FOSSIL INC
PRE 14A, 2000-03-31
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                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

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

Filed by Registrant:                        |X|
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant: | |

Check the appropriate box:

|X|      Preliminary Proxy Statement
|_|      Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by
         Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
|_|      Definitive Proxy Statement
|_|      Definitive Additional Materials
|_|      Soliciting Materials Pursuant toss.240.14a-11(c) orss.240.14a-12

                                  Fossil, Inc.
                ------------------------------------------------
                (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|  No fee required.

|_|  $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), 14a-6(i)(2) o Item
     22(a)(2) of Schedule 14A.

|_|  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.

         1)       Title of each class of securities to which transaction
                  applies:

         2)       Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

         3)       Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction
                  computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11:

         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 filing.

         1)       Amount Previously Paid:
         2)       Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
         3)       Filing Party:
         4)       Date Filed:

<PAGE>

                                                                Preliminary Copy

                                  FOSSIL, INC.

                            2280 N. Greenville Avenue

                             Richardson, Texas 75082

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                             TO BE HELD MAY 24, 2000

To the Stockholders of Fossil, Inc.:

     NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the "Annual
Meeting") of Fossil, Inc., a Delaware corporation (the "Company"),  will be held
at the offices of the Company, 2280 N. Greenville Avenue, Richardson,  Texas, on
the 24th day of May 2000, at 4:00 p.m. (local time) for the following purposes:

1.   To elect  three (3)  directors  to serve for a term of three years or until
     their respective successors are elected and qualified;

2.   To increase  the number of  authorized  shares of common  stock,  par value
     $0.01 per share of the Company (the "Common Stock") from 50,000,000  shares
     to 100,000,000 shares; and

3.   To transact any and all other  business  that may properly  come before the
     meeting or any adjournment(s) thereof.

     The Board of Directors has fixed the close of business on March 31, 2000 as
the record  date (the  "Record  Date")  for the  determination  of  stockholders
entitled to notice of and to vote at such meeting or any adjournment(s) thereof.
Only  stockholders  of record at the close of  business  on the Record  Date are
entitled to notice of and to vote at such meeting. The stock transfer books will
not be closed.  A list of  stockholders  entitled to vote at the Annual  Meeting
will be  available  for  examination  at the  offices of the Company for 10 days
prior to the Annual Meeting.

     You are cordially invited to attend the meeting;  whether or not you expect
to attend the meeting in person, however, you are urged to mark, sign, date, and
mail the  enclosed  form of proxy  promptly  so that your shares of stock may be
represented  and voted in  accordance  with your  wishes  and in order  that the
presence of a quorum may be assured at the meeting.  Your proxy will be returned
to you if you should be present at the meeting and should  request its return in
the  manner  provided  for  revocation  of proxies  on the  initial  page of the
enclosed proxy statement.

                                          BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS



                                          T. R. Tunnell
                                          Senior Vice President, Development
                                          and Chief Legal Officer and Secretary

April 17, 2000
Richardson, Texas

<PAGE>

                                                                Preliminary Copy

                                  FOSSIL, INC.

                            2280 N. Greenville Avenue

                             Richardson, Texas 75082

                                 PROXY STATEMENT

                                       FOR

                         ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                             TO BE HELD MAY 24, 2000

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

                          SOLICITATION AND REVOCABILITY

                                   OF PROXIES

     The accompanying  proxy is solicited by the Board of Directors on behalf of
Fossil,  Inc., a Delaware  corporation (the "Company"),  to be voted at the 2000
Annual Meeting of Stockholders of the Company (the "Annual  Meeting") to be held
on May 24,  2000,  at the time and place and for the  purposes  set forth in the
accompanying  Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the "Notice") and at any
adjournment(s)  thereof.  When  proxies in the  accompanying  form are  properly
executed  and  received,  the shares  represented  thereby  will be voted at the
Annual Meeting in accordance with the directions noted thereon;  if no direction
is  indicated,  such shares will be voted for the election of  directors  and in
favor of Proposal 2 as set forth on the accompanying Notice.

     The  executive  offices of the  Company  are  located  at, and the  mailing
address of the Company is, 2280 N. Greenville Avenue, Richardson, Texas 75082.

     Management  does not intend to present any  business at the Annual  Meeting
for a vote other than the matters set forth in the Notice and has no information
that others will do so. If other  matters  requiring a vote of the  stockholders
properly  come before the Annual  Meeting,  it is the  intention  of the persons
named in the  accompanying  form of proxy to vote the shares  represented by the
proxies held by them in accordance with their judgment on such matters.

     This proxy statement (the "Proxy Statement") and accompanying form of proxy
are being  mailed on or about April 17, 2000.  The  Company's  Annual  Report to
Stockholders  covering  the  Company's  fiscal  year ended  January 1, 2000,  is
enclosed herewith,  but does not form any part of the materials for solicitation
of proxies.

     Any stockholder of the Company giving a proxy has the  unconditional  right
to revoke his proxy at any time prior to the voting  thereof either in person at
the Annual  Meeting by delivering a duly executed  proxy bearing a later date or
by giving written notice of revocation to the Company addressed to T.R. Tunnell,
Senior Vice President,  Development,  Chief Legal Officer and Secretary, Fossil,
Inc., 2280 N.  Greenville  Avenue,  Richardson,  Texas 75082; no such revocation
shall be effective,  however, unless such notice of revocation has been received
by the Company at or prior to the Annual Meeting.

     In addition to the solicitation of proxies by use of the mail, officers and
regular  employees  of the Company may solicit the return of proxies,  either by
mail,  telephone,  telegraph,  or through  personal  contact.  Such officers and
employees  will  not be  additionally  compensated  but will be  reimbursed  for
out-of-pocket  expenses.  Brokerage houses and other custodians,  nominees,  and
fiduciaries will, in connection with shares of common

                                       -1-

<PAGE>

stock,  par value  $0.01 per share (the  "Common  Stock"),  registered  in their
names, be requested to forward solicitation material to the beneficial owners of
such shares of Common Stock.

     The cost of preparing, printing, assembling, and mailing the Annual Report,
the Notice, this Proxy Statement, and the enclosed form of proxy, as well as the
reasonable cost of forwarding solicitation materials to the beneficial owners of
shares of the Company's Common Stock, and other costs of solicitation, are to be
borne by the Company.

                                QUORUM AND VOTING

     The record date for the determination of stockholders entitled to notice of
and to vote at the Annual  Meeting  was the close of  business on March 31, 2000
(the "Record Date").  On the Record Date, there were 32,100,646 shares of Common
Stock issued and outstanding.

     Each  holder  of  Common  Stock is  entitled  to one vote per  share on all
matters to be acted upon at the meeting and  neither the  Company's  Amended and
Restated  Certificate of Incorporation nor its Amended and Restated Bylaws allow
for  cumulative  voting  rights.  The  presence,  in person or by proxy,  of the
holders of a majority of the issued and  outstanding  Common  Stock  entitled to
vote at the meeting is necessary to constitute a quorum to transact business. If
a quorum is not present or represented at the Annual Meeting,  the  stockholders
entitled to vote thereat,  present in person or by proxy, may adjourn the Annual
Meeting from time to time without notice or other announcement until a quorum is
present or represented.  Assuming the presence of a quorum, the affirmative vote
of the  holders  of a  plurality  of the  shares of Common  Stock  voting at the
meeting is required for the election of directors and the affirmative  vote of a
majority of the  outstanding  shares of Common  Stock is required to approve the
proposed  amendment to the Amended and  Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation
contained in Proposal 2.

     An automated system  administered by the Company's transfer agent tabulates
the  votes.   Abstentions  and  broker   non-votes  are  each  included  in  the
determination  of the number of shares  present for  determining a quorum.  Each
proposal is  tabulated  separately.  Abstentions,  with  respect to any proposal
other  than the  election  of  directors,  will  have the same  effect as a vote
against such  proposal.  Broker  non-votes will have no effect on the outcome of
the  election of  directors  and will have the same effect as a vote against the
proposed  amendment to the Amended and  Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation
contained in Proposal 2.

                                       -2-

<PAGE>

            PRINCIPAL STOCKHOLDERS AND STOCK OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT

     The Company has only one outstanding class of equity securities, its Common
Stock,  par value $0.01 per share.  The following  table sets forth  information
regarding the beneficial  ownership of Common Stock as of the Record Date by (i)
each director of the Company;  (ii) each Named Executive  Officer (as defined in
"Election of Directors -  Compensation  of Executive  Officers - Executive  Cash
Compensation");  (iii) all  present  executive  officers  and  directors  of the
Company  as a group;  and (iv) each  other  person  known to the  Company to own
beneficially  more than five  percent  (5%) of the Common Stock as of the Record
Date.  Unless  otherwise  noted,  the  persons  named below have sole voting and
investment power with respect to the shares shown as beneficially owned by them.

