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                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
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                    INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

          PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(a) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OFof the Securities
                              Exchange Act of 1934

Filed by the Registrantregistrant [X]

Filed by a Partyparty other than the Registrantregistrant [ ]

Check the appropriate box:

                                            
[ ]  Preliminary Proxy Statementproxy statement               [ ]  Confidential, for useUse of the Commission
                                               Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[X]  Definitive Proxy Statementproxy statement
[ ]  Definitive Additional Materialsadditional materials
[ ]  Soliciting Material Pursuantmaterial pursuant to sec.240.14a-11(c)Rule 14a-11(c) or sec.240.14a-12Rule 14a-12
Venator Group, Inc.VENATOR GROUP, INC. - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)(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. [ ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11. (1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies: ------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ (3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined): ------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (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 itsthe filing. (1) Amount previously paid:Previously Paid: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ (2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ (3) Filing Party: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ (4) Date Filed: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2 [VENATOR GROUP LOGO] June 15, 1999April 27, 2000 Dear Shareholder: We are pleasedIt is a pleasure to invite you to attend the 19992000 annual meeting of shareholders of Venator Group, Inc., which will be held on Friday, July 16, 1999,Thursday, June 8, 2000, at 1:10:00 P.M.A.M., local time, at the headquarters of our Champs Sports division located at 311 ManateeTappan Hill, 81 Highland Avenue, West, Bradenton, Florida 34205.Tarrytown, New York 10591. The items to be considered and voted on at the meeting are described in the notice of the 19992000 annual meeting of shareholders and proxy statement accompanying this letter. We understand that youRecord holders may receivevote their shares by using a toll-free telephone number or via the Internet. Please see the enclosed proxy soliciting materials from Greenway Partners, L.P. ("Greenway")card for instructions on using these convenient methods. You may also vote your shares by completing the enclosed proxy card and mailing it in connection with items Greenway intends to presentthe envelope provided or by voting in person by ballot at the meeting. These items are a slate of directors chosen by Greenway and proposals relating to a changeYour vote is important regardless of the Company's name and the Company's Shareholder Rights Plan. The Boardnumber of Directors believes that these proposals are not in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders and urgesshares you own. We encourage you to vote against these proposals. If you plan to attend the annual meeting, please mark the appropriate box on the enclosed WHITE proxy card and return your completed WHITE proxy card promptly so we can mail an admission ticket to you. If your shares are not registered inas soon as possible. Thank you for your own name and you would like to attend the meeting, please ask the broker, trust, bank or other nominee that holds the shares to provide you with evidence of your share ownership, as of the record date, in order to be admitted to the meeting. Attendance at the meeting will be limited to shareholders as of the record date (or authorized representatives) having an admission ticket or evidence of their share ownership, and guests of the Company. YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT. WE ENCOURAGE YOU TO VOTE YOUR SHARES AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS OR NEED ASSISTANCE IN VOTING YOUR SHARES, PLEASE CALL OUR PROXY SOLICITOR, INNISFREE M&A INCORPORATED, TOLL FREE AT 1-888-750-5834. SINCERELY,continued support. Sincerely, /s/ Roger N. Farah /s/ Dale W. Hilpert ROGER N. FARAH DALE W. HILPERT Chairman of the Board and President and Chief Executive Officer Chief Operating Officer
3 TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE ---- GENERAL Notice of Meeting........................................... 1 Voting and Revocability of Proxies..........................General Information......................................... 2 Admission to the Meeting.................................... 2 Outstanding Voting Stock.................................... 2 Vote Required............................................... 3 Method of Counting Votes.................................... 3 Method and Cost of Proxy Solicitation....................... 3 Beneficial Ownership of the Company's Stock................. 5How to Vote Your Shares..................................... 3 Revoking Your Proxy......................................... 4 BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF THE COMPANY'S STOCK................. 4 Directors and Executive Officers.......................... 54 Persons Owning More than Five Percent of the Company's Stock.................................................. 6 Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance.....Compliance... 7 Corporate Governance........................................CORPORATE GOVERNANCE........................................ 7 Board of Directors.......................................... 9BOARD OF DIRECTORS.......................................... 8 Organization and Powers................................... 98 Committees of the Board of Directors...................... 9 Audit Committee........................................ 9 Acquisitions and Finance Committee..................... 9 Compensation Committee................................. 9 Executive Committee.................................... 109 Nominating and Organization Committee.................. 109 Retirement Investment Committee........................ 10 Directors Compensation and Benefits....................... 10 Directors and Officers Indemnification and Insurance...... 1110 Transactions with Management and Others................... 11 PROPOSAL 1 -- ELECTION OF DIRECTORS.........................EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION...................................... 12 Nominees.................................................. 12 Directors Continuing in Office............................ 13 Executive Compensation...................................... 15 Summary Compensation Table................................ 1512 Long-Term Incentive Plan -- Awards in Last Fiscal Year.... 1615 Option Grants in Last Fiscal Year......................... 17 Aggregated Option Exercises in Last Fiscal Year and Fiscal Year-End Option Values................................. 18 Retirement Plans.......................................... 18 Employment Contracts and Termination of Employment and Change-in-Control Arrangements......................... 20 Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation.......................................... 2223 Compensation Committee Report............................. 22Committee's Report to Shareholder on Executive Compensation................................. 23 Performance Graphs........................................ 2627 PROPOSAL 1 -- ELECTION OF DIRECTORS......................... 28 Nominees for Directors.................................... 29 Directors Continuing in Office............................ 30 PROPOSAL 2 -- RATIFICATION OF THE APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS............................................... 27 Greenway Solicitation....................................... 2831 PROPOSAL 3 -- GREENWAY PROPOSAL RELATING TO CHANGE IN NAME...................................................... 29AMENDMENT OF 1998 STOCK OPTION AND AWARD PLAN...................................................... 31 PROPOSAL 4 -- GREENWAYREAPPROVAL OF PERFORMANCE GOALS AND AMENDMENT OF ANNUAL INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PLAN..................... 33 PROPOSAL RELATING TO RIGHTS PLAN..... 30 Participants in the Solicitation............................ 32 Deadlines for Nominations and Shareholder Proposals......... 33 Other Business.............................................. 33 Appendix5 -- APPROVAL OF THE DIRECTORS STOCK OPTION PLAN... 35 DEADLINES FOR NOMINATIONS AND SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS......... 38 OTHER BUSINESS.............................................. 38 APPENDIX A.................................................. A-1 APPENDIX B.................................................. B-1 APPENDIX C.................................................. C-1
