terminate and cease to be  outstanding  with respect to any vested shares
for which the option has not otherwise been exercised. However, each outstanding
option shall immediately  terminate and cease to be outstanding,  at the time of
the  Optionee's  cessation of Service,  with respect to any shares for which the
option is not otherwise at that time exercisable or in which the Optionee is not
otherwise at that time vested.

                           (v) Should (A) the  optionee's  service be terminated
for misconduct (including, but not limited to, any act of

                                       10
<PAGE>
dishonesty,  willful misconduct, fraud or embezzlement) or (B) the Optionee make
any unauthorized use or disclosure of confidential  information or trade secrets
of the  Corporation or its parent or subsidiary  corporations,  then in any such
event all  outstanding  options held by the Optionee under this Article II shall
terminate immediately and cease to be outstanding.

                  (g) Discretion to Accelerate  Vesting.  The Plan Administrator
shall have  complete  discretion,  exercisable  either at the time the option is
granted or at any time while the option  remains  outstanding,  to permit one or
more options held by the Optionee under this Article II to be exercised,  during
the limited post-Service  exercise period applicable under Section 2.1(f) above,
not only with  respect to the number of vested  shares of Common Stock for which
each such  option is  exercisable  at the time of the  optionee's  cessation  of
Service but also with respect to one or more  subsequent  installments of vested
shares for which the option would  otherwise  have become  exercisable  had such
cessation of Service not occurred.

                  (h)   Discretion   to  Extend   Exercise   Period.   The  Plan
Administrator  shall also have full power and  authority to extend the period of
time for which the  option is to remain  exercisable  following  the  Optionee's
cessation of Service or death from the limited  period in effect  under  Section
2.1(f) above to such greater period of time as the Plan Administrator shall deem
appropriate.  In no event,  however,  shall such option be exercisable after the
specified expiration date of the option term.

                  (i) Definitions.  For purposes of the foregoing  provisions of
this  Section 2.1 (and for all other  purposes  under the  Discretionary  Option
Grant Program):

                           (i)  The  Optionee   shall   (except  to  the  extent
otherwise  specifically  provided in the applicable  stock option  agreement) be
deemed to remain in Service for so long as such individual renders services on a
periodic basis to the Corporation  (or any parent or subsidiary  corporation) in
the  capacity  of  an  Employee,  a  non-employee  member  of  the  Board  or an
independent consultant or advisor.

                           (ii)  The  Optionee  shall  be  considered  to  be an
Employee  for so long as he or she remains in the employ of the  Corporation  or
one or more  parent or  subsidiary  corporations,  subject  to the  control  and
direction  of the employer  entity not only as to the work to be  performed  but
also as to the manner and method of performance.

                  (j) Stockholder  Rights. An Optionee shall have no stockholder
rights with respect to any shares covered by the option

                                       11
<PAGE>
until such individual  shall have exercised the option and paid the option price
for the purchased shares.

                  (k)  Repurchase  Rights.  The shares of Common Stock  acquired
upon the exercise of any Article II option grant may be subject to repurchase by
the Corporation in accordance with the following provisions:

                           (i) The Plan Administrator  shall have the discretion
to authorize the issuance of unvested  shares of Common Stock under this Article
II. Should the Optionee  cease Service while holding such unvested  shares,  the
Corporation  shall  have the right to  repurchase  any or all of those  unvested
shares at the option price paid per share.  The terms and conditions  upon which
such repurchase  right shall be exercisable  (including the period and procedure
for exercise and the  appropriate  vesting  schedule for the  purchased  shares)
shall be established by the Plan  Administrator  and set forth in the instrument
evidencing such repurchase right.

                           (ii) All of the Corporation's  outstanding repurchase
rights  under this  Article  II shall  automatically  terminate,  and all shares
subject to such  terminated  rights  shall  immediately  vest in full,  upon the
occurrence of any Corporate  Transaction under Section 2.3 hereof, except to the
extent:  (A) any such  repurchase  right is expressly  assigned to the successor
corporation (or parent thereof) in connection with the Corporate  Transaction or
(B) such accelerated  vesting is precluded by other  limitations  imposed by the
Plan Administrator at the time the repurchase right is issued.