                                            Shares Beneficially Owned (1)(2)
Name of Beneficial Owner                 Number                        Percent
- ------------------------              ------------                 -------------

Tom Kartsotis (3)                     10,224,950     (4)                31.85
Kosta N. Kartsotis (3)                 4,591,284                        14.30
Michael W. Barnes                        105,748     (5)                    *
Richard H. Gundy                         193,011     (6)                    *
Mark D. Quick                             27,751     (7)                    *
Jal S. Shroff (8)                        593,170     (9)                 1.85
Kenneth W. Anderson                       56,812     (10)                   *
Alan J. Gold                              68,062     (11)                   *
Michael Steinberg                              0                            *
Donald J. Stone                           56,700     (12)                   *
FMR Corp. (13)                         1,688,300                         5.26
All executive officers and
  Directors as a group (12 persons)
  (4)(5)(6)(7)(9)(10)(11)(12)         16,090,936                        50.12

- ----------------------
*   Less than 1%

(1)  Beneficial  ownership as reported in the above table has been determined in
     accordance  with Rule 13d-3 under the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as
     amended (the "Exchange  Act").  The persons and entities named in the table
     have sole voting and  investment  power with respect to all shares shown as
     beneficially  owned by them,  except as noted below.  Amounts shown include
     shares of Common  Stock  issuable  upon  exercise  of  certain  outstanding
     options within 60 days after the Record Date.

(2)  Except for the  percentage  of certain  parties that are based on presently
     exercisable  options which are indicated in the following  footnotes to the
     table,  the  percentages  indicated are based on ________  shares of Common
     Stock issued and  outstanding  on the Record  Date.  In the case of parties
     holding  presently   exercisable   options,  the  percentage  ownership  is
     calculated on the assumption that the shares  presently held or purchasable
     within the next 60 days underlying such options are outstanding.

(3)  The address of such  individual is 2280 N. Greenville  Avenue,  Richardson,
     Texas 75082.

(4)  Includes 1,190,925 shares of Common Stock owned of record by Lynne Stafford
     Kartsotis,  wife of Mr. Tom Kartsotis,  as to which Mr. Kartsotis disclaims
     beneficial ownership, and 14,658 shares owned by Mr. Kartsotis as custodian
     for Annie Grace Kartsotis, his minor daughter.

(5)  Includes 30,658 shares  issuable  pursuant to the exercise of stock options
     within 60 days of the Record Date.

(6)  Includes 16,350 shares owned by the Richard Gundy Trust,  and 16,350 shares
     owned by the Richard Gundy Family Trust.  Mr. Gundy is a trustee of each of
     these trusts and has sole voting and investment power with respect to those
     shares.  Also includes 29,345 shares  issuable  pursuant to the exercise of
     stock options within 60 days of the Record Date.

                                       -3-

<PAGE>

(7)  Shares issuable pursuant to the exercise of stock options within 60 days of
     the Record Date.

(8)  Mr.  Shroff and his wife,  Pervin J. Shroff,  share  voting and  investment
     power with respect to 424,252 of the shares shown.

(9)  Includes 94,734 shares  issuable  pursuant to the exercise of stock options
     within 60 days of the Record  Date.  Also  includes  indirect  ownership of
     74,184 shares issuable  pursuant to the exercise of stock options within 60
     days of the Record Date, which are owned by Mrs. Shroff.

(10) Includes 34,312 shares  issuable  pursuant to the exercise of stock options
     within 60 days of the Record Date. Also includes 11,250 shares owned by the
     K.W. Anderson Family Limited Partnership.  Mr. Anderson is managing general
     partner of the  partnership  and has sole voting and investment  power with
     respect to those shares.

(11) Includes 34,312 shares  issuable  pursuant to the exercise of stock options
     within 60 days of the Record Date.

(12) Includes 45,562 shares  issuable  pursuant to the exercise of stock options
     within 60 days of the Record Date.

(13) Based on a  Schedule  13G,  dated  February  14,  2000,  filed by FMR Corp.
     ("FMR") with the  Securities and Exchange  Commission and the Company.  The
     Schedule  13G  discloses  that  Fidelity   Management  &  Research  Company
     ("Fidelity"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of FMR and an investment adviser is
     the beneficial  owner of 1,688,300 shares of Common Stock or 5.267%% of the
     Common Stock of the Company as a result of acting as investment  advisor to
     various  companies  registered  under the  Investment  Company Act of 1940.
     Edward C. Johnson,  III , FMR,  through control  of Fidelity and the funds,
     each has sole power to dispose of the 1,688,300  shares owned by the funds.
     Neither  FMR,  nor  Edward C.  Johnson,  III has the sole  power to vote or
     direct the voting of the shares owned directly by the Fidelity Funds, which
     power resides with the Fund's Board of Trustees.  Fidelity  carries out the
     voting of the shares under written guidelines  established by such Board of
     Trustees.  Strategic  Advisers,  Inc., a  wholly-owned  subsidiary  of FMR,
     provides investment advisory services to individuals. It does not have sole
     power to vote or direct the voting of shares of certain securities held for
     clients and has sole dispositive power over such securities. As such, FMR's
     beneficial   ownership  may  include  shares   beneficially  owned  through
     Strategic  Advisers,  Inc.  The  address  of FMR is 82  Devonshire  Street,
     Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Section  16(a)  Beneficial  Ownership  Reporting  Compliance:  The  rules of the
Securities  and Exchange  Commission  require  disclosure by the Company of late
filings of reports of stock  ownership by its directors and executive  officers.
To the Company's  knowledge,  the only late filing during its most recent fiscal
year was a Form 5 by Tom Kartsotis.

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

                                       -4-

<PAGE>

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

                                  (Proposal 1)

     The  Board  of  Directors  currently  consists  of  eight  members  and  is
classified into three classes.  The term of one class of directors  expires each
year.  By resolution of the Board of Directors at its meeting on March 14, 2000,
the number of directors  composing the Board of Directors has been set at eight.
The  persons  whose  names are  listed  below  ("Director  Nominees")  have been
nominated  for  election as  directors  by the Board of Directors to serve for a
term of office to expire at the Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  in 2003,  with
each to hold office until his  successor  has been duly  elected and  qualified.
Stockholders  will not be able to vote the  proxies  held by them for more  than
three persons.  To be elected a director,  each Director  Nominee must receive a
plurality of the votes cast at the Meeting for the election of directors. Should
any  Director  Nominee  become  unable  or  unwilling  to accept  nomination  or
election, the proxy holders may vote the proxies for the election, in his or her
stead,  of any other person the Board of Directors may  recommend.  Each nominee
has  expressed  his  intention  to serve the entire  term for which  election is
sought.

Directors and Nominees

     The following  table and text set forth the name, age and positions of each
Director Nominee and director:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                       <C>                   <C>

         Name                                             Age                 Position

Tom Kartsotis....................................          40     Director, Chairman of the Board and Chief
                                                                  Executive Officer
Kosta N. Kartsotis...............................          47     Director, President and Chief Operating Officer
Michael W. Barnes................................          39     Director and Executive Vice President
Jal S. Shroff....................................          63     Director and Managing Firector of Fossil (East) Limited
Kenneth W. Anderson..............................          66     Director
Alan J. Gold.....................................          66     Director
Michael Steinberg ...............................          71     Director
Donald J. Stone..................................          71     Director

</TABLE>

     The  Director  Nominees  for election to the Board of Directors at the 2000
Annual Meeting of Stockholders are as follows:

     Kosta N.  Kartsotis  has served as President  and Chief  Operating  Officer
since December 1991. Mr. Kosta  Kartsotis  joined the Company in 1988 and served
as Vice  President -- Marketing  until  December 1991. He has been a director of
the Company since 1990.

     Alan J. Gold has been a director of the Company since April 1993.  Mr. Gold
was the founder of Accessory Lady, a women's fashion accessory retail chain, and
served as its President  until 1992. Mr. Gold is currently  President of Goldcor
Investments.

     Michael  Steinberg has been a director of the Company since March 2000. Mr.
Steinberg  served as Chairman  and Chief  Executive  Officer of Macy's  West,  a
Division of Federated  Department Stores,  Inc., from a date prior to 1995 until
his retirement in January 2000.

                                      -5-

<PAGE>

     Unless otherwise directed in the enclosed proxy, it is the intention of the
persons  named in such proxy to nominate and to vote the shares  represented  by
such proxy for the election of the Director  Nominees for the office of director
of the  Company.  Each of the  Director  Nominees is presently a director of the
Company.

     The Board of Directors  does not  contemplate  that any of the  above-named
nominees for director will refuse or be unable to accept  election as a director
of the Company,  or be unable to serve as a director of the Company.  Should any
of them become  unavailable for nomination or election or refuse to be nominated
or to accept  election as a director of the Company,  then the persons  named in
the enclosed form of proxy intend to vote the shares  represented  in such proxy
for the  election  of such  other  person  or  persons  as may be  nominated  or
designated by the Board of Directors.

     Mr. Tom  Kartsotis and Mr. Kosta N.  Kartsotis  are brothers.  There are no
other family  relationships  among any of the  directors,  director  nominees or
executive officers of the Company.

                  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS

                THAT STOCKHOLDERS VOTE FOR EACH DIRECTOR NOMINEE

                           FOR THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

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


Directors Serving Terms To Expire At The 2001 Annual Meeting Of Stockholders:

     Tom  Kartsotis  has  served as  Chairman  of the Board and Chief  Executive
Officer since December  1991. Mr. Tom Kartsotis  founded the Company in 1984 and
served as its  President  until  December  1991.  He has been a director  of the
Company since 1984.