4 VENATOR GROUP, INC. 233 BROADWAY112 WEST 34TH STREET NEW YORK, NEW YORK 1027910120 NOTICE OF 19992000 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS DATE: July 16, 1999June 8, 2000 TIME: 1:10:00 P.M.A.M., local time PLACE: Champs Sports, 311 ManateeTappan Hill, 81 Highland Avenue, West, Bradenton, Florida 34205Tarrytown, New York 10591 RECORD DATE: June 7, 1999
The meeting is being held for the following purposes: 1. To elect four directors in Class II to serve for three-year terms expiring at the 2002 annual meeting of shareholders. The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR the election of the existing director nominees proposed for reelection by the Company, as described in the Company's proxy statement. 2.Shareholders of record on April 24, 2000 can vote at this meeting. ANNUAL REPORT: Our 1999 Annual Report, which is not part of the proxy soliciting material, is enclosed. ITEMS OF BUSINESS: (1) To elect three members to the Board of Directors to serve for three-year terms, and one member to the Board of Directors to serve for a one-year term. (2) To ratify the appointment of KPMG LLP as our independent auditors for the 2000 fiscal year. (3) To approve amendments to the 1998 Stock Option and Award Plan. (4) To approve amendments to the Annual Incentive Compensation Plan and to reapprove the plan's performance goals. (5) To approve the Venator Group Directors Stock Option Plan. (6) To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting and at any adjournment or postponement. PROXY VOTING: Your vote is important to us. Please vote in one of these ways: (1) use the toll-free telephone number shown on your proxy card, (2) visit the web site listed on your proxy card to vote via the Internet, (3) follow the instructions on your proxy materials if your shares are held in street name, or (4) complete and promptly return your proxy card in the enclosed postage-paid envelope. Even if you plan to attend the annual meeting, we encourage you to vote in advance using one of these methods. GARY M. BAHLER Secretary April 27, 2000 1 5 VENATOR GROUP, INC. 112 WEST 34TH STREET NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10120 PROXY STATEMENT GENERAL INFORMATION We are providing these proxy materials to you in connection with the solicitation of proxies by the Board of Directors of KPMG LLP as independent accountants of the CompanyVenator Group, Inc. for the 1999 fiscal year. The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR this proposal. 3. To vote on certain proposals of Greenway Partners, L.P., if properly presented, as described in the Company's proxy statement relating to (i) a change in the Company's name and (ii) the Company's Rights Plan. The Board of Directors recommends a vote AGAINST each of these proposals. 4. To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting, or at any adjournments or any postponements thereof. The above matters are more fully described in the accompanying proxy statement. By Order of the Board of Directors GARY M. BAHLER Secretary June 15, 1999 1 5 VENATOR GROUP, INC. 233 BROADWAY NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10279 PROXY STATEMENT This proxy statement is being furnished to shareholders of Venator Group, Inc., a New York corporation (the "Company"), in connection with the solicitation by the Board of Directors of proxies to be voted at the2000 annual meeting of shareholders to be held on July 16, 1999, and atfor any adjournments or postponements thereof. Thisof this meeting. We are holding this annual meeting on June 8, 2000 at 10:00 A.M. In this proxy statement we refer to Venator Group, Inc. as "the Company," "we," or "us." We intend to mail this proxy statement and the proxy card are first being mailed to shareholders beginning on or about June 15, 1999.April 27, 2000. The Company's Annual Report for the fiscal year ended January 30, 1999 ("1998") has been mailed to each shareholder of record. You may obtain without charge a copy of the Company's 1998 Form 10-K, exclusive of certain exhibits, by writing to the Investor Relations Department, Venator Group, Inc., 233 Broadway, New York, New York 10279. The enclosed WHITE proxy card shows the number of shares of Common Stock registered in the name of each shareholder of record on June 7, 1999. Proxies furnished to employeesApril 24, 2000, the record date for the annual meeting. Proxy cards also show, if applicable, the number of shares held in the Company's 401(k) Plan, if applicable. Greenway Partners, L.P. ("Greenway") has nominated four individuals for election to the Board of Directors in opposition to the Company's nominees for election to the Board of Directors. Greenway also has stated that it intends to present proposals concerning (i) a non-binding recommendation that the Company change its name and (ii) a non-binding recommendation concerning the termination of the Shareholder Rights Plan (the "Greenway Proposals"). Accordingly, the Board of Directors is soliciting votes FOR the Company's slate of nominees for election to the Board of Directors, FOR the ratification of the appointment of KPMG LLP as independent accountants for the 1999 fiscal year ("1999") and AGAINST the Greenway Proposals.Plan. Unless contrary instructions are indicatedmarked on the WHITE proxy card, all shares represented by valid proxies received pursuant tothrough this solicitation (and not revoked) will be voted FOR the election of all of the Company's nominees for directors named in this proxy statement, FOR the ratification of the appointment of KPMG LLP as independent accountants for 19992000, FOR the amendments to the 1998 Stock Option and AGAINSTAward Plan, FOR the two Greenway Proposals.re-approval of the performance goals and the amendment to the Annual Incentive Compensation Plan; and FOR the approval of the Venator Group Directors Stock Option Plan. If you specify a different choice on the proxy card, your shares will be voted as specified. VOTING AND REVOCABILITY OF PROXIES You are urgedmay obtain without charge a copy of the Company's 1999 Form 10-K, excluding certain exhibits, by writing to signour Investor Relations Department at Venator Group, Inc., 112 West 34th Street, New York, New York 10120. ADMISSION TO THE MEETING Attendance at the meeting will be limited to shareholders as of the record date (or their authorized representatives) having an admission ticket or evidence of their share ownership, and dateguests of the enclosed WHITE proxy card and return it in the enclosed prepaid envelope whether or notCompany. If you plan to attend the meeting. A shareholdermeeting, please mark the appropriate box on your proxy card, and we will mail an admission ticket to you. You may revoke any proxy (whether such proxy was solicitedalso request an admission ticket if you are voting by telephone or via the Company orInternet by Greenway) at any time prior to its use by submittingresponding to the Companyappropriate prompts offered in those methods. If your shares are held in the name of a bank, broker, or other holder of record and you plan to Greenway a written revocation or duly executed proxy bearing a later date. In addition, any shareholder who attendsattend the meeting, you can obtain an admission ticket in person may voteadvance by ballotproviding proof of your ownership, such as a bank or brokerage account statement, to the Corporate Secretary at Venator Group, Inc., 112 West 34th Street, New York, New York 10120. If you do not obtain an admission ticket, you must show proof of your ownership of the Company's Common Stock at the meeting, thereby canceling any proxy previously given.registration tables at the door. OUTSTANDING VOTING STOCK The only voting securities of the CompanyVenator Group are the shares of Common Stock. Only shareholders of record on the books of the Company at the close of business on June 7, 1999April 24, 2000 are entitled to vote at the annual meeting and any adjournments or postponements thereof.postponements. Each share is entitled to one vote. There were 137,363,467137,578,699 shares of Common Stock outstanding on the record date. Under the Company'sour By-laws, the holders of a majority of the shares entitled to vote thereatat the meeting must be present in person or by proxy to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. 