                           (iii)   The  Plan   Administrator   shall   have  the
discretionary  authority,  exercisable  either  before or after  the  Optionee's
cessation of Service, to cancel the Corporation's  outstanding repurchase rights
with  respect to one or more shares  purchased  or  purchasable  by the Optionee
under this Discretionary Option Grant Program and thereby accelerate the vesting
of such shares in whole or in part at any time.

         2.2      INCENTIVE OPTIONS

                  (a) General. The terms and conditions specified below shall be
applicable to all incentive  options  ("Incentive  Options")  granted under this
Article II pursuant  to Section 422 of the  Internal  Revenue  Code of 1986,  as
amended (the "Code").  Incentive  Options may only be granted to individuals who
are employees of the Corporation.  Options which are specifically  designated as
"non-statutory"  options when issued under the Plan shall not be subject to such
terms and conditions.

                  (b)  Dollar  Limitation.   The  aggregate  fair  market  value
(determined as of the respective date or dates of grant) of the

                                       12
<PAGE>
Common  Stock for which one or more  Incentive  Options  granted to any Employee
under this Plan (or any other  option plan of the  Corporation  or its parent or
subsidiary  corporations) may for the first time become  exercisable  during any
one  calendar  year  shall not exceed the sum of One  Hundred  Thousand  Dollars
($100,000).  To the extent the Employee holds two or more such Incentive Options
which  become  exercisable  for the first time in the same  calendar  year,  the
foregoing  limitation on the exercisability of such options as Incentive Options
under the  federal  tax laws shall be applied on the basis of the order in which
such Incentive Options are granted.  Should the number of shares of Common Stock
for which any Incentive  Option first becomes  exercisable  in any calendar year
exceed the applicable One Hundred Thousand Dollar  ($100,000)  limitation,  then
that option may  nevertheless  be exercised in that calendar year for the excess
number of shares as a non-statutory option under the federal tax laws.

                  (c) 10%  Stockholder.  If any  individual to whom an Incentive
Option is  granted  is the  owner of stock (as  determined  under  Code  Section
424(d))  possessing ten percent (10%) or more of the total combined voting power
of  all  classes  of  stock  of the  Corporation  or any  one of its  parent  or
subsidiary corporations,  then the option price per share shall not be less than
one hundred and ten percent  (110%) of the fair market value per share of Common
Stock on the grant  date,  and the  option  term shall not  exceed  five  years,
measured from the grant date.

                  (d)   Application.   Except  as  modified  by  the   preceding
provisions  of this Section 2.2, the  provisions  of Articles I, II and V of the
Plan shall apply to all Incentive Options granted hereunder.

         2.3      CORPORATE TRANSACTIONS

                  (a)  Definition.  For  purposes  of  this  Plan,  any  of  the
following  stockholder approved transactions to which the Corporation is a party
shall be considered a "Corporate Transaction":

                           (i)  a  merger   or   consolidation   in  which   the
corporation is not the surviving entity,  except for a transaction the principal
purpose  of  which  is  to  change  the  State  in  which  the   Corporation  is
incorporated,

                           (ii) the sale,  transfer or other  disposition of all
or substantially all of the assets of the Corporation in complete liquidation or
dissolution of the Corporation, or

                           (iii) any reverse merger in which the  Corporation is
the surviving entity but in which securities  possessing more than fifty percent
(50%) of the total combined voting power of the

                                       13
<PAGE>
Corporation's  outstanding  securities  are  transferred  to person  or  persons
different from those who held such securities immediately prior to such merger.