     Jal S. Shroff has served as  Managing  Director  of Fossil  (East)  Limited
("Fossil  East") since January 1991 and has been a director of the Company since
April 1993.

     Donald J. Stone has been a director  of the Company  since April 1993.  Mr.
Stone served as Vice  Chairman of  Federated  Department  Stores until  February
1988, at which time he retired.

Directors Serving Terms To Expire At The 2002 Annual Meeting Of Stockholders:

     Michael W. Barnes has served as Executive  Vice  President  since 1995. Mr.
Barnes has been a director  of the  Company  since his  election to the Board of
Directors in February 1993.

     Kenneth W.  Anderson  has been a director of the Company  since April 1993.
Mr. Anderson was a co-founder of Blockbuster Entertainment  Corporation, a video
rental  company,  and served as its President from 1985 until 1987. From 1987 to
1991, Mr. Anderson served in various positions with Amtech Corporation, a remote
electronic identification technology company, which he co-founded, including the
position of Chairman of its Executive Committee.

Board Committees and Meetings

     The Board of Directors has established two standing  committees:  the Audit
Committee and the Compensation Committee.  Messrs. Anderson, Gold, Steinberg and
Stone serve on the Audit Committee and the Compensation Committee.

                                      -6-

<PAGE>

     The  functions  of the Audit  Committee  are to  recommend  to the Board of
Directors the appointment of independent  auditors, to review the plan and scope
of any audit of the Company's  financial  statements and to review the Company's
significant  accounting  policies and other related matters.  In March 2000, the
Board of Directors of the Company, on the recommendation of the Audit Committee,
adopted a written  Audit  Committee  Charter in order to  specify  the roles and
responsibilities  of the Audit Committee and to help focus Committee  members on
their  responsibilities  as  expressed  in such  charter.  A copy  of the  Audit
Committee  Charter is  attached  as  Appendix  1. The Audit  Committee  held two
meeting during the fiscal year ended January 1, 2000.

     The functions of the Compensation  Committee are to make recommendations to
the Board of Directors  regarding  the  compensation  of senior  officers and to
administer  the 1993  Long-Term  Incentive  Plan  (the  "Incentive  Plan").  The
Compensation  Committee held one meeting during the fiscal year ended January 1,
2000.

     The Board of  Directors  held four  meetings  during the fiscal  year ended
January 1, 2000. During 1999 each director attended,  in person or by conference
call, all of the meetings of the Board of Directors and the meetings held by all
committees of the Board on which such director served.

Director Compensation

     The  Company  pays an  annual  retainer  of  $15,000  to  each  nonemployee
director.  In  addition,  the Company  pays each  nonemployee  director a fee of
$1,000 for each meeting of the Board of Directors or any committee thereof which
he attends. The Company also reimburses its directors for ordinary and necessary
travel expenses incurred in attending such meetings.

     Nonemployee  Director  Stock  Option Plan.  The Board of Directors  and the
stockholders  of the Company has approved  the adoption of the 1993  Nonemployee
Director Plan (the  "Nonemployee  Director  Plan").  Pursuant to the Nonemployee
Director Plan, each Nonemployee Director receives a grant of 5,000 non-qualified
stock options on the date he becomes a director of the Company. On the first day
of each  calendar  year,  each  Nonemployee  Director  receives  a  grant  of an
additional 3,000 non-qualified stock options, as long as he is then serving as a
Nonemployee Director.  The grant of options pursuant to the Nonemployee Director
Plan is  automatic.  An  aggregate  of 225,000  shares of Common Stock have been
authorized  for issuance  pursuant to the  Nonemployee  Director  Plan, of which
140,000 shares were subject to outstanding options on the Record Date.

     Options  granted  pursuant  to the  Nonemployee  Director  Plan will become
exercisable  (i) with  respect  to 50% of the total  number  of  shares  subject
thereto,  on the first anniversary of the date of grant and (ii) with respect to
the remaining shares subject  thereto,  in installments of 25% of such shares on
the second and third  anniversaries  of the date of grant. The exercise price of
options  granted  pursuant to the  Nonemployee  Director  Plan shall be the fair
market value of the Common Stock on the date of grant.  Such exercise price must
be paid in full in cash at the time an option is exercised.  The term of options
granted under the  Nonemployee  Director Plan will expire on the earliest of (i)
ten years from the date of grant,  (ii) one year after the optionee ceases to be
a director  by reason of death or  disability  or (iii) three  months  after the
optionee ceases to be a director for any reason other than death or disability.

     The Nonemployee Director Plan provides that the Board of Directors may make
certain  adjustments  to the  exercise  price and  number of shares  subject  to
options  granted  thereunder  in the  event of a stock  split,  stock  dividend,
combination,  reclassification or certain other corporate transactions.  Subject
to  certain  limitations,  the Board of  Directors  is  authorized  to amend the
Nonemployee Director Plan as it deems necessary,  but no amendment may adversely
affect the rights of an optionee with respect to an  outstanding  option without
his  consent.  The  Compensation  Committee  of the  Board of  Directors  is not
responsible for the administration of the Nonemployee Director Plan.

                                      -7-

<PAGE>

Executive Officers

     The  name,  age,  current  position  with the  Company,  and the  principal
occupation  during  the  last  five  years of  executive  officers  Messrs.  Tom
Kartsotis,  Kosta N.  Kartsotis  and  Michael W.  Barnes and the year each first
became an executive  officer of the Company is set forth above under the caption
"Directors and Nominees," and with respect to each remaining  executive  officer
is set forth in the following table and text:


 Name                                         Age        Position
- -------                                      -----     ------------
Richard H. Grundy.......................      57    Executive Vice President

Randy S. Kercho.........................      43    Executive Vice President,
                                                    Chief Financial Officer and
                                                    Treasurer

Mark D. Quick...........................      51    Executive Vice President

T.R. Tunnell............................      46    Senior Vice President,
                                                    Development, Chief Legal
                                                    Officer and Secretary

     Richard H. Gundy has served as  Executive  Vice  President  of the  Company
since April 1994.  Mr. Gundy  previously  served as Executive Vice President and
Director of County Seat Stores, Inc., a national retailer of apparel and fashion
accessories.

     Randy S. Kercho has served as Executive Vice President and Chief  Financial
Officer of the  Company  since  March  1997.  Mr.  Kercho  served as Senior Vice
President  and Chief  Financial  Officer of the Company from February 1995 until
March 1997 and has served as Treasurer since May 1995. Mr. Kercho served as Vice
President and Chief  Financial  Officer from a date prior to 1995 until February
1995.

     Mark D. Quick has served as Executive Vice President  since March 1997. Mr.
Quick is  responsible  for the  Company's  fashion  accessory  lines  including,
handbags,  small leather goods,  belts and sunglasses.  From November 1995 until
March 1997 he served as Senior Vice President -  Accessories.  From a date prior
to 1995, Mr. Quick served as Senior Vice President - General Merchandise Manager
of Foley's (currently part of May Co.).

     T.R. Tunnell has served as Senior Vice President,  Development, Chief Legal
Officer and Secretary of the Company since  December 1996. Mr. Tunnell served as
Vice  President  and General  Counsel of Pillowtex  Corporation  from April 1996
until December 1996. Mr. Tunnell served as Vice President, Secretary and General
Counsel of the Company from a date prior to 1995 until April 1996.

                                      -8-

<PAGE>

Key Employees

     The following table and text set forth certain information  regarding other
key employees of the Company.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                        <C>             <C>
  Name                                     Age          Position
- --------                                 -------      ------------

Suzanne Amundsen                           42           Vice President, Product Development
Diarmuid Bland                             44           Senior Vice President, Product Development
Gary A. Bollinger                          52           Senior Vice President, Donna Karan Division
Heath Carr                                 33           Vice President, Supply Chain Management
Sharon Dean                                34           Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer
Robert V. Fiore                            55           Vice President, Midwest Region
Cheri J. Friedman                          43           Vice President, Northeast Region
Mark Ginsberg                              45           Vice President, Armani Products
John Gonzales                              47           Vice President, Distribution Operations
Kurt Hagen                                 31           Vice President, e-Commerce
Timothy G. Hale                            39           Senior Vice President and Image Director
David Heath                                46           Senior Vice President, Relic, Private Label and Special Markets
Don Hicks                                  38           Senior Vice President, International
Mike Kovar                                 38           Senior Vice President, Finance
Julie Kramer                               39           Vice President, Merchandising
Lisa Lapiska                               44           Vice President, Human Resources and Organizational Development
Enrico Margaretelli                        40           Senior Vice President, Global Marketing
Isabelle Maujean                           31           Vice President, International Marketing
David R. Moore                             39           Vice President, Eyewear
Dora Y. O'Brien                            39           Vice President, Western Region
Tom Olt                                    53           Senior Vice President, Stores and Real Estate
Margo Pieper                               38           Vice President, Southwest Region
Franz Scheurl                              48           Senior Vice President, International
Daniel M. Smith                            62           Senior Vice President, RELIC / Private Label
Doug Smith                                 38           Vice President, Premiums/Special Markets
Justin Stead                               32           Vice President, International
Gail Stoke                                 46           Vice President, Women's Leathers
Steve Street                               35           Vice President, Planning and Inventory Management
John Talbot                                41           Vice President, Marketing
Sarah White                                35           Vice President, Product Design for Leathers

</TABLE>

     Suzanne Amundsen has served as Vice President - Product  Development from a
date prior to 1995.  Ms.  Amundsen is  responsible  for certain of the Company's
private  label  watch  accounts  as well as watch  product  development  for the
Company's RELIC and premium product divisions.