2 6 VOTE REQUIRED Director nominees who receive the greatest number of votes cast at the meeting willDirectors must be elected as directors.by a plurality of the votes cast. The affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the votes cast at the meeting will be required to approve each other proposal. METHOD OF COUNTING VOTES Votes will be counted and certified by independent inspectors of election. Under the rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"), boxes and a designated blank space are provided on the proxy card for you to mark if you wish to vote "for" or "against" or "abstain" from voting on one or more of the proposals, or to withhold authority to vote for one or more of the nominees for director. New York law and the Company'sour By-laws require the presence of a quorum at the annual meeting. Under New York law, abstentions are not counted in determining the votes cast for any proposal. Votes withheld in connection withfor the election of one or more of the nominees for director will not be counted as votes cast for those individuals. Broker non-votes, which occur when brokers do not receive voting instructions from their customers on non-routine matters and, consequently, have no discretion to vote on those matters, are not counted as votes cast for any proposal. The Company's Certificate of Incorporation and By-laws do not contain any provisions with respect toon the effect of abstentions or broker non-votes. METHOD AND COST OF PROXY SOLICITATION Proxies may be solicited, without additional compensation, by directors, officers or employees of the Company by mail, telephone, facsimile, telegram, in person or otherwise. The CompanyWe will bear the cost of the solicitation of proxies, including the preparation, printing and mailing of the proxy materials. In addition, the Companywe will request banks, brokers and other custodians, nominees and fiduciaries to forwarddeliver proxy material to the beneficial owners of the Company's stock and obtain their voting instructions. The Company will reimburse those firms for their expenses in accordance with the rules of the SECSecurities and Exchange Commission and the New York Stock Exchange. In addition, the Company has retained Innisfree M&A Incorporated ("Innisfree") to assist in the solicitation of proxies for a fee of $100,000$12,500 plus out of pocket expenses. Innisfree will employ approximately 75 people to solicitHOW TO VOTE YOUR SHARES VOTE BY TELEPHONE You can vote your shares by telephone by calling the Company's shareholders. Expenses related to the solicitation of shareholders, in excess of those normally spent for an annual meeting, are expected to aggregate approximately $500,000, of which approximately $75,000 has been spent to date. Appendix A sets forth certain information relating to the Company's directors, nominees, officerstoll-free telephone number on your proxy card. Telephone voting is available 24 hours a day and other employees of the Company who will be soliciting proxiesaccessible until 12:01 A.M. on June 8, 2000. The voice prompts allow you to vote your shares and confirm that your instructions have been properly recorded. Our telephone voting procedures are designed to authenticate shareholders by using individual control numbers. If you vote by telephone, you can request an admission ticket for the Company's behalf ("Participants").annual meeting. IF YOU VOTE BY TELEPHONE, YOU DO NOT NEED TO RETURN YOUR PROXY CARD. IF YOU ARE LOCATED OUTSIDE THE U.S. AND CANADA, PLEASE SEE YOUR PROXY CARD FOR ADDITIONAL INSTRUCTIONS. IF YOU ARE AN OWNER IN STREET NAME, PLEASE FOLLOW THE INSTRUCTIONS THAT ACCOMPANY YOUR PROXY MATERIALS. VOTE BY INTERNET You can also choose to vote via the Internet. The web site for Internet voting is listed on your proxy card. Internet voting is available 24 hours a day and will be accessible until 12:01 A.M. on June 8, 2000. As with telephone voting, you will be given the opportunity to confirm that your instructions have been properly recorded, and you can also request an admission ticket for the annual meeting. IF YOU VOTE VIA THE INTERNET, YOU DO NOT NEED TO RETURN YOUR PROXY CARD. IF YOU ARE AN OWNER IN STREET NAME, PLEASE FOLLOW THE INSTRUCTIONS THAT ACCOMPANY YOUR PROXY MATERIALS. VOTE BY MAIL If you choose to vote by mail, simply mark your proxy, date and sign it, and return it in the postage-paid envelope provided. 3 7 YOUR VOTEVOTING AT THIS YEAR'STHE ANNUAL MEETING IS ESPECIALLY IMPORTANT. PLEASE SIGN AND DATE THE ENCLOSED WHITE PROXY CARD AND RETURN IT IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE PROMPTLY. WE URGE YOU NOT TO SIGN OR RETURN ANY PROXY CARD THAT MAY BE SENT TO YOU BY GREENWAY, EVEN AS A PROTEST VOTE AGAINST GREENWAY. IfYou may also vote by ballot at the annual meeting if you previously voted on a Greenway proxy card, you have every legal rightdecide to change your vote. You can do so simply by signing, dating and returning the enclosed WHITE proxy card. ONLY YOUR LATEST DATED PROXY CARD WILL COUNT. IMPORTANT:attend in person. If your shares of the Company's stock are held in the name of a brokerage firm, bank, nomineebroker or other institution, only it canholder of record, you must obtain a proxy, executed in your favor, from the holder of record to be able to vote at the meeting. All shares that have been properly voted -- whether by telephone, Internet or mail, and not revoked -- will be voted at the annual meeting. If you sign a WHITEand return your proxy card with respectbut do not give voting instructions, the shares represented by that proxy will be voted as recommended by the Board of Directors. VOTING ON OTHER MATTERS If any other matters are properly presented at the annual meeting for consideration, the persons named in the proxy will have the discretion to your shares and only upon specific instructions fromvote on those matters for you. Please contactAt the person responsible for your account and give instructions for a WHITE proxy carddate this Proxy Statement went to press, we did not know of any other matter to be signed representingraised at the annual meeting. REVOKING YOUR PROXY You may revoke your shares of the Company's stock. We urge youproxy at any time prior to confirm in writing your instructionsits use by submitting to the Company a written revocation, submitting a duly executed proxy bearing a later date, or providing subsequent telephone or Internet voting instructions. In addition, any shareholder who attends the meeting in person responsible for your account and to provide a copy of such instructions to the Company's proxy solicitor, Innisfree,may vote by ballot at the address indicated below so that Innisfree can attempt to ensure that your instructions are followed. If you havemeeting, which would cancel any questions about executing your proxy or require assistance, please contact: INNISFREE M&A INCORPORATED 501 Madison Avenue, 20th Floor New York, New York 10022 Call Toll Free: (888) 750-5834 Banks and Brokerage Firms please call collect: (212) 750-5833 4 8previously given. BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF THE COMPANY'S STOCK DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS The following table below sets forth, as reported to the Company, the number of shares of Common Stock beneficially owned as of June 1, 1999,April 12, 2000, by each of the directors, the nominee for director, and the named executive officers. The table also shows the beneficial ownership of the Company's stock by all directors, the nominee for director, the named executive officers and the executive officers as a group on that date, including shares of Common Stock that they have a right to acquire within 60 days after June 1, 1999April 12, 2000 by the exercise of options that have been granted under the Company's stock option plans. ExcludingOther than Roger N. Farah, no director, nominee for director, named executive directorofficer or executive officer beneficially owned one percent or more of the total number of outstanding shares of Common Stock as of June 1, 1999.April 12, 2000. Mr. Farah beneficially owned 1.011.15 percent as of this date. 4 8 Except as otherwise noted in a footnote below, each person has sole voting and investment power with respect to the number of shares shown.