                  (b) Acceleration of Option. Upon the stockholder approval of a
Corporate  Transaction,  each option which is at the time outstanding under this
Article  II shall  automatically  accelerate  so that  each such  option  shall,
immediately prior to the specified effective date for the Corporate Transaction,
become  fully  exercisable  with respect to the total number of shares of Common
Stock at the time  subject to such  option and may be  exercised  for all or any
portion of such shares.  However,  an  outstanding  option under this Article II
shall not so accelerate if and to the extent:  (A) such option is, in connection
with  the  Corporate  Transaction,   either  to  be  assumed  by  the  successor
corporation  or parent  thereof or to be replaced  with a  comparable  option to
purchase  shares of the capital  stock of the  successor  corporation  or parent
thereof,  (B) such option is to be replaced with a cash incentive program of the
successor  corporation which preserves the option spread existing at the time of
the Corporate  Transaction and provides for subsequent payout in accordance with
the same vesting schedule  applicable to such option, or (C) the acceleration of
such option is subject to other limitations imposed by the Plan Administrator at
the time of the option grant. The  determination of option  comparability  under
clause (A) above shall be made by the Plan Administrator,  and its determination
shall be final, binding and conclusive.

                  (c)  Termination  of  Options.  Upon the  consummation  of the
Corporate  Transaction,  all  outstanding  options  under this  Article II shall
terminate  and cease to be  outstanding,  except to the  extent  assumed  by the
successor corporation or its parent company.

                  (d)   Adjustments   on   Assumption  or   Continuation.   Each
outstanding option under this Article II which is assumed in connection with the
Corporate   Transaction   or  is  otherwise  to  continue  in  effect  shall  be
appropriately adjusted,  immediately after such Corporate Transaction,  to apply
and pertain to the number and class of  securities  which would have been issued
to the option holder,  in consummation of such Corporate  Transaction,  had such
person  exercised the option  immediately  prior to such Corporate  Transaction.
Appropriate  adjustments  shall also be made to the  option  price  payable  per
share,  provided the aggregate  option price payable for such  securities  shall
remain the same. In addition,  the class and number of securities  available for
issuance under the Plan following the consummation of the Corporate  Transaction
shall be appropriately adjusted.

                  (e) Discretion to  Accelerate.  The Plan  Administrator  shall
have the discretion, exercisable either in advance of any

                                       14
<PAGE>
actually-anticipated Corporate Transaction or at the time of an actual Corporate
Transaction,  to provide  (upon such terms as it may deem  appropriate)  for the
automatic acceleration of one or more outstanding options granted under the Plan
which are assumed or replaced in the Corporate  Transaction and do not otherwise
accelerate at that time, in the event the Optionee's Service should subsequently
terminate  within a  designated  period  following  the  effective  date of such
Corporate Transaction.

                  (f) Plan Not to Affect Corporation. The grant of options under
this Article II shall in no way affect the right of the  Corporation  to adjust,
reclassify,  reorganize or otherwise change its capital or business structure or
to merge, consolidate,  dissolve,  liquidate or sell or transfer all or any part
of its business or assets.

         2.4      CHANGE IN CONTROL

                  (a) Definition. For purposes of this Plan, a Change in Control
shall be deemed to occur in the event:

                           (i) any  person or related  group of  persons  (other
than the  Corporation  or a person that  directly  or  indirectly  controls,  is
controlled  by, or is under common control with,  the  Corporation)  directly or
indirectly  acquires  beneficial  ownership (within the meaning of Rule 13d-3 of
the 1934 Act) of  securities  possessing  more than fifty  percent  (50%) of the
total combined voting power of the Corporation's outstanding securities pursuant
to a tender or exchange  offer made directly to the  Corporation's  stockholders
which the Board does not recommend such stockholders to accept; or

                           (ii)  there is a  change  in the  composition  of the
Board over a period of twenty-four (24)  consecutive  months or less such that a
majority of the Board members  (rounded up to the next whole number) ceases,  by
reason of one or more proxy  contests for the election of Board  members,  to be
comprised of  individuals  who either (a) have been Board  members  continuously
since the  beginning of such period or (b) have been  elected or  nominated  for
election as Board members during such period by at least a majority of the Board
members  described  in  clause  (a) who were  still in  office  at the time such
election or nomination was approved by the Board.