     Diarmuid  Bland has served as Senior Vice  President,  Product  Development
since February  1998.  Mr. Bland served as Vice President - Product  Development
from July 1996 until February  1998.  Mr. Bland is  responsible  for new product
development  of FOSSIL watches and certain  licensed  watch brands.  From a date
prior to 1995 until June 1996,  Mr. Bland was employed by Timex  Corporation  as
Vice President Marketing and Sales - Fashion Brands / Asia.

                                      -9-

<PAGE>

     Gary A.  Bollinger has served as Senior Vice  President - Donna Karan since
June 1999. Mr.  Bollinger is responsible  for sales of the Company's Donna Karan
New York and DKNY  licensed  products.  Mr.  Bollinger  served  as  Senior  Vice
President,  International  from  February  1997  until  June  1999  and as  Vice
President - International from a date prior to 1995 until February 1997.

     Heath Carr has served as Vice  President,  Supply  Chain  Management  since
August  1999.  Mr. Carr is  responsible  for all  purchasing  and  manufacturing
logistics.  From June 1997  until  August  1999 Mr.  Carr was Vice  President  -
Promotional  Products and from February 1996 until June 1997,  Mr. Carr was Vice
President - Operations/  Fossil East.  From a date prior to 1995 until  February
1996, he served as Division Manager, Order Management Department.

     Sharon Dean has served as Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer since
February  2000. Ms. Dean is responsible  for the Company's  domestic  accounting
operations,  consolidations and budgeting.  From March 1999 until February 2000,
Ms. Dean  served as Chief  Accounting  Officer.  From a date prior to 1995 until
March 1999, Ms. Dean was a Divisional Controller for Banc One.

     Robert V. Fiore has served as Vice  President - Midwest  Region from a date
prior to 1995. Mr. Fiore is responsible  for sales of the Company's  products in
the Midwest Region.

     Cheri J.  Friedman has served as Vice  President - Northeast  Region from a
date prior to 1995.  Ms.  Friedman  is  responsible  for sales of the  Company's
products in the Northeast Region.

     Mark Ginsberg has served as Vice  President,  Armani  Products  since March
1998.  Mr.  Ginsberg  is  responsible  for  sales  of  Emporio  Armani  products
worldwide.  From a date prior to 1995 until March 1998,  Mr.  Ginsberg was Sales
Manager for Knoll, Inc.

     John Gonzales has served as Vice President,  Distribution  Operations since
February 1998. Mr. Gonzales is responsible for the warehousing and  distribution
operations in the United  States.  From  September 1995 until February 1998, Mr.
Gonzales served as Director of Distribution  for the Company.  From a date prior
to 1995 until September 1995, Mr. Gonzales served as General  Warehouse  Manager
for M.J. Designs.

     Kurt Hagen has served as Vice  President,  e-commerce  since February 1999.
Mr. Hagen is  responsible  for sales of the  Company's  products via  electronic
means.  From August 1996 to February  1999, Mr. Hagen served as Vice President -
European  Operations.  From February 1996 until August 1996, Mr. Hagen served as
Division Manager, Order Management  Department.  From a date prior to 1995 until
February 1996, Mr. Hagen served as International Group Manager.

     Timothy  G. Hale has served as Senior  Vice  President  and Image  Director
since February 1999. Mr. Hale is responsible for  coordinating the activities of
the Company's in-house advertising  department.  From a date prior to 1995 until
February 1999, Mr. Hale served as Vice President and Image Director.

     David Heath has served as Senior Vice President,  Relic,  Private Label and
Special  Markets  since  April  1999.  Mr.  Heath is  responsible  for sales and
development  of the RELIC  brand,  the private  label  business and the premiums
business.  From a date prior to 1995 until April 1999, Mr. Heath was employed by
Nike where he served in various capacities including Strategic Accounts Manager,
Director of USA Sales  Development,  Director of Global Sales for the  Equipment
Division, and General Manager of USA Equipment Division.

     Don Hicks has served as Senior Vice President, International since February
2000.  Mr. Hicks is  responsible  for finance and  operations  of the  Company's
international subsidiaries and distributors and the Company's Emporio Armani and
Diesel brand  licensed  products.  From February 1999 until  February  2000, Mr.

                                      -10-

<PAGE>

Hicks served as Vice President,  Finance. Mr. Hicks served as the Vice President
and Chief Accounting Officer from September 1997 until February 1999. From April
1997  until  September  1997,  he served as Vice  President  and  Controller  of
HealthCor Holdings,  Inc. a publicly held home healthcare services company. From
a date prior to 1995 until November 1996, Mr. Hicks was employed by Maxum Health
Corp. where he initially served as Director of Accounting followed by Controller
and Chief Accounting Officer.

     Mike Kovar has served as Senior Vice  President,  Finance since March 2000.
From  November  1997 until March 2000,  Mr. Kovar served as Vice  President  and
Chief  Financial  Officer for BearCom Group,  Inc. He served as Controller  from
July 1996 to November 1997. From a date prior to 1995 until July 1996, Mr. Kovar
served as  Director  of Finance and  Operations  for the Golf  Division of Sport
Supply Group, Inc.

     Julie Kramer has served as Vice President, Merchandising since August 1999.
Ms. Kramer is  responsible  for the Fossil  apparel  line.  From July 1997 until
August 1999,  Ms.  Kramer served as  Divisional  Merchandise  Manager for Junior
Apparel/Accessories  for Gadzooks.  From March 1996 to June 1997, Ms. Kramer was
the Active  Sportswear  buyer for The  Limited.  From a date prior to 1995 until
February  1996, Ms. Kramer served as Divisional  Merchandise  Manager for Junior
Apparel/Accessories for Merry-Go-Round.

     Lisa Lapiska has served as Vice  President,  Human  Resources since October
1999. Ms. Lapiska is responsible for staffing, compensation,  benefits, employee
relations  and  training.  From a date prior to 1995  until  October  1999,  Ms.
Lapiska served as Vice President, Management Development for Pier 1 Imports.

     Enrico  Margaretelli has served as Senior Vice President,  Global Marketing
since  September  1999.  Mr.   Margaretelli  is  responsible  for  planning  and
developing the goals,  policies and programs of the worldwide marketing program.
From a date prior to 1995  until  September  1999,  Mr.  Margaretelli  served as
Managing Director of Fossil Italia Srl., a subsidiary of the Company.

     Isabelle  Maujean  has served as Vice  President,  International  Marketing
since September 1999. Ms. Maujean is responsible for the Company's international
marketing  program.  From a date prior to 1995 until September 1999, Ms. Maujean
served as General Manager of Fossil Italia Srl., a subsidiary of the Company.

     David R. Moore has served as Vice  President - Eyewear  since  August 1995.
Mr. Moore is  responsible  for sales and  development  of the Company's  eyewear
products.  Mr. Moore served as Division  Merchandising Manager from a date prior
to 1995 until August 1995.

     Dora Y. O'Brien has served as Vice  President - West Region since  February
1993. Ms. O'Brien is responsible for sales of the Company's products in the West
region.

     Tom Olt has served as Senior Vice  President,  Stores and Real Estate since
February 2000. Mr. Olt is responsible  for the  development and operation of the
Company's  outlet and retail  stores.  Mr. Olt served as Vice President - Stores
and Real Estate from a date prior to 1995 until February 2000.

     Margo Pieper has served as Vice President,  Southwest Region since February
1998.  Ms.  Pieper is  responsible  for sales of the  Company's  products in the
Southwest  region.  From a date prior to 1995 until  February  1998,  Ms. Pieper
served as Southwest Regional Manager for the Company.

     Franz  Scheurl has served as Senior  Vice  President,  International  since
April 1997. Mr. Scheurl is  responsible  for sales of the Company's  products in
Europe and Japan. From a date prior to 1995 until April 1997, Mr. Scheurl served
as Managing Director of Fossil (Europe) GmbH, a subsidiary of the Company.

                                      -11-

<PAGE>

     Daniel M. Smith has served as Senior Vice President - RELIC / Private Label
since March 1996.  Mr. Smith is  responsible  for the  marketing and sale of the
Company's  RELIC and Private Label watches.  From February 1995 until March 1996
Mr. Smith served as Senior Vice President - RELIC Division.

     Doug Smith has served as Vice President of Sales and National Sales Manager
for the  Premiums/Special  Markets  Division  since  April  1999.  Mr.  Smith is
responsible  for sales and  marketing of the Company's  premium  products to the
corporate  market sector.  From a date prior to 1995 until April 1999, Mr. Smith
served as National-Key Account Manager for The Gillette Company.