AMOUNT AND NATURE OF BENEFICIAL NAME OWNERSHIP - ---- -------------------- J. Carter Bacot............................................. 4,4906,531 M. Jeffrey Branman.......................................... 226,773(a)204,911(a) Purdy Crawford.............................................. 11,78233,681 John E. DeWolf III.......................................... 106,666(b)83,524(b) Roger N. Farah.............................................. 1,380,979(c)1,589,488(c) S. Ronald Gaston............................................ 66,735(d) Philip H. Geier Jr. ........................................ 11,782Jr.......................................... 15,580 Jarobin Gilbert Jr. ........................................ 2,008Jr.......................................... 4,049 Bruce L. Hartman............................................ 138,002(e) Dale W. Hilpert............................................. 667,351(d) Reid Johnson................................................ 5,000845,053(f) Allan Z. Loren.............................................. 8884,686 Margaret P. MacKimm......................................... 5,9908,031 John J. Mackowski........................................... 6,85510,896 James E. Preston............................................ 25,915(e)39,998(g) David Y. Schwartz........................................... 4,000 Matthew D. Serra............................................ 294,959(h) Christopher A. Sinclair..................................... 3,8825,781 All 2122 directors, nominee for director, and executive officers as a group, including the named executive officers.................... 2,980,647(f)officers.................................................. 3,780,190(i)
- --------------- (a) Includes 40,000 shares of restricted stock granted on February 1, 1999; 141,666158,332 shares that may be acquired by the exercise of stock options; 29,786 shares issued on April 16, 1999 in payment of 50 percent of his long-term bonus for 1996-1998;options through May 29, 2000 and 275465 shares held in the Company's 401(k) Plan. (b) Includes 40,000 shares of restricted stock granted on February 1, 1999, and 66,66683,332 shares that may be acquired by the exercise of stock options. (c) Includes 275,000 shares of restricted stock granted on April 26, 1999; 115,488 shares issued on April 16, 1999 in payment of 50 percent of his long-term bonus for 1996-1998; 800,000 shares that may be acquired by the exercise of stock options;options through May 29, 2000 and 314192 shares held in the Company's 401(k) Plan. (d)(c) Includes 100,000 shares of restricted stock granted on February 1, 1999; 57,744 shares issued on April 16, 1999 in payment of 50 percent of his long-term bonus for 1996-1998; 499,9991,249,999 shares that may be acquired by the exercise of stock options and 2,239492 shares held in the Company's 401(k) Plan. (d) Includes 26,666 shares that may be acquired by the exercise of stock options and 69 shares held in the Company's 401(k) Plan. (e) Includes 70,832 shares that may be acquired by the exercise of stock options and 1,552 shares held in the Company's 401(k) Plan. (f) Includes 616,666 shares that may be acquired by the exercise of stock options and 3,274 shares held in the Company's 401(k) Plan. (g) Excludes 50 shares of Common Stock owned by Mr. Preston's stepchildren, with respect to which Mr. Preston disclaims beneficial ownership. (f)(h) Includes 83,333 shares that may be acquired by the exercise of stock options and 229 shares held in the Company's 401(k) Plan. (i) This figure represents approximately 2.172.75 percent of the shares of Common Stock outstanding at the close of business on June 1, 1999.April 12, 2000. It includes all of the shares referred to in footnotes (a) through (e) 5 9(h) above, a total of 316,961306,095 shares that may be acquired within 60 days after June 1, 1999April 12, 2000 by executive officers of the Company (excluding the named executive officers)officers and Mr. Serra) by the exercise of stock options, and 3,2203,756 shares held by executive officers (excluding the named executive officers)officers and Mr. Serra) in the Company's 401(k) Plan. 5 9 PERSONS OWNING MORE THAN FIVE PERCENT OF THE COMPANY'S STOCK Following is information with respect toregarding shareholders who beneficially own more than five percent of the Company's Common Stock. This information is derived fromStock according to documents filed by those shareholders with the SEC. To the best knowledge of the Company,our knowledge, there are no other shareholders who beneficially own more than five percent of a class of the Company's voting securities.
AMOUNT AND NAME AND ADDRESS NATURE OF BENEFICIAL PERCENT OF BENEFICIAL OWNER OWNERSHIP OF CLASS - ------------------- -------------------- -------- Greenway Partners, L.P. 19,649,612(a) 14.4%19,034,522(a) 13.8%(a) Greentree Partners, L.P. Greenhut, L.L.C., Greenbelt Corp., Greensea Offshore, L.P. Greenhouse Partners, L.P., Greenhut Overseas, L.L.C., Alfred D. Kingsley, and Gary K. Duberstein and Howard Stein 277 Park Avenue New York, NY 10172 and Andrew P. Hines (a) 100 Sea Horse Drive Waukegan, IL 60085 AXA AssuranceAssurances I.A.R.D. Mutuelle 13,684,101(b)14,321,236(b) 10.4%(b) and AXA Assurances Vie Mutuelle 21, rue de ChateaudinChateaudun 75009 Paris, France AXA Conseil Vie Assurance Mutuelle (b) 100-101 TerasseTerrasse Boieldieu 92042 Paris La Defense, France AXA Courtage Assurance Mutuelle (b) 26, rue Louis le Grand 75002 Paris, France The Equitable Companies IncorporatedAXA Financial, Inc. (b) 1290 Avenue of the Americas New York, New York 10104 AXA (b) 9 Place Vendome 75001 Paris, France Mellon BankFinancial Corporation 7,795,653(c) 5.74%9,167,400(c) 6.66%(c) One Mellon Bank Center Pittsburgh, PA 15258 Sasco Capital, Inc. 6,940,213(d) 5.1%8,087,392(d) 5.9%(d) 10 Sasco Hill Road Fairfield, CT 06430
- --------------- (a) Reflects shares beneficially owned as of April 30, 1999,March 13, 2000, according to Amendment No. 10 to a preliminary proxy statement dated April 30, 1999on Schedule 13D filed by Greenway Partners, L.P. with the SEC. As reported, Greenway Partners L.P. holds sole voting and dispositive power with respect to 2,350,000 shares; Greentree Partners L.P. holds sole voting and dispositive power with respect to 1,500,900 shares; Greenhouse Partners, L.P. holds shared voting and dispositive power with respect to 2,350,000 shares; Greenhut, L.L.C. holds shared 6 10sole voting and dispositive power with respect to 1,500,900 shares; Greenbelt Corp. holds sole voting and dispositive power with respect to 12,886,32212,101,322 shares; Greensea Offshore, L.P. holds sole voting and dispositive power with respect to 2,250,000 shares; Greenhut Overseas, L.L.C. holds shared voting and dispositive power with respect to 2,250,000 shares; Alfred D. Kingsley holds sole voting and dispositive power with respect to 541,800832,300 shares; Alfred D. Kingsley and Gary K. Duberstein hold shared voting and dispositive power with respect to 18,987,222 shares; Andrew P. Hines holds sole voting and dispositive power with respect to 590 shares; and Howard Stein holds sole voting and dispositive power with respect to 120,00018,202,222 shares. 6 10 (b) Reflects shares beneficially owned as of JanuaryMarch 31, 19992000 according to Amendment No. 4 to a statement on Schedule 13G filed with the SEC. As reported, in the 13G, the parent holding companies -- AXA Assurances I.A.R.D. Mutuelle, AXA Assurances Vie Mutuelle, AXA Conseil Vie Assurance Mutuelle, AXA Courtage Assurance Mutuelle, AXA and AXA --Financial, Inc. hold sole voting power with respect to 1,020,101523,476 shares; sole dispositive power with respect to 13,257,00114,321,236 shares; shared voting power with respect to 12,632,900 shares and shared dispositive power with respect to 427,100 shares. The Equitable Companies Incorporated, a parent holding company, holds sole voting power with respect to 590,001 shares; sole dispositive power with respect to 13,254,001 shares and shared voting power with respect to 12,632,90013,734,800 shares. (c) Reflects shares beneficially owned as of December 31, 1998,1999, according to Amendment No. 1 to a statement on Schedule 13G filed with the SEC. Mellon BankFinancial Corporation, a parent holding company, reported that it holds sole voting power with respect to 6,138,2127,010,681 shares; sole dispositive power with respect to 7,501,6558,394,387 shares; shared voting power with respect to 841321,641 shares and shared dispositive power with respect to 107,243686,113 shares. All of the shares are held by Mellon Bank Corporation and its direct or indirect subsidiaries of Mellon Bank Corporation in their various fiduciary capacities. (d) Reflects shares beneficially owned as of February 22,December 31, 1999 according to Amendment No. 2 to a statement on Schedule 13G filed with the SEC. Sasco Capital, Inc. reported that it has beneficial ownershipsole voting power with respect to direct the disposition of 6,940,2134,299,800 shares and has the sole dispositive power with respect to vote 4,294,6218,087,392 shares. SECTION 16(a)16(A) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the "Exchange Act") requires that the Company's directors, executive officers and beneficial owners of more than 10 percent of the Company's Common Stock file with the SEC and the New York Stock Exchange reports of ownership and changes in ownership of Common Stock and other equity securities of the Company. These persons are required by SEC rules to furnish the Companyus with copies of all Section 16(a) forms they file. Based solely on a review of the copies of those reports furnished to the Company or written representations that no other reports were required, the Company believes that during the 19981999 fiscal year, the directors, executive officers and beneficial owners of more than 10 percent of the Company's Common Stock complied with all applicable SEC filing requirements. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE The following is a summary of the Company'sour principal corporate governance practices and policies. INDEPENDENT BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND COMMITTEES Only two of the 11 current members of the Board of Directors also serve as officers of the Company, and at present, all of the committees of the Board (other than the Executive Committee and the Retirement Administration Committee) are composed entirely of outside directors. All members of the Compensation Committee are directors meeting the criteria established for outside directors in the regulations under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Internal Revenue Code"), and for non-employee directors under Section 16 of the Exchange Act. The Audit Committee is composed entirely of non- employee directors, as required by the rules of the New York Stock Exchange.non-employee directors. At least once a year, the outside directors meet without the presence of management. 7 11 PAYMENT OF DIRECTORS FEES IN STOCK Under the Directors' Stock Plan, one-half of the annual fee payable to directors for their Board service is paid in shares of the Company's Common Stock, with the balance payablepaid in cash. Directors may elect to receive up to 100 percent of their fees in stock. DIRECTOR RETIREMENT The Company'sOur retirement policy for directors is that no person may be nominated or stand for election as a director after reaching age 72. The Company discontinued its retirement plan for directorsthe Directors Retirement Plan in 1995, and only four of the current directors, who were then serving and had at least five years of service, will receive payments under that plan. Mr. Mackowski and Mrs. MacKimm, who are retiring as directors at this annual meeting, are eligible to receive benefits under the plan. In the eventDirectors Retirement Plan. If a non-employee director of the Company changes his or her principal business position or affiliation, including through retirement, the Board of Directors reviews and considers the 7 11 appropriateness of the individual's continued participation as a member of the Board under those changed circumstances. As discussed below under the caption "GREENWAY SOLICITATION -- Election of Directors," the Company will not apply the retirement policy in connection with Greenway's nomination of Howard Stein, who is 72 years of age. CONFIDENTIAL VOTING The Company has a policy that our shareholders be provided privacy in voting. All proxy cards, voting instructions, ballots and voting tabulations identifying shareholders are held permanently confidential from the Company, except as (i) as necessary to meet any applicable legal requirements, (ii) when disclosure is expressly requested by a shareholder or where a shareholder makes a written comment on a proxy card, (iii) in a contested proxy solicitation, or (iv) to allow independent election inspectors to tabulate and certify the vote. The tabulators and inspectors of election are independent and are not employees of the Company. In the event that Greenway solicits proxies in support of its slate of nominees and in support of the Greenway Proposals, there will be a contested proxy solicitation within the meaning of the Company's confidential voting policy. SHAREHOLDER RIGHTS PLAN The Company has had a Shareholder Rights Plan in place since 1988 and, last year,in 1998, the Board of Directors adopted a new Rights Plan along the lines of the Plan originally adopted in 1988.original Plan. The Board recently adopted certain amendments last year to the Rights Plan that would make the Rights Plan inapplicable to certain kinds of offers to purchase all of the Company's Common Stock that meet the criteria specified for "qualifying offers." In general, the requirements for a qualifying offer are as follows: - The person making the offer to purchase the stock (the "Offeror") has provided firm written financial commitments from responsible financial institutions for any cash portion of the purchase price and the opinion of a nationally recognized investment bank with respect to the value of any securities portion of the purchase price. - The offer to purchase the Company's Common Stock remains open for at least 120 days. - The Offeror makes an irrevocable written commitment (1) to purchase those shares that were not acquired through the original offer for the same price paid for the shares that were acquired through the original offer, (2) that the Offeror will not materially amend the offer except to increase the offering price, and (3) that the Offeror will not make any offer for the Company's stock for six months after the commencement of the original offer. - After the consummation of the transaction, the Offeror owns at least 80 percent of the outstanding Common Stock. In addition, the Independent Directors, defined in the Rights Plan as directors who are not current or former officers of the Company, holders of five percent or more of the Company's shares, or the persons 8 12 making the tender offer, have the discretion to shorten the time periods related to the qualifying offer provisions. BOARD OF DIRECTORS ORGANIZATION AND POWERS The Board of Directors has responsibility for establishing broad corporate policies, reviewing significant developments affecting the Company,Venator Group, and monitoring the general performance of the Company. The Company'sOur By-laws provide for a Board of Directors consisting of not less than 9 nor more than 17 directors, the exact number to be determined, from time to time, by resolution adopted by a majority of the entire Board. The size of the Board is presently fixed at 11 directors. Immediately upon Mrs. MacKimm's and Mr. Mackowski's retirement from the Board and upon the election of Mr. Schwartz to the Board, the size of the Board will be fixed at 10 directors. In 19992000 the Board of Directors is scheduled to hold six regular meetings. During 1998,1999 the Board held eight meetings. During 1998,12 meetings, and each director, other than Allan Z. Loren,Philip H. Geier Jr., attended at least 75 percent of the aggregate total 8 12 number of meetings of the Board and of meetings held by all committees of which he or she was a member. Because Mr. LorenGeier attended 73 percent of the meetings of the Board and committees of which he was unable to attend two non-regular meetings, his attendance fell below 75 percent.a member. COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS The Board has delegated certain duties to committees, which assist the Board in carrying out its responsibilities. Each director serves on one or moreat least two committees. There are six standing committees of the Board. The committee memberships, the number of meetings held in 1998,during 1999, and the functions of the committees are described below. AUDIT COMMITTEE. The members of the committee are John J. Mackowski (Chairman), Purdy Crawford, Jarobin Gilbert Jr. and Allan Z. Loren. The committee met fivesix times during 1998.1999. The committee evaluates and reviews such matters as the Company's systems of internal accounting controls and the scope and results of the Company's internal audit procedures. The committee also recommends to the Board the appointment of the Company's independent accountants, reviews the scope and results of their audit and approves their audit and non-audit fees. The committee has direct channels of communication with the Company's independent accountants and internal audit staff, including meeting with them, both with and without the presence of Company management, to discuss