                  (b) Discretion to  Accelerate.  The Plan  Administrator  shall
have the discretionary authority,  exercisable either in advance of any actually
anticipated Change in Control or at the time of an actual Change in Control,  to
provide for the automatic  acceleration of one or more outstanding options under
this  Article  II (and  the  termination  of one or  more  of the  Corporation's
outstanding  repurchase rights under this Article II) upon the occurrence of the
Change in Control. The Plan Administrator shall

                                       15
<PAGE>
also have full power and  authority  to condition  any such option  acceleration
(and the termination of any outstanding  repurchase  rights) upon the subsequent
termination of the Optionee's  Service within a specified  period  following the
Change in control.

                  (c) Exercise  Rights.  Any options  accelerated  in connection
with the Change in Control shall remain fully  exercisable  until the expiration
or sooner termination of the option term.

         2.5      INCENTIVE OPTIONS.

                  The   exercisability  as  Incentive  Options  of  any  options
accelerated  under  Sections  2.3 or 2.4 hereof in  connection  with a Corporate
Transaction or Change in Control shall remain  subject to the dollar  limitation
of Section 2.2 hereof.


                                   ARTICLE III
                                    RESERVED
                                    --------


                                       16
<PAGE>
                                   ARTICLE IV
                         AUTOMATIC OPTION GRANT PROGRAM
                         ------------------------------

         4.1      TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF AUTOMATIC OPTION GRANTS.

                  (a)  Amount  and Date of Grant.  During the term of this Plan,
automatic  option grants (the  "Automatic  Option  Grant") shall be made to each
eligible non-employee member of the Board ("Optionee") as follows:

                           (i) Each year on the Annual  Automatic  Grant Date an
option to  acquire  5,000  shares of Common  Stock  ("Option  Shares")  shall be
granted to each eligible  non-employee  member of the Board for so long as there
are shares of Common  Stock  available  under  Section 1.5  hereof.  The "Annual
Automatic  Grant  Date"  shall  be as of the  date of the  Corporation's  Annual
Stockholders Meeting. Notwithstanding the foregoing, (1) any non-Employee Member
of the Board  whose  term  ended as of such  Automatic  Grant  Date shall not be
eligible to receive any automatic  option grants on that Annual  Automatic Grant
Date and (2) any non-Employee  Member of the Board who has received an Automatic
Grant  pursuant to Section  4.1(a)(ii) on the same date as the Annual  Automatic
Grant Date or within 30 days prior thereto,  shall not be eligible to receive an
Automatic Option Grant on that Annual Automatic Grant Date.

                           (ii) On the Initial  Automatic Grant Date,  every new
member of the Board who is an eligible  non-Employee and has not previously been
a member of the Board  shall be granted an option to  acquire  10,000  shares of
Common  Stock  ("Option  Shares")  as long as there are  shares of Common  Stock
available under Section 1.5 hereof.  The "Initial Automatic Grant Date" shall be
as of the date that the Optionee was first appointed or elected to the Board.

                  (b) Exercise  Price.  The  exercise  price per share of Common
Stock subject to each automatic option grant made under this Article IV shall be
equal to 100% of the fair  market  value  per share of the  Common  Stock on the
applicable  Automatic Grant Date, as determined in accordance with the valuation
provisions of Section 2.1(d) hereof.

                  (c) Method of  Exercise.  In order to  exercise an option with
respect to any Option Shares for which an Automatic  Option Grant is exercisable
at the time,  Optionee (or in the case of an exercise  after  Optionee's  death,
Optionee's  executor,  administrator,  heir or legatee, as the case may be) must
take the following action:

                           (i)  execute  and  deliver  to the  Secretary  of the
Company a written notice of exercise;

                                       17
<PAGE>
                           (ii)  pay the  aggregate  Option  Price in one of the
alternate forms as set forth in Section 4.1(d) below; and

                           (iii)  furnish  appropriate  documentation  that  the
person or persons  exercising  the option (if other than the  Optionee)  has the
right to exercise  such option.  As soon after the Exercise  Date (as defined in
Section 4.1(e) hereof), as practical, the Company shall mail or deliver to or on
behalf of the Optionee (or any other person or persons exercising this option in
accordance  herewith) a certificate or certificates  representing the shares for
which the option has been  exercised in accordance  with the  provisions of this
Plan. In no event may any option be exercised for any fractional shares.