     Justin Stead has served as Vice  President,  International  since  February
2000. Mr. Stead is responsible for Fossil  International  General Stores and for
sales in Asia, the Pacific Rim, Japan, South Africa, the United Kingdom, France,
and  Scandinavia.  From November 1998 until November 1999, Mr. Stead served as a
Divisional Manager for Relic. From a date prior to 1995 until November 1998, Mr.
Stead was a buyer for Zale Corporation.

     Gail Stoke has served as Vice  President,  Women's  Leathers since February
1998. Ms. Stoke is responsible for sales of the Company's women's leather goods.
From a date prior to 1995 until February 1998, Ms. Stoke served in the positions
as Account Executive and National Sales Manager for Women's Leathers.

     Steve  Street  has  served  as  Vice  President,   Planning  and  Inventory
Management  since February 1998. Mr. Street is responsible for the management of
the Company's  domestic and  international  inventory.  From February 1995 until
February 1998, Mr. Street served as Division  Manager,  Order Management for the
Company.

     John Talbot has served as Vice  President,  Marketing  since November 1997.
Mr.  Talbot is  responsible  for  domestic  and  international  marketing of the
Company's  products.  From  June  1997  until  November  1997,  Mr.  Talbot  was
self-employed.  From June 1996  until  May  1997,  he served as Vice  President,
Marketing for Buster Brown  Apparel.  From a date prior to 1995 until June 1996,
Mr. Talbot was Vice President, Merchandising for Buster Brown Apparel.

     Sarah White has served as Vice President, Product Design for Leathers since
February  1998.  Ms.  White is  responsible  for the design and  development  of
leather goods for men and women.  From  September  1996 until February 1998, Ms.
White served as Design Director for the Company. From a date prior to 1995 until
September 1996, Ms. White served as a Designer for the Company.

Compensation of Executive Officers

     The total  compensation  paid for the  1999,  1998 and 1997  fiscal  years,
respectively,  to the Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Tom Kartsotis,  and the other
four most highly paid  executive  officers who  received  cash  compensation  in
excess of $100,000 for the fiscal year ended January 1, 2000 (collectively,  the
"Named  Executive  Officers"),  is set  forth  below  in the  following  Summary
Compensation Table:

                                      -12-

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                            <C>         <C>        <C>                <C>                <C>                   <C>
                                                 SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
                                                                                          Long-Term
                                                                                        Compensation
                                                  Annual Compensation ($)                 Awards (2)
                                                ---------------------------             -------------
                                                                                         Securities
                              Fiscal                                Other Annual         Underlying           All Other
 Name and Principal Position   Year      Salary       Bonus       Compensation (1)       Options (#)       Compensation ($)
- ----------------------------- -------- ----------- ------------ --------------------- ------------------ ---------------------

Tom Kartsotis                  1999     262,500        -0-              -0-                  -0-                12 (3)
Chairman, Chief Executive      1998     262,500        -0-              -0-                  -0-                13 (3)
Officer  and Director          1997     262,500        -0-              -0-                  -0-                13 (3)


Kosta N. Kartsotis             1999     255,000        -0-              -0-                  -0-                18 (3)
President, Chief Operating     1998     255,000        -0-              -0-                  -0-                35 (3)
Officer and                    1997     255,000        -0-              -0-                  -0-                35 (3)
Director

Michael W. Barnes              1999     233,846        -0-             50,000              33,751             2,923 (4)
Executive Vice President       1998     224,423        -0-              -0-                26,250             3,162 (5)
and Director                   1997     218,846        -0-              -0-                37,500             2,526 (6)

Richard H. Gundy               1999     250,000        -0-             25,000              41,251             3,450 (4)
Executive Vice President       1998     250,000        -0-              -0-                26,251             2,988 (5)
                               1997     250,000        -0-              -0-                30,000             2,746 (6)

Mark D. Quick                  1999     228,846        -0-              -0-                26,251             2,652 (4)
Executive Vice President       1998     219,423        -0-              -0-                22,500             2,988 (5)
                               1997     210,384        -0-              -0-                37,500             3,919 (6)

</TABLE>

(1)  Represents  employer  contributions  under the Fossil,  Inc. and Affiliates
     Deferred Compensation Plan.

(2)  During the applicable reporting periods, no awards of restricted stock were
     made as  Long-Term  Compensation  and no  payouts  were  made  pursuant  to
     long-term   incentive  plans,   therefore  the  columns  "Restricted  Stock
     Award(s)"   and  "LTIP   Payouts"   have  been  omitted  from  the  Summary
     Compensation Table.

(3)  Represents  the dollar  value of premiums  paid by the Company on term life
     insurance policies.

(4)  Includes employer-matching  contribution under the Fossil, Inc. Savings and
     Retirement Plan to the Named Executive  Officers in the following  amounts:
     Mr.  Barnes - $2,707;  Mr.  Gundy - $2,762  and Mr.  Quick -  $2,600.  Also
     includes  the dollar  value of  premiums  paid by the  Company on term life
     insurance policies on the Named Executive Officers as follows: Mr. Barnes -
     $216; Mr. Gundy - $688 and Mr. Quick - $52.

(5)  Includes employer-matching  contribution under the Fossil, Inc. Savings and
     Retirement Plan to the Named Executive  Officers in the following  amounts:
     Mr.  Barnes - $2,898;  Mr.  Gundy - $2,898  and Mr.  Quick -  $2,898.  Also
     includes  the dollar  value of  premiums  paid by the  Company on term life
     insurance policies on the Named Executive Officers as follows: Mr. Barnes -
     $264; Mr. Gundy - $90 and Mr. Quick - $90.

(6)  Includes employer-matching  contribution under the Fossil, Inc. Savings and
     Retirement Plan to the Named Executive  Officers in the following  amounts:
     Mr.  Barnes - $2,338 ; Mr.  Gundy - $2,656  and Mr.  Quick -  $3,829.  Also
     includes  the dollar  value of  premiums  paid by the  Company on term life
     insurance policies on the Named Executive Officers as follows: Mr. Barnes -
     $188; Mr. Gundy - $90 and Mr. Quick - $90.

                                      -13-

<PAGE>

     The following table  discloses,  for each of the Named Executive  Officers,
options  granted  during the fiscal year ended January 1, 2000 and the potential
realizable values for such options:

                     OPTIONS/SAR GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                        <C>             <C>          <C>        <C>           <C>           <C>         <C>
                                                                                           Potential Realizable
                                                                                         Value at Assumed Annual
                                                                                           Rates of Stock Price
                                                                                               Appreciation
                                              Individual Grants                              for Option Term
                     -------------------------------------------------------------------  -----------------------
                         Number of      % of Total
                       Securities   Options/Shares                Market
                       Underlying     Granted to      Exercise   Price at
                      Options/SARs   Employees in     Or Base     Date of     Expiration
Name                    Granted      Fiscal Year (1)    Price      Grant        Date           5% (2)      10% (2)

Tom Kartsotis                   -0-       --             --          --          --            --         --

Kosta N. Kartsotis              -0-       --             --          --          --            --         --

Michael W. Barnes         33,751(3)      6.07%       $18.0417(4)   $18.0417      2/12/09     $382,966    $970,497

Richard H. Gundy          41,251(3)      7.41%       $18.0417(4)   $18.0417      2/12/09     $468,068  $1,186,156

Mark D. Quick             26,251(3)      4.72%       $18.0417(4)   $18.0417      2/12/09     $297,865    $754,837

</TABLE>
- ----------------------
(1)      Represents  the percentage of  options/shares  granted to all employees
         pursuant to the Incentive Plan during the 1999 fiscal year.

(2)      These dollar amounts represent the value of the option assuming certain
         rates of appreciation  from the market price of the Common Stock at the
         date of grant.  Actual  gains,  if any, on stock option  exercises  are
         dependent  on the future  performance  of the Common  Stock and overall
         market conditions. There can be no assurance that the amounts reflected
         in this column will be achieved.

(3)      These options were granted  pursuant to the  Incentive  Plan and become
         exercisable  with  respect to 20% of such  options on each of the first
         through the fifth anniversary dates of the grants, cumulatively.

(4)      Pursuant to the Incentive Plan under which this option was granted, the
         exercise  price was the closing price of a share of Common Stock on the
         Nasdaq National Market on the date of grant.

                                      -14-

<PAGE>

     The  following  table  describes for each of the Named  Executive  Officers
options  exercised  and the  potential  realizable  values for their  options at
January 1, 2000:

                         AGGREGATED OPTION/SAR EXERCISES
                    AND OPTION/SAR VALUES AT JANUARY 1, 2000

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                         <C>              <C>            <C>          <C>               <C>              <C>

                                                       Number of Securities Underlying       Value of Unexercised
                                                         Unexercised Options/SARs at             In-the-Money
                                                             January 1, 2000                    Options/SARs at
                                                                    (#)                        January 1, 2000 (1)
                           Shares                      -------------------------------       ----------------------
                        Acquired on        Value
 Name                    Exercise(#)      Realized     Exercisable      Unexercisable    Exercisable     Unexercisable
- -------                --------------    -----------  -------------    ---------------  -------------   ---------------
Tom Kartsotis                --              --              --               --              --             --

Kosta N. Kartsotis           --              --              --               --              --             --

Michael W. Barnes          98,472        $2,617,383         1(2)           67,501(3)         $18          $681,954

Richard H. Gundy           42,189         $605,761          1(4)           72,188(5)         $13          $670,661

Mark D. Quick              227,813       $4,888,828         1(4)           57,187(6)         $13          $606,197

</TABLE>
- --------------------------
(1)      Based on $23.125 per share of Common Stock, which was the closing price
         per share of Common Stock on December  31, 1999 on the Nasdaq  National
         Market, minus the exercise price of "in-the-money" Options/SARs.