and review issues as appropriate. The committee also meets with the Company's financial personnel and general counsel to review their various activities and findings. While it is the responsibility of management to design and implement an effective system of internal accounting controls, it is the responsibility of the committee to ensure that management has done so. It is also the responsibility of the committee to review periodically the adequacy, management and effectiveness of the Company's information systems. ACQUISITIONS AND FINANCE COMMITTEE. The members of the committee are J. Carter Bacot (Chairman), James E. Preston and Christopher A. Sinclair. The committee held one meeting in 1998.three meetings during 1999. The committee considers proposals concerning mergers, combinations, acquisitions, sales, or offers to purchase the Company's shares or significant assets. In addition, the committee reviews certain proposed acquisitions by the Company of shares or assets of third parties, and it considers proposed debt or equity issues of the Company. In addition, the committee considers proposals concerning mergers, combinations, acquisitions, sales, or offers to purchase the Company's shares or significant assets. COMPENSATION COMMITTEE. The members of the committee are James E. Preston (Chairman), Philip H. Geier Jr. and Margaret P. MacKimm. The committee met three times during 1998.1999. The committee establishes and approves compensation plans and goals, salaries, incentives and other forms of compensation for the Company's officers and for certain other executives of the Company and its major subsidiaries and operating divisions. The committee administers the Annual Incentive Compensation Plan, the Long-Term Incentive Compensation Plan, the Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan, the 9 13 Executive Supplemental Retirement Plan, the Voluntary Deferred Compensation Plan, and may take certain actions with respect to the Trust (as defined on pagePage 22). The committee also administers the 1994 Venator Group Employees Stock Purchase Plan, administers and grants options under the 1995 Stock Option and Award Plan and the 1998 Stock Option and Award Plan and administers the 1986 Stock Option Plan and the Eastbay, Inc. 1994 Stock Incentive Plan. Members of the committee are not eligible to participate in any of these plans. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. The current members of the committee are Roger N. FarahMr. Hilpert (Chairman) and all of the non-employee directors. Mr. Farah was a member and Chairman of this committee until his resignation on April 12, 2000. The committee did not meet in 1998.during 1999. Except for certain matters reserved to the Board, the committee has all of the powers of the Board in the management of the business of the Company during intervals between Board meetings. NOMINATING AND ORGANIZATION COMMITTEE. The members of the committee are Jarobin Gilbert Jr. (Chairman), J. Carter Bacot and James E. Preston. The committee held one meeting in 1998.during 1999. 9 13 The committee makes recommendations to the Board with respect to the size and composition of the Board and the Company's internal organizational structure. In addition, the committee reviews the qualifications of candidates, and makes recommendations to the Board with respect to nominees, for election as directors. The committee may also consider nominees recommended by shareholders in accordance with the procedures described on page 33.Page 38. RETIREMENT INVESTMENT COMMITTEE. The members of the committee are Margaret P. MacKimm (Chairman), Purdy Crawford and John J. Mackowski. The committee met twothree times in 1998.during 1999. The committee has responsibility to supervise the investment of the assets of the retirement plans of the Company and to appoint, review the performance of and, if appropriate, replace, the trustee of the Company's pension trust and the managers responsible for managing the funds of such trust. In addition, the Board has established a Retirement Administration Committee, composed of certain officers of the Company, to which the Board has delegated certain administrative responsibilities with regard to the retirement plans of the Company. DIRECTORS COMPENSATION AND BENEFITS Non-employeeOur non-employee directors of the Company receive an annual retainer of $40,000. The committee chairmen receive an additional annual retainer of $3,000. No separate fees are paid for attendance at Board or committee meetings. One-half of the annual retainer is required to be paid in shares of the Company's Common Stock under the Directors' Stock Plan, with the balance payablepaid in cash. Directors may elect to receive up to 100 percent of their annual retainer in shares of stock. The number of shares received under the plan is determined by dividing the applicable retainer amount by the average price of a share of stock on the last business day preceding July 1 of each year. In addition,The Company also reimburses non-employee directors are reimbursed for their reasonable expenses in attending meetings of the Board and committees, including travel expenses to and from meetings. At this annual meeting we are seeking shareholder approval of the Directors Stock Option Plan, which provides for an initial grant to the non-employee directors of an option to purchase that number of shares of the Company's Common Stock having a market value of $50,000 on the date shareholders approve the plan and, thereafter, an annual stock option grant on the first business day of each fiscal year for that number of shares having a market value of $50,000 on the date of grant. The Directors' Retirement Plan was frozen as of December 31, 1995. Consequently, only four of the current directors, including the two directors who are retiring at this annual meeting, are entitled to receive a retirement benefit under this plan because they had completed at least five years of service as a director on the date the plan was frozen and they are not entitled to receive a retirement benefit under any of the Company's other retirement plans or programs. Under the Directors' Retirement Plan, an annual retirement benefit of $24,000 will be paid to a qualified director for the lesser of the number of years of his or her service as a director or 10 years. Payment of benefits under this plan generally begins on the later of the director's termination of service as a director or the attainment of age 65. Directors with less than five years of service at December 31, 1995 and directors who are elected after this date are not eligible to participate in the Directors' Retirement Plan. At the Company's request, during 1998 Jarobin Gilbert Jr. served on the Supervisory Board of F.W. Woolworth Co. GmbH ("FWW Germany"), a former subsidiary of the Company. In connection with this service, Mr. Gilbert received a fee of DM 11,250 (approximately U.S. $6,325) and reimbursement for 10 14 reasonable expenses in attending meetings of the Supervisory Board. The Company sold FWW Germany in October 1998, and Mr. Gilbert's membership on the Supervisory Board ended at that time. Pursuant to a consulting arrangement with DBSS Group, Inc. ("DBSS"), of which Mr. Gilbert is the President and Chief Executive Officer, the Company paid a fee of $15,000 to DBSS for consulting services rendered by Mr. Gilbert during 1998 related to the Company's businesses in Germany. The Company and DBSS terminated this consulting arrangement following the Company's sale of FWW Germany in October 1998. DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS INDEMNIFICATION AND INSURANCE The Company hasWe have purchased directors and officers liability and corporation reimbursement insurance from National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa., The Great American Insurance Companies, The Chubb Group of Insurance Companies and Executive Risk Indemnity, Inc. These policies insure the Company and all of the Company's wholly owned subsidiaries. They also insure all of the directors and officers of the Company and the covered subsidiaries. The policies were written for a term of 36 months, from September 12, 1998 until September 12, 2001. The total annual premium for these policies is $419,903. Directors and officers of the Company, as well as all other employees with fiduciary responsibilities under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, are insured under policies issued by Federal Insurance Company and National Union Fire Insurance Company, which have a total premium of $104,249$97,500 for the 12-month period ending September 12, 1999. In accordance with the indemnification provisions of the Company's By-laws, the Company paid legal fees and expenses totaling approximately $58,265 during 1998 on behalf of certain of the Company's former officers who were named as individual defendants in the litigation captioned In re Woolworth Corporation Securities Class Action Litigation, which had been settled during 1998. The amounts paid in 1998 were covered under the Company's directors and officers liability insurance policies in effect during the applicable period.2000. 