                  (d) Payment Price.  The exercise price shall be payable in one
of the alternative forms specific below:

                           (i) full payment in cash or check made payable to the
Corporation's order; or

                           (ii) full  payment in shares of Common Stock held for
the requisite period necessary to avoid a charge to the  Corporation's  reported
earnings and valued at fair market value on the Exercise Date; or

                           (iii)  full  payment  through  a sale and  remittance
procedure  pursuant to which the  non-employee  Board  member (A) shall  provide
irrevocable  written  instructions to a designated  brokerage firm to effect the
immediate sale of the purchased shares and remit to the Corporation,  out of the
sale proceeds  available on the settlement  date,  sufficient funds to cover the
aggregate  exercise  price  payable  for the  purchased  shares  and  shall  (B)
concurrently  provide  written  directives  to the  Corporation  to deliver  the
certificates  for the purchased  shares directly to such brokerage firm in order
to complete the sale transaction.

                  (e)  Exercise  Date.  For  purposes  of this  Article  IV, the
Exercise Date shall be the date on which written  notice of the option  exercise
is delivered to the  Corporation,  and the fair market value per share of Common
Stock on any  relevant  date  under  this  Article  IV shall  be  determined  in
accordance  with the provisions of Section  2.1(d) hereof.  Except to the extent
the sale and remittance  procedure  specified above is utilized for the exercise
of the  potion,  payment  of the  option  price for the  purchased  shares  must
accompany the exercise notice.

                  (f) Term of Option.  Each  automatic  option  grant under this
Article  IV shall  have a  maximum  term of ten  (10)  years  measured  from the
Automatic Grant Date. Should Optionee's  service as a Board member cease for any
reason while an option remains outstanding and unexercised, then the option term
shall immediately

                                       18
<PAGE>
terminate and the option shall cease to be  outstanding  prior to the Expiration
Date in accordance with the following provisions:

                           (i) The option shall immediately  terminate and cease
to be  outstanding  for any shares of Common  Stock for which the option was not
otherwise exercisable at the time of Optionee's cessation of Board service.

                           (ii) Should Optionee cease, for any reason other than
death,  to serve as a member of the Board,  then Optionee shall have a six-month
period  measured  from the date of such  cessation of Board  service in which to
exercise the options  which vested prior to the time of such  cessation of Board
service. In no event,  however, may any option be exercised after the Expiration
Date of such option.

                           (iii) Should  Optionee  die while  serving as a Board
member or within six months after cessation of Board service,  then the personal
representative  of the  Optionee's  estate (or the person or persons to whom the
option is transferred  pursuant to the Optionee's will or in accordance with the
laws of descent and  distribution)  shall have the right to exercise  any option
for any or all of the  shares of  Common  Stock  for  which  the  option  is, in
accordance  with the  provisions  of this Plan,  exercisable  at the time of the
Optionee's cessation of Board service, less any shares subsequently purchased by
the Optionee pursuant to the option prior to death. Such right shall cease to be
exercisable  and the option  shall  accordingly  terminate  with  respect to all
Common Stock available under such option by the earlier of (A) the expiration of
the  twelve-month  period measured from the date of Optionee's  death or (B) the
Expiration Date.

                  (g) Vesting.  Each  Automatic  Option  Grant made  pursuant to
Section  4.1(a)(i) shall become  exercisable and vest in a series of twelve (12)
equal and successive  monthly  installments,  with the first such installment to
become  exercisable  one month  after the  Annual  Automatic  Grant  Date.  Each
Automatic  Option  Grant  made  pursuant  to  Section  4.1(a)(ii)  shall  become
exercisable   and  vest  in  a  series  of  36  equal  and  successive   monthly
installments,  with the first such  installment to become  exercisable one month
after the Initial Automatic Grant Date. Each installment of an option shall only
vest and become  exercisable  if the Optionee has not ceased  serving as a Board
member as of such installment date.