(2)      The exercise prices of such Options are $5.5556 per share.

(3)      The  exercise  prices of such  Options  are (i)  $5.5556 per share with
         respect to 14,062  options,  (ii) $9.75 with respect to 19,688 options,
         and (iii) $18.0417 per share with respect to 33,751.

(4)      The exercise price of such Options are $9.75 per share.

(5)      The  exercise  prices of such  Options  are (i)  $5.5556 per share with
         respect to 11,250  options,  (ii) $9.75 with respect to 19,687  options
         and (iii) $18.0417 per share with respect to 41,251 options.

(6)      The  exercise  prices of such  Options  are (i)  $5.5556 per share with
         respect to 14,063 options,  (ii) $9.75 per share with respect to 16,873
         options and (ii) $18.0417 per share with respect to 26,251 options.

Compensation Committee Report on Executive Compensation

     In March 1993, the Board of Directors established a Compensation  Committee
to review  and make  recommendations  to the Board of  Directors  regarding  the
compensation  of senior  management  and to administer  the Incentive  Plan. The
Committee is charged with  reviewing  with the Board of Directors all aspects of
compensation for the executive officers of the Company.

Compensation Philosophy.

     The philosophy of the Company's  compensation program is to employ,  retain
and reward executives  capable of leading the Company in achieving its strategic
business  objectives.  These objectives  include achieving further growth in its
watch and fashion  accessories  businesses and  capitalizing on growing consumer
awareness  of the FOSSIL and RELIC  brand  names by  expanding  the scope of its
product offerings to additional  categories of fashion  accessories.  Additional
objectives include preserving a strong financial posture,  increasing the assets
of the Company and

                                      -15-

<PAGE>

positioning   the   Company's   assets  and  business   operations  in  selected
international   markets  and  product  segments  that  offer  long  term  growth
opportunities  and  enhance  stockholder  value.  The  accomplishment  of  these
objectives is measured against conditions prevalent in the industry within which
the Company operates, which, in recent years have been highly competitive.

Compensation Vehicles.

     The  available  forms of  executive  compensation  currently  include  base
salary, cash bonus awards and stock options. Performance of the Company is a key
consideration. The Company's compensation policy recognizes, however, that stock
price  performance  is only one  measure  of  performance  and,  given  industry
business  conditions  and the long  term  strategic  direction  and goals of the
Company,  it may not  necessarily  be the  best  current  measure  of  executive
performance.   Therefore,   the   Company's   compensation   policy  also  gives
consideration to the Company's achievement of specified business objectives when
determining  executive  officer  compensation.  An  additional  objective of the
Compensation Committee in determining  compensation has been to reward executive
officers  with equity  compensation  in  addition to salary in keeping  with the
Company's overall compensation philosophy, which attempts to place equity in the
hands  of  its   employees   in  an  effort  to  further   instill   stockholder
considerations  and values in the  actions of all the  employees  and  executive
officers.

     Compensation paid to executive officers is based upon a Company-wide salary
structure   consistent   for  each  position   relative  to  its  authority  and
responsibility  compared to industry  peers.  Individual  awards  under the 1993
Fossil,  Inc. Long-Term Incentive Plan (the "Incentive Plan") were determined on
the basis of a  subjective  evaluation  of the  executive  officer's  ability to
influence  the  Company's  long term growth and  profitability,  including  such
factors as degree of management responsibility, performance of departments under
his  management  or  supervision,  excellence  of work  product,  commitment  to
accomplishing   the   Company's   goals   as   reflected   by  time   committed,
constructiveness  of working  relationships  with other  executive  officers and
staff, and assumption of responsibility and initiative.

     As of January 1, 2000, a total of  1,907,453  options  under the  Incentive
Plan were issued and outstanding to executive  officers and other key employees.
These awards were intended to assure the  stability of the Company's  management
team as well as to provide  incentives for individual  performance that coincide
with the  enhancement of stockholder  value.  The Committee  believes that it is
important  during  this  period of Company  growth to use stock  options for its
executive  officers as a  cornerstone  of  incentive  compensation  to tie their
success directly to the growth of stockholder value.

Chief Executive Officer Compensation.

     The Compensation  Committee considered a number of factors in reviewing and
approving the Chief Executive  Officer's (the "CEO")  compensation  for 1999. In
addition to stock price  performance,  the factors  considered  by the Committee
included an evaluation of CEO compensation levels for other comparable companies
in the industry,  the achievement of specified  business  objectives  during the
prior  fiscal  year,  including  increasing  the market  awareness of the FOSSIL
brand, the expansion of the business into additional accessory lines,  improving
revenues,  income and operating  cash flow,  and  developing  the ability of the
Company to expand internationally.  Based on these considerations, a 1999 salary
level of  $262,500  was  judged  by the  Compensation  Committee  to be fair and
appropriate for the most senior  executive  officer of the Company,  taking into
account the level of salary compensation paid to other executive officers of the
Company and in comparison to the CEO's industry  peers.  The CEO did not receive
any grants of stock options in 1999.

                                      -16-

<PAGE>

Corporate Tax Deduction on Compensation.

     Federal income tax  legislation  has limited the  deductibility  of certain
compensation  paid to the  CEO  and  the  four  other  most  highly  compensated
executive  officers of the Company to $1,000,000  annually to such officers.  To
the extent readily determinable,  and as one of the factors in its consideration
of  compensation  matters,  the  Compensation  Committee  takes into account any
anticipated  tax treatment to the Company and to the  executive  officers of the
available   compensation   vehicles.   Some  types  of   compensation   and  the
deductibility  of those expenses for federal income tax purposes depend upon the
timing of an executive's  vesting or exercise of previously  granted rights.  In
addition,  interpretation  of,  and  changes  in,  the tax laws also  affect the
deductibility  of  certain  compensation  expenses.  To  the  extent  reasonably
practicable,  and  to the  extent  it is  within  the  Compensation  Committee's
control,  the  Compensation  Committee  intends to limit executive  compensation
under ordinary circumstances to that which is deductible under Section 162(m) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. In doing so, the  Compensation  Committee may
utilize alternatives (such as deferring compensation or establishing performance
based  compensation  plans  for  covered  employees)  for  qualifying  executive
compensation for deductibility  and may rely on grand fathering  provisions with
respect to existing contractual commitments.

                                           COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

                                           Kenneth W. Anderson
                                           Alan J. Gold
                                           Michael Steinberg
                                           Donald J. Stone

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

     No  member  of the  Compensation  Committee  is or has been an  officer  or
employee  of the  Company  or any of its  subsidiaries  or had any  relationship
requiring  disclosure  pursuant  to Item 404 of  Regulation  S-K.  No  executive
officer of the  Company  served as a member of the  compensation  committee  (or
other board  committee  performing  similar  functions or, in the absence of any
such committee,  the entire board of directors) of another  corporation,  one of
whose executive  officers  served on the  Compensation  Committee.  No executive
officer of the Company served as a director of another corporation, one of whose
executive officers served on the Compensation Committee. No executive officer of
the Company  served as a member of the  compensation  committee  (or other board
committee  performing  equivalent  functions  or,  in the  absence  of any  such
committee,  the entire board of directors) of another corporation,  one of whose
executive officers served as a director of the registrant.

                                      -17-

<PAGE>

Common Stock Performance Graph

     The  following  performance  graph  compares the  cumulative  return of the
Company's  Common  Stock over the  preceding  five year periods with that of the
Broad  Market  (CRSP Total Return Index of the Nasdaq Stock Market (US)) and the
Nasdaq  Retail Trade  Stocks.  Each Index  assumes $100 invested at December 31,
1994  and  is  calculated  assuming  quarterly  reinvestment  of  dividends  and
quarterly weighting by market capitalization.

                         1999 COMPARATIVE TOTAL RETURNS
                      Fossil, Inc., Nasdaq Stock Market and
                     Nasdaq Stock Market Retail Trades Group
                     (Performance Results through 12/31/99)

                                  [LINE GRAPH]

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                  <C>            <C>             <C>            <C>              <C>           <C>
                                  12/31/94       12/31/95        12/31/96       12/31/97        12/31/98       12/31/99
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fossil, Inc.                        100.00          63.81          102.86         190.48          328.57         396.43

Nasdaq Stock Market                 100.00         141.33          174.04         213.07          300.25         542.43

Nasdaq Retail Trades                100.00         110.14          131.31         154.27          187.59         181.50
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>


Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

     Section  16(a) of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  as amended  (the
"Exchange  Act"),  which became  effective  May 1, 1991,  requires the Company's
officers and directors,  and persons who own more than 10% of a registered class
of the Company's equity securities (the "10% Stockholders"),  to file reports of
ownership and changes of ownership with the SEC and the Nasdaq National  Market.
Officers,  directors  and 10%  Stockholders  of the Company are  required by SEC
regulation  to furnish  the Company  with  copies of all Section  16(a) forms so
filed.  Based  solely on review of copies of such forms  received,  the  Company
believes  that,  during the last fiscal year,  the only late filing was a Form 5
filed on behalf of Tom Kartsotis.