10 14 The Company has entered into indemnification agreements with its directors and executive officers, as approved by shareholders at the 1987 annual meeting. TRANSACTIONS WITH MANAGEMENT AND OTHERS The CompanyVenator Group and its subsidiaries have had transactions in the normal course of business with various other corporations, including certain corporations whose directors or officers are also directors of the Company. The amounts involved in these transactions have not been material in relation to the businesses of the Company or its subsidiaries, and it is believed that these amounts have not been material in relation to the businesses of the other corporations. In addition, it is believed that these transactions have been on terms no less favorable to the Company than if they had been entered into with disinterested parties. It is anticipated that transactions with such other corporations will continue in the future. The Company had a consulting arrangement with DBSS, of which Jarobin Gilbert Jr. is the President and Chief Executive Officer. Under this arrangement, Mr. Gilbert provided consulting services to the Company related to the Company's businesses in Germany. The Company and DBSS terminated this arrangement following the sale of FWW Germany in October 1998. During 1998, the Company paid fees of $15,000 to DBSS. Purdy Crawford is Honorary Counsel to the Canadian law firm of Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt, which provided legal services to the Company in 1998.1999. Mr. Crawford received no remuneration from the firm in 1998.1999. David Y. Schwartz provided consulting services to the Company during 1999, and the Company paid him $34,892 for those services. 11 15 PROPOSAL 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS The Company's Certificate of Incorporation provides that the members of the Board of Directors be divided into three classes serving staggered three-year terms, each class to be as nearly equal in number as the other two. The terms of the four directors who constitute Class II expire at the 1999 annual meeting upon the election and qualification of their successors. J. Carter Bacot, Purdy Crawford, Philip H. Geier Jr. and Dale W. Hilpert will be considered for election as directors in Class II, each to hold office for a three-year term expiring at the annual meeting in 2002. The seven remaining directors will continue in office, in accordance with their previous elections, until the expiration of the terms of their classes at the 2000 or 2001 annual meeting. Each nominee has been nominated by the Board of Directors for election and has consented to serve for the specified term. All of the nominees are presently serving as directors, having been elected to serve for their present terms at the annual meeting in 1996. If, prior to the annual meeting, any of the four nominees becomes unable to serve as a director for any reason, the persons designated as proxies on the enclosed proxy card will have full discretion to vote the shares represented by proxies held by them for another person to serve as a director in place of that nominee. Biographical information follows for each of the four nominees and for each of the seven other directors of the Company whose present terms as directors will continue after the 1999 annual meeting. Any reference to a person's tenure as a director of the Company includes service as a director of Venator Group Specialty, Inc. (formerly named F.W. Woolworth Co.) for the period prior to the 1989 share exchange between the Company and Venator Group Specialty, Inc. There are no family relationships among the directors or executive officers of the Company. THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR THE ELECTION TO THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF EACH OF THE COMPANY'S NOMINEES IDENTIFIED FOR REELECTION. NOMINEES FOR DIRECTORS TERMS EXPIRING IN 2002 [BACOT PHOTO] J. CARTER BACOT. Age 66. Director since 1993. Chairman of the Board of The Bank of New York Company, Inc. (bank holding company) and of The Bank of New York, its wholly owned subsidiary, from 1982 to February 7, 1998; Chief Executive Officer of The Bank of New York Company, Inc. and of The Bank of New York from 1982 to July 1, 1997. He is a trustee of Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company and a director of its subsidiaries, Atlantic Specialty Insurance Company and Centennial Insurance Company; and a director of The Bank of New York Company, Inc., Time Warner, Inc., Associates First Capital Corporation, Phoenix Home Life Mutual Insurance Company and United Way of New York City. He is also a Trustee of Hamilton College. [CRAWFORD PHOTO] PURDY CRAWFORD. Age 67. Director since 1995. Chairman of the Board of Imasco Limited (Canada) (consumer products and services) since 1987 and its Chief Executive Officer from 1987 to 1995. He is also Chairman of the Board of CT Financial Services Inc. and Canada Trustco Mortgage Company, both of which are financial services companies and subsidiaries of Imasco Limited. Mr. Crawford is a director of Camco Inc., Canadian National Railway Company, Inco Limited, Maple Leaf Foods Ltd., Petro-Canada and Nova Scotia Power Inc. He is Governor Emeritus of McGill University; Chancellor of Mount Allison University; a member of the Advisory Board of Oxford Frozen Foods Limited; and Honorary Counsel to the Canadian law firm of Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt.
12 16 [GEIER PHOTO] PHILIP H. GEIER JR. Age 64. Director since 1994. Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (advertising agencies and other marketing communication services) since 1980. He is a director of Fiduciary Trust Company International, AEA Investors, Inc. and the International Tennis Hall of Fame. He is also a member of the Board of Overseers and Managers of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, the Board of Overseers of Columbia Business School, and the Board of Trustees of the Whitney Museum of American Art. [HILPERT PHOTO] DALE W. HILPERT. Age 56. Director since 1995. The Company's President and Chief Operating Officer since May 15, 1995. Mr. Hilpert was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Payless Shoe Source division of The May Department Stores Company (retail merchants) from 1985 to April 1995.
DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE TERMS EXPIRING IN 2001 [FARAH PHOTO] ROGER N. FARAH. Age 46. Director since 1994. The Company's Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer since December 1994. Mr. Farah was President and Chief Operating Officer of R. H. Macy & Co., Inc. (retail merchants) from July 1994 to October 1994. He was Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Federated Merchandising Services, a division of Federated Department Stores, Inc. (retail merchants), from July 1991 to July 1994. He is a director of Liz Claiborne, Inc. and a member of the Undergraduate Executive Board of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. [PRESTON PHOTO] JAMES E. PRESTON. Age 66. Director since 1983. Chairman of the Board of Avon Products, Inc. (manufacture and sale of beauty and related products) from 1989 to May 6, 1999, and Chief Executive Officer of Avon Products, Inc. from 1989 to June 1998. He is a director of ARAMARK Corporation, Reader's Digest Association, the Cosmetic, Toiletry and Fragrance Association, and Project Hope; and a member of the Advisory Board of the Salvation Army of Greater New York. [SINCLAIR PHOTO] CHRISTOPHER A. SINCLAIR. Age 48. Director since 1995. Chairman of the Board of Caribiner International (business communications) since May 5, 1999 and Chief Executive Officer from December 22, 1998 to present. He was President of Caribiner International from December 22, 1998 to May 5, 1999. Mr. Sinclair was President and Chief Executive Officer of Quality Food Centers, Inc. (supermarket chain) from September 12, 1996 to March 1998. He was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Pepsi-Cola Company, a division of PepsiCo, Inc. ("PepsiCo") (beverages, snack foods and restaurants) from April 1996 to July 1996; and President and Chief Executive Officer of PepsiCo Foods and Beverages International, a division of PepsiCo, from 1993 to April 1996. He is a director of Caribiner International, Mattel, Inc. and the Amos Tuck School of Business Administration at Dartmouth College.