                  (h) Limited Transferability. Each Automatic Option Grant shall
be exercisable only by Optionee during Optionee's  lifetime and shall be neither
transferable  nor  assignable,  other than by will or by the laws of descent and
distribution following Optionee's death.

         4.2      CORPORATE TRANSACTION

                                       19
<PAGE>
                  In  the  event  of   stockholder   approval   of  a  Corporate
Transaction  (as that term is  defined  in  Section  2.3(a)),  then all  options
granted pursuant to this Article IV (to the extent outstanding at such time, but
not otherwise fully exercisable and vested) shall  automatically  accelerate and
immediately  vest so that the option shall,  immediately  prior to the specified
effective date for the Corporate  Transaction,  become fully exercisable for all
of the Option  Shares at the time  subject to the option and may  thereafter  be
exercised  for any or all  such  Option  Shares.  Upon the  consummation  of the
Corporate Transaction, the option shall, to the extent not previously exercised,
terminate and cease to be outstanding.

         4.3      CHANGE IN CONTROL

                  All options granted  pursuant to an Automatic Option Agreement
under this  Article  IV (to the  extent  outstanding,  but not  otherwise  fully
exercisable  and vested) shall  automatically  accelerate  in connection  with a
Change in Control  (as that term is defined  in  Section  2.4(a)),  so that such
option shall, immediately prior to the effective date of such Change in Control,
become  fully  exercisable  for all of the Option  Shares at the time subject to
that  option and may be  exercised  for any or all of such  Option  Shares.  The
option  shall  remain  so  exercisable  until  such  option  has  terminated  in
accordance with Section 4.1(d) hereof.

         4.4      MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

                  (a) Corporation  Rights.  The Automatic Option Grants shall in
no way affect the right of the Corporation to adjust, reclassify,  reorganize or
otherwise  change its capital or business  structure  or to merge,  consolidate,
dissolve,  liquidate  or sell or  transfer  all or any part of its  business  or
assets.

                  (b) Privilege of Stock  Ownership.  An Optionee shall not have
any of the rights of a  stockholder  with  respect to Option  Shares  until such
individual  shall have  exercised  the option and paid the option  price for the
Option Shares.


                                    ARTICLE V
                                  MISCELLANEOUS
                                  -------------

         5.1      AMENDMENT OF THE PLAN AND AWARDS

                  (a) Board  Authority.  The Board has  complete  and  exclusive
power and  authority to amend or modify the Plan (or any  component  thereof) in
any or all respects  whatsoever.  However,  no such  amendment  or  modification
shall,  without the consent of the  Corporation's  stockholders,  disqualify any
option  previously  granted under the Plan for treatment as an Incentive Option,
or

                                       20
<PAGE>
adversely  affect  rights and  obligations  with  respect to options at the time
outstanding under the Plan, unless the Optionee or Participant  consents to such
amendment.  In  addition,  the  Board  may  not,  without  the  approval  of the
Corporation's  stockholders,  amend  the  Plan to (i)  materially  increase  the
maximum  number  of shares  issuable  under the  Plan,  except  for  permissible
adjustments under Section 1.5(d) or extend the term of the Plan, (ii) materially
modify the eligibility  requirements for plan  participation or (iii) materially
increase the benefits accruing to plan participants.

                  (b) Options Issued Prior to Stockholder  Approval.  Options to
purchase  shares of Common Stock may be granted under the  Discretionary  Option
Grant  Program and the  Automatic  Option  Grant  Program  prior to any required
stockholder  approvals,  provided, any shares actually issued under the Plan are
held in escrow  until  stockholder  approval is  obtained.  If such  stockholder
approval is not obtained  within  twelve (12) months of the meeting of the Board
approving the Plan or any  amendments,  then (i) any  unexercised  options shall
terminate and cease to be exercisable  and (ii) the  Corporation  shall promptly
refund the purchase price paid for any excess shares  actually  issued under the
Plan and held in escrow,  together with interest (at the  applicable  Short Term
Federal Rate) for the period the shares were held in escrow.