                                      -18-

<PAGE>

             INCREASE IN NUMBER OF AUTHORIZED SHARES OF COMMON STOCK
                                  (Proposal 2)

General Description of Proposal

     The Board of Directors  has approved a proposed  amendment to Article IV of
the  Amended and  Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation  of the Company  that
increases the number of authorized shares of Common Stock from 50,000,000 shares
to 100,000,000  shares.  The Board of Directors believes that it is desirable to
increase the number of authorized shares of Common Stock in order to ensure that
the Company has a sufficient  number of authorized but unissued shares of Common
Stock  available to provide the flexibility  needed for future  expansion of the
Company's  activities.  The availability of the additional  authorized shares of
Common Stock will permit the Company to meet advantageous  market conditions for
the sale of additional  Common Stock,  future  acquisitions of the properties or
securities of other companies,  dividend  reinvestment  plans,  stock dividends,
stock splits, and other general corporate purposes.  The increase will also give
the Company greater  flexibility by allowing shares of Common Stock to be issued
by the Board of Directors for such  purposes  without the delay and expense of a
special meeting of stockholders.

     Pursuant to Delaware corporate law, the Board of Directors is authorized to
issue the additional  shares of Common Stock from time to time for any corporate
purposes without further action by the Company's Stockholders,  except as may be
required  for a particular  transaction  by the  Company's  Amended and Restated
Certificate of Incorporation,  or by the rules of any applicable  exchange.  The
Common Stock is  currently  listed on the Nasdaq  National  Market  System.  The
Board,  however, has no current plans,  understandings,  or arrangements for the
issuance of any of the additional  Common Stock that would be authorized by this
proposed  amendment to the Amended and Restated  Certificate of Incorporation of
the  Company.  Holders of  presently  outstanding  share of Common Stock have no
preemptive rights to purchase additional shares of Common Stock.

Possible Effects of the Proposal

     Anti-takeover  Issues.  Although the Board of  Directors  does not view the
proposed  amendment to increase the number of authorized  shares of Common Stock
to be an anti-takeover proposal, it may be deemed to be one. The availability of
additional  shares of Common Stock may make it more difficult to effect,  or may
discourage  an  attempt,  to gain  control of the  Company by means of a merger,
tender offer, or proxy contest that is not approved by the Company's management.
The  proposal is not the result of any  knowledge of the Company of any specific
effort to  accumulate  the  Company's  securities  or to obtain  control  of the
Company. As discussed above, the primary purpose of the proposed amendment is to
increase the  Company's  flexibility  for the future  expansion of the Company's
activities.

     Delaware  Statute.  Pursuant to Delaware  law,  Delaware  corporations  are
prohibited  from  engaging in a wide range of  specified  transactions  with any
"interested stockholder," defined to include, among others, any person or entity
who in the last three years obtained 15% or more of any class or series of stock
entitled to vote  generally in the election of  directors,  unless,  among other
exceptions,  the  transaction is approved by (i) the Board of Directors prior to
the date the interested  stockholder obtained such status or (ii) the holders of
two-thirds of the  outstanding  shares of each class or series of stock entitled
to vote generally in the election of directors, not including those shares owned
by the interested  stockholder.  By virtue of the Company's  decision not to opt
out of the provisions of this law, it applies to the Company.

     The  Amended  and  Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation  of the Company
contains  other  provisions  that  also  may be  deemed  to have the  effect  of
delaying,  deferring,  or  preventing  a change in control of the  Company.  The
following summary  description of those provisions is necessarily  general,  and
reference should be made in each case to the Amended and Restated Certificate of
Incorporation of the Company.

                                      -19-

<PAGE>

     Removal of Directors.  The Company's  Amended and Restated  Certificate  of
Incorporation  and Amended and  Restated  Bylaws  provide that a director of the
Company may be removed for cause by vote or other action of the  stockholders by
the affirmative  vote of at least a majority of the shares then entitled to vote
at an election of  directors;  or without  cause by the  affirmative  vote of at
least 80% of all directors then in office at a meeting of the Board of Directors
called for that purpose,  or by the affirmative  vote of the holders of at least
80% of the  voting  power of all  outstanding  shares  of  capital  stock of the
Company entitled to vote in the election of directors.

     Classified  Board  of  Directors.   The  Company's   Amended  and  Restated
Certificate of Incorporation divides the Company's Board of Directors into three
approximately  equal classes with staggered  terms.  This provision may have the
effect  of  significantly  extending  the time  required  to make any  change in
control of the Board and may tend to discourage any hostile takeover bid for the
Company.  Staggered  terms also guarantee that  approximately  two-thirds of the
directors at any one time would have at least one year's experience as directors
of the Company.  This provision also makes it more difficult for stockholders to
change the composition of the Board even if  stockholders  believe such a change
would be desirable. Because of the additional time required to change control of
the Board,  this  provision  also tends to perpetuate  incumbent  management and
increases the amount of time required for a takeover bidder to obtain control of
the Company  without the  cooperation  of the Board,  even if the bidder were to
acquire a majority of the Company's outstanding stock; accordingly,  it may tend
to  discourage  certain  tender  offers,  perhaps  including  some  offers  that
stockholders might deem to be in their best interest. As a result,  stockholders
may be deprived of opportunities to sell some or all of their shares in a tender
offer.  Tender offers for control  usually  involve a purchase price higher than
the current  market price and may involve a bidding  contest  between  competing
takeover bidders.  This provision may also discourage open market purchases by a
potential takeover bidder. Such purchases could temporarily  increase the market
value of the Company's Common Stock,  enabling stockholders to sell their shares
at a price  higher  than that  which  would  otherwise  prevail.  Finally,  this
provision may decrease the market price of the Company's  Common Stock by making
the stock less attractive to persons who invest in securities in anticipation of
an increase in price if a takeover attempt develops.

     Issuance of Preferred Stock. The Company's Amended and Restated Certificate
of Incorporation also authorizes the Board of Directors to issue up to 1,000,000
shares of preferred  stock,  par value $0.01 per share (the "Preferred  Stock"),
from time to time, in one or more series.  No shares of the  Preferred  Stock of
the Company have been issued, and the Company has no present plans to issue such
shares.  The  Board  of  Directors  has the  authority,  without  action  by the
stockholders,  to create one or more series of Preferred Stock and determine the
number of shares, designation,  price, sinking fund terms, conversion and voting
rights  with  respect to any such  series.  The  issuance  of any such series of
Preferred  Stock could be used to render more  difficult  an  unfriendly  tender
offer, proxy contest, merger or other change in control of the Company.

     All of the various provisions  described above, as well as the authority of
the  Board of  Directors  to issue  additional  shares  of  Common  Stock if the
proposal to increase the number of authorized  share of Common Stock is approved
by the  stockholders,  could  be used by the  Board  of  Directors  in a  manner
calculated  to prevent  the removal of  management  and make more  difficult  or
discourage a change in control of the Company.  Certain aspects of the foregoing
provisions  in the Amended and Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation  and the
Amended and Restated  Bylaws of the Company were designed to afford the Board of
Directors the  opportunity to evaluate the terms of a takeover  attempt  without
haste or undue pressure, advise stockholders of its findings and to negotiate to
protect the interests of all stockholders.

     The  Company  is not  aware  of any  effort  to  accumulate  the  Company's
securities or to obtain  control of the Company,  and the Company has no present
intention  or  agreement  to  issue  any  additional   share  of  Common  Stock.
Furthermore,  the proposal to increase the number of authorized shares of Common
Stock is not part of any plan by the Company to adopt a series of  anti-takeover
measures,  and the Company has no present  intention of  soliciting  vote on any
such measures or series of measures.

                                      -20-

<PAGE>

Effective Date of Amendment and Board Recommendation

     The  proposed  amendment  to increase  the number of  authorized  shares of
Common  Stock,  if  passed,  would  become  effective  upon  the  filing  of the
Certificate  of Amendment  with the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware,
which filing is expected to be made shortly after the  stockholders  approve the
amendment.  The  affirmative  vote of the  holders of at least a majority of the
outstanding  shares of Common  Stock  entitled to vote at the Annual  Meeting of
Stockholders is required to adopt the amendment.

     The Board of Directors has approved the proposed amendment to the Company's
Amended and Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation  and submits the  following
resolution for adoption by the shareholders at the Annual Meeting:

         RESOLVED, that it is deemed by the Board of Directors to be in the best
         interests of the Company and its  stockholders  to amend the  Company's
         Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation to increase the total
         authorized shares of Common Stock of the Company,  including that which
         is  outstanding,  from  50,000,000  shares of Common  Stock,  par value
         $0.01,  to  100,000,000  shares of Common Stock,  par value $0.01,  and
         that, to  accomplish  the  foregoing,  paragraph 1 of Article IV of the
         Company's Amended and Restated  Certificate of Incorporation be amended
         to read as follows:

         "The  aggregate  number  of shares of all  classes  of stock  which the
         Corporation  shall  have  authority  to  issue is  101,000,000  shares,
         consisting of 1,000,000  shares of preferred  stock, par value $.01 per
         share ("Preferred  Stock"), and 100,000,000 shares of common stock, par
         value $.01 per share ("Common Stock")."

   THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE INCREASE IN
                  NUMBER OF AUTHORIZED SHARES OF COMMON STOCK.

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

                                      -21-

<PAGE>

                                 OTHER BUSINESS

     The Board  knows of no other  business  to be  brought  before  the  Annual
Meeting.  If, however, any other business should properly come before the Annual
Meeting,  the person named in the  accompanying  proxy will vote the proxy as in
his  discretion  he may deem  appropriate,  unless  directed  by the proxy to do
otherwise.

                RELATIONSHIP WITH INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

     The  Company's  independent  public  accountants  for the fiscal year ended
January 1, 2000 was the firm of Deloitte & Touche  LLP. It is expected  that one
or more  representatives  of such firm will  attend  the Annual  Meeting  and be
available  to respond to  appropriate  questions.  The Board of Directors of the
Company, on the recommendation of the Audit Committee,  has selected the firm of
Deloitte & Touche LLP as the Company's  independent  accountants  for the fiscal
year ending December 30, 2000.

                    DATE FOR RECEIPT OF STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

     Stockholder  proposals to be included in the proxy  statement  for the next
Annual  Meeting  must be  received  by the  Company at its  principal  executive
offices on or before  December  17, 2000 for  inclusion in the  Company's  Proxy
Statement relating to that meeting.

                                  BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS



                                  T. R. Tunnell
                                  Senior Vice President, Development
                                  and Chief Legal Officer and Secretary

April 17, 2000
Richardson, Texas

IT IS  IMPORTANT  THAT  PROXIES BE RETURNED  PROMPTLY.  STOCKHOLDERS  WHO DO NOT
EXPECT TO ATTEND THE MEETING AND WISH THEIR STOCK TO BE VOTED ARE URGED TO DATE,
SIGN AND RETURN THE ACCOMPANYING PROXY IN THE ENCLOSED SELF-ADDRESSED  ENVELOPE.
NO POSTAGE IS REQUIRED IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES.

                                      -22-

<PAGE>

                                   APPENDIX 1

                             AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER

PURPOSE

The primary  purpose of the Audit  Committee (the  "Committee") is to assist the
Board of Directors  (the "Board") in fulfilling  its  responsibility  to oversee
management's  conduct of the Company's  financial  reporting process,  including
overviewing the financial  reports and other financial  information  provided by
the Company to any  governmental  or regulatory  body, the public or other users
thereof,  the Company's systems of internal  accounting and financial  controls,
the annual  independent  audit of the  Company's  financial  statements  and the
Company's legal  compliance and ethics programs as established by management and
the Board.

In discharging its oversight role, the Committee is empowered to investigate any
matter  brought  to its  attention  with  full  access  to all  books,  records,
facilities and personnel of the Company and the power to retain outside counsel,
auditors or other experts for this  purpose.  The Board and the Committee are in
place to represent the Company's shareholders;  accordingly, the outside auditor
is ultimately accountable to the Board and the Committee.

The Committee shall review the adequacy of this Charter on an annual basis.

MEMBERSHIP

The  Committee  shall be comprised of not less than three  members of the Board,
and  the  Committee's  composition  will  meet  the  requirements  of the  Audit
Committee Policy of the NASD.

Accordingly, all of the members will be directors:

1.   Who  have no  relationship  to the  Company  that  may  interfere  with the
     exercise of their independence from management and the Company; and

2.   Who are financially  literate or who become  financially  literate within a
     reasonable period of time after appointment to the Committee.  In addition,
     at least  one  member of the  Committee  will have  accounting  or  related
     financial management expertise.

KEY RESPONSIBILITIES

The  Committee's  job is one of oversight and it  recognizes  that the Company's
management is responsible for preparing the Company's  financial  statements and
that  the  outside   auditors  are  responsible  for  auditing  those  financial
statements.  Additionally,  the Committee recognizes that financial  management,
including  the internal  audit staff,  if any, as well as the outside  auditors,
have more time,  knowledge and more detailed  information on the Company than do
Committee members; consequently, in carrying out its oversight responsibilities,
the  Committee  is not  providing  any  expert or  special  assurance  as to the
Company's  financial  statements  or any  professional  certification  as to the
outside auditor's work.

The  following  functions  shall  be  the  common  recurring  activities  of the
Committee in carrying out its oversight function.  These functions are set forth
as a guide with the understanding that the Committee may diverge from this guide
as appropriate given the circumstances.

o    As a whole,  or through a Committee  representative,  the  Committee  shall
     review with  management  and the  outside  auditors  the audited  financial
     statements to be included in the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K (or
     the Annual Report to  Shareholders  if  distributed  prior to the filing of
     Form 10-K) and review and  consider  with the outside  auditors the matters
     required to be discussed by Statement of Auditing Standards ("SAS") No. 61.

<PAGE>

o    As a whole,  or through a Committee  representative,  the  Committee  shall
     review with the outside auditors the Company's interim financial results to
     be included in the Company's  quarterly reports to be filed with Securities
     and Exchange Commission and the matters required to be discussed by SAS No.
     61; this review will occur prior to the Company's filing of the Form 10-Q.

o    The Committee  shall discuss with  management  and the outside  auditors at
     regularly held Audit  Committee  meetings,  or at such other time as deemed
     appropriate, the quality and adequacy of the Company's internal controls.

o    The Committee shall request from the outside  auditors  annually,  a formal
     written statement delineating all relationships between the auditor and the
     Company  consistent  with  Independence  Standards Board Standard Number 1;
     discuss with the outside  auditors  any such  disclosed  relationships  and
     their impact on the outside auditor's independence;  and recommend that the
     Board take  appropriate  action to oversee the  independence of the outside
     auditor.

o    The  Committee,  subject to any action that may be taken by the full Board,
     shall have the ultimate  authority and  responsibility to select,  evaluate
     and, where appropriate, replace the outside auditor.

<PAGE>

                                  FOSSIL, INC.
                            2280 N. Greenville Avenue

                             Richardson, Texas 75082

          THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

     The undersigned  hereby appoints T.R. Tunnell and Randy S. Kercho, and each
of them, as proxies,  each with the power to appoint his substitute,  and hereby
authorizes them to represent and vote, as designated below, all of the shares of
the  common  stock of  Fossil,  Inc.  (the  "Company"),  held of  record  by the
undersigned  on March 31, 2000,  at the Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  of the
Company to be held on May 24, 2000, and any adjournment(s) thereof.

                    [To Be Dated And Signed On Reverse Side]

<PAGE>

     THIS PROXY,  WHEN PROPERLY  EXECUTED AND DATED, WILL BE VOTED IN THE MANNER
DIRECTED HEREIN BY THE UNDERSIGNED STOCKHOLDER(S). IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE, THIS
PROXY WILL BE VOTED "FOR" THE ELECTION OF THE NOMINEES  UNDER  PROPOSAL 1, "FOR"
PROPOSAL  2, AND,  THE PROXIES  WILL USE THEIR  DISCRETION  WITH  RESPECT TO ANY
MATTERS REFERRED TO IN PROPOSAL 3.

     1. PROPOSAL TO ELECT THREE (3) DIRECTORS OF THE COMPANY TO SERVE FOR A TERM
OF THREE YEARS OR UNTIL THEIR RESPECTIVE SUCCESSORS ARE ELECTED AND QUALIFIED.

          [ ]     FOR all nominees listed
                  (except as marked below to the contrary)

          [ ]     WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for all nominees listed

                            Kosta N. Kartsotis
                               Alan J. Gold
                             Michael Steinberg

     (INSTRUCTION:  To withhold  authority to vote for any  individual  nominee,
write that nominee's name in the space provided below.)


     2.  PROPOSAL TO INCREASE THE NUMBER OF  AUTHORIZED  SHARES OF COMMON STOCK,
PAR VALUE $0.01 PER SHARE OF THE COMPANY FROM  50,000,000  SHARES TO 100,000,000
SHARES.

              [ ]      FOR     [ ]       AGAINST        [ ]       ABSTAIN


     3. IN THEIR DISCRETION,  THE PROXIES ARE AUTHORIZED TO VOTE UPON SUCH OTHER
BUSINESS AS MAY PROPERLY COME BEFORE THE MEETING.

              [ ]      FOR     [ ]       AGAINST        [ ]       ABSTAIN

<PAGE>

                             Dated ____________________, 2000


                             ---------------------------------------------------
                             Signature

                             ---------------------------------------------------
                             Signature, If Held Jointly

     Please execute this proxy as your name appears hereon. When shares are held
by joint  tenants,  both  should  sign.  When  signing  as  attorney,  executor,
administrator,  trustee  or  guardian,  please  give  full  title as such.  If a
corporation,  please  sign in full  corporate  name by the  president  or  other
authorized  officer.  If a  partnership,  please  sign  in  partnership  name by
authorized person.  PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THIS PROXY PROMPTLY USING
THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.



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