                  (c) Rule  16b-3  Plan.  With  respect  to  persons  subject to
Section 16 of the 1934 Act,  the Plan is intended to comply with all  applicable
conditions  of Rule 16b-3 (and all  subsequent  revisions  thereof)  promulgated
under the 1934 Act. To the extent any revision of the Plan or action by any Plan
Administrator  fails to so  comply,  it shall be deemed  null and  void,  to the
extent  permitted  by law and deemed  advisable by such Plan  Administrator.  In
addition,  the Board may amend the Plan from time to time as it deems  necessary
in order to meet the  requirements  of any  amendments to Rule 16b-3 without the
consent of the shareholders of the Company.

         5.2      TAX WITHHOLDING

                  (a) General. The Corporation's obligation to deliver shares of
Common Stock upon the  exercise of stock  options for such shares or the vesting
of such  shares  under the Plan  shall be  subject  to the  satisfaction  of all
applicable  Federal,  State and local income tax and employment tax  withholding
requirements.

                  (b) Shares to Pay for Withholding.  A Plan  Administrator may,
in its discretion  and in accordance  with the provisions of this Section 5.2(b)
and such  supplemental  rules as the Plan  Administrator  may from  time to time
adopt  (including  the  applicable  safe-harbor  provisions  of SEC Rule 16b-3),
provide any or all holders of non-statutory options or unvested shares under the
Plan with the right to use shares of the Corporation's Common Stock in

                                       21
<PAGE>
satisfaction  of all or part of the  Federal,  State  and local  income  tax and
employment  tax  liabilities  incurred by such  holders in  connection  with the
exercise of their  options or the vesting of their  shares (the  "Taxes").  Such
right may be  provided  to any such  holder  in either or both of the  following
formats:

                           (i)  Stock   Withholding.   The  holder  of  the  non
statutory  option or unvested  shares may be provided  with the election to have
the Corporation  withhold,  from the shares of Common Stock  otherwise  issuable
upon the exercise of such non-statutory  option or the vesting of such shares, a
portion  of those  shares  with an  aggregate  fair  market  value  equal to the
percentage of the applicable  Taxes (not to exceed one hundred  percent  (100%))
designated by the holder.

                           (ii) Stock Delivery.  The Plan  Administrator may, in
its discretion,  provide the holder of the non-statutory  option or the unvested
shares  with  the  election  to  deliver  to the  Corporation,  at the  time the
non-statutory  option is  exercised  or the shares  vest,  one or more shares of
Common Stock previously  acquired by such individual (other than pursuant to the
transaction  triggering  the Taxes) with an aggregate fair market value equal to
the percentage of the taxes incurred in connection  with such option exercise or
share  vesting  (not to exceed one hundred  percent  (100%))  designated  by the
holder.

         5.3      EFFECTIVE DATE AND TERM OF PLAN

                  (a)   Effective   Date.   This  Plan,   as  successor  to  the
Corporation's  1989 Stock Option  Plan,  become  effective as of the  applicable
Effective  Date, and no further option grants or stock  issuances  shall be made
under the 1989 Plan from and after such Effective Date.

                  (b)  Incorporation  of  1989  Plan.  Each  option  issued  and
outstanding  under the 1989 Plan immediately  prior to the Effective Date of the
Discretionary  Option Grant  Program  shall be  incorporated  into this Plan and
treated as an  outstanding  option  under this Plan,  but each such option shall
continue to be governed  solely by the terms and  conditions  of the  instrument
evidencing  such  grant,  and  nothing in this Plan shall be deemed to affect or
otherwise  modify the rights or  obligations of the holders of such options with
respect to their acquisition of shares of Common Stock thereunder.

                  (c) Discretion. The option and vesting acceleration provisions
of Article II relating to Corporate  Transactions and Changes in Control may, in
the Plan  Administrator's  discretion,  be extended to one or more stock options
which  are  outstanding  under  the  1989  Plan  on the  Effective  Date  of the
Discretionary Option

                                       22
<PAGE>
Grant Program but which do not otherwise provide for such acceleration.

                  (d)  Termination  of Plan.  The Plan shall  terminate upon the
earlier of (i) January  19, 2003 or (ii) the date on which all shares  available
for issuance  under the Plan shall have been issued  pursuant to the exercise of
options  granted under the Plan. If the date of termination is determined  under
clause  (i)  above,   then  all  option  grants  and  unvested  stock  issuances
outstanding on such date shall  thereafter  continue to have force and effect in
accordance  with the  provisions of the  instruments  evidencing  such grants or
issuances.

         5.4      USE OF PROCEEDS

                  Any cash proceeds received by the Corporation from the sale of
shares  pursuant  to  option  grants  under the Plan  shall be used for  general
corporate purposes.

         5.5      REGULATORY APPROVALS

                  (a) General.  The  implementation of the Plan, the granting of
any option under the Plan, and the issuance of Common Stock upon the exercise or
surrender  of  the  option  grants  made  hereunder  shall  be  subject  to  the
Corporation's  procurement  of all approvals and permits  required by regulatory
authorities having jurisdiction over the Plan, the options granted under it, and
the Common Stock issued pursuant to it.

                  (b)  Securities  Registration.  No shares  of Common  Stock or
other assets shall be issued or delivered under this Plan unless and until there
shall have been compliance with all applicable requirements of Federal and State
securities  laws,  including  the  filing  and  effectiveness  of the  Form  S-8
registration  statement for the shares of Common Stock  issuable under the Plan,
and all applicable  listing  requirements  of any  securities  exchange on which
stock of the same class is then listed.

         5.6      NO EMPLOYMENT/SERVICE RIGHTS

                  Neither  the action of the  Corporation  in  establishing  the
Plan,  nor  any  action  taken  by the  Plan  Administrator  hereunder,  nor any
provision of the Plan shall be construed so as to grant any individual the right
to  remain  in the  employ  or  service  of the  Corporation  (or any  parent or
subsidiary corporation) for any period of specific duration, and the Corporation
(or  any  parent  or  subsidiary  corporation  retaining  the  services  of such
individual)  may terminate such  individual's  employment or service at any time
and for any reason, with or without cause.

         5.7      MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

                                       23
<PAGE>
                  (a)  Assignment.  The right to acquire  Common  Stock or other
assets under the Plan may not be assigned,  encumbered or otherwise  transferred
by any Optionee or  Participant.  The  provisions of the Plan shall inure to the
benefit of, and be binding upon, the  Corporation and its successors or assigns,
whether  by  Corporate  Transaction  or  otherwise,  and  the  Participants  and
Optionees,   the  legal  representatives  of  their  respective  estates,  their
respective heirs or legatees and their permitted assignees.

                  (b) Choice of Law. The  provisions of the Plan relating to the
exercise of options  and the vesting of shares  shall be governed by the laws of
the State of Arizona,  as such laws are applied to  contracts  entered  into and
performed in such State.

                  (c) Plan Not  Exclusive.  This Plan is not  intended to be the
exclusive  means by which the  Corporation  may issue  options  or  warrants  to
acquire its shares of Common Stock, stock awards or issuances, or any other type
of award or issuance.  To the extent permitted by applicable law, any such other
option,  warrants,  issuance, or awards may be issued by the Company, other than
pursuant to this Plan, without shareholder approval.

                                       24
<PAGE>
         EXECUTED as of the 23rd day of April, 1996.


                                           MICROCHIP TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION,
                                           a Delaware corporation


                                           By:________________________________
                                                    Steve Sanghi

                                           Its: Chairman of the Board, President
                                                and Chief Executive Officer



Attested by:


______________________________
C. Philip Chapman
Secretary


______________________________
Mary Simmons-Mothershed
Assistant Secretary

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