13 17 DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE TERMS EXPIRING IN 2000 [GILBERT PHOTO] JAROBIN GILBERT JR. Age 52. Director since 1981. President and Chief Executive Officer of DBSS Group, Inc. (management, planning and trade consulting services) since 1992. He is a director of Whitman Corp. and Midas, Inc. He is a trustee of Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company and a director of its subsidiaries, Atlantic Specialty Insurance Company and Centennial Insurance Company. Mr. Gilbert is also a director of Valley Agency for Youth, and a permanent member of the Council on Foreign Relations. [MacKIMM PHOTO] MARGARET P. MACKIMM. Age 65. Director since 1977. Senior Vice President -- Communications of Kraft Foods, Inc. (multinational marketer and processor of food products) and its predecessor, Kraft, Inc., from 1986 to 1989. She is a director of Chicago Title Corporation, The World Press Institute, and the Human Relations Foundation of Chicago. [LOREN PHOTO] ALLAN Z. LOREN. Age 61. Director since 1998. Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer of American Express Company (travel and financial services) since May 1994. He was President and Chief Executive Officer of Galileo International (global computer reservation system company) from 1991 to 1994. He is a director of Reynolds & Reynolds Company and Hershey Foods Corp. [MACKOWSKI PHOTO] JOHN J. MACKOWSKI. Age 73. Director since 1986. Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company and its subsidiary, Centennial Insurance Company (property, liability and marine insurance) from 1985 to 1988; and Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Atlantic Specialty Insurance Company (formerly Atlantic Reinsurance Company) (issuer of reinsurance contracts), a subsidiary of Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company, from 1986 to 1988. He is a director of Northern Trust Company of Connecticut, and of Transatlantic Holdings, Inc.
14 18 EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION The following Summary Compensation Table provides certain compensation information for the Company's Chief Executive Officer during 1998 and the four other most highly compensated executive officers of the Company at January 30, 1999, for services rendered in all capacities during 1998 and the fiscal years ended January 31, 1998 ("1997") and January 25, 1997 ("1996"). SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
LONG-TERM COMPENSATION ---------------------------------------- ANNUAL COMPENSATION LONG-TERM COMPENSATIONAWARDS PAYOUTS ---------------------------------- ----------------------- AWARDS --------------------------------------- --------- SECURITIES OTHER ANNUAL RESTRICTED UNDERLYING LTIP ALL OTHER SALARY BONUS COMPENSATION STOCK OPTION/SARS PAYOUTS COMPENSATION NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITIONPOSITION(A) YEAR ($) ($) ($) ($) (#) ($) ($) - --------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- ------- ------------ ---------- ----------- --------- ------------ Roger N. Farah(a)........... 1998 1,500,000 Dale W. Hilpert(b)............ 1999 883,712 0 3,884(b) 0 1,671,670(m) 6,032(c)957,500(c)(d) 500,000 0 19,383(e) Chairman of the Board and 1997 1,500,000 702,150 3,886(b) 0 0 5,610(c) Chief Executive Officer 1996 1,500,000 780,900 3,372(b) 0 0 5,688(c) Dale W. Hilpert............. 1998 825,000 0 0 0 100,000 835,835(m) 10,860(c) President835,835(f) 10,860(e) and Chief Executive Officer 1997 806,250 377,406 0 100,000 0 9,718(c) Operating Officer 1996 750,000 390,450 0 100,000 0 8,506(c)9,718(e) Roger N. Farah (g)............ 1999 749,999 0 2,583(h) 2,870,313(i)(d) 675,000 0 5,033(e) Former Chairman of the Board 1998 1,500,000 0 3,884(h) 0 0 1,671,670(f) 6,032(e) and Chief Executive Officer 1997 1,500,000 702,150 3,886(h) 0 0 0 5,610(e) M. Jeffrey Branman(d)....... 1998 435,000 200,000(e)Branman(j)......... 1999 440,000 0 150,000 431,158(m) 2,595(c)0 215,000(l)(d) 50,000 0 2,302,912(m)(e) Former Senior Vice President- 1998 435,000 200,000(k) 0 0 150,000 431,158(f) 2,595(e) Corporate Development 1997 415,000 394,262(e)394,262(k) 0 0 75,000 0 3,113(c) Corporate Development 1996 365,079 390,060(e)3,113(e) John E. DeWolf III(j)......... 1999 420,000 500,000(n) 0 75,000215,000(l)(d) 50,000 0 1,513(f) Reid Johnson(g)............. 1998 434,000 0 9,191(h) 43,000 179,570(n) 14,561(i)422,930(o)(e) Former Senior Vice PresidentPresident- 1998 406,250 0 0 0 50,000 374,805(f) 2,959(p) Real Estate 1997 169,034 200,000(j) 21,445(h)361,250 169,101 0 0 30,000 0 1,343(p) Ronald Gaston(q).............. 1999 400,000 100,000(r) 4,807(s) 215,000(l)(d) 50,000 0 126,664(k)7,765(e)(t) Senior Vice President 1998 68,254 50,000(r) 0 0 30,000 0 50,000(u) and Chief Information Officer Bruce Hartman(v).............. 1999 394,063 0 45,858(s) 161,250(l)(d) 50,000 0 66,162(w) Senior Vice President 1998 318,750 0 0 0 25,000 0 0 and Chief Financial Officer John E. DeWolf III(d)....... 1998 406,2501997 300,000 126,390 23,290(s) 0 25,000 0 50,000 374,805(m) 2,959(f) Senior Vice President- 1997 361,250 169,101 0 30,000 0 1,343(f) Real Estate 1996 319,444 166,303 28,242(h) 30,000 0 254,620(l)42,602(x)
- --------------- (a) On January 9, 1995,Includes the two persons who served as Chief Executive Officer of the Company during the 1999 fiscal year and the four other most highly compensated individuals who were executive officers of Venator Group at the end of fiscal 1999, as measured by salary and annual bonus. (b) Elected Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer on April 12, 2000. He served as President and Chief Executive Officer from August 16, 1999 to April 11, 2000, and President and Chief Operating Officer prior to August 16, 1999. (c) The Company granted to Mr. Farah 200,000Hilpert 100,000 shares of Common Stock (the "Restricted Stock"), which are subject to a Restricted Stock Agreement.restricted stock on February 1, 1999 and 60,000 shares on November 10, 1999. All of the shares will vest on February 1, 2004 if Mr. Hilpert remains employed by the Company until that date. The shares will vest over a five-year period beginning January 31, 1996 through January 31, 2000, in increments of 40,000 sharesearlier, on each vesting date.March 15, 2002, if certain performance goals are attained. Mr. FarahHilpert has the right to vote the Restricted Stockshares of restricted stock and to receive and retain all regular cash dividends payable after January 1995the grant dates to record holders of Common Stock. The value of the restricted stock award was calculated by multiplying the closing price of the Company's Common Stock of record.on the New York Stock Exchange on February 1, 1999 ($5.375) by 100,000 and by multiplying the closing price on November 10, 1999 ($7.00) by 60,000. (d) At January 30, 1999, Mr. Farah29, 2000 the named executive officers held 80,000the following shares of Restricted Stock (120,000 sharesrestricted stock, having previously vested), having a value of $410,000,the values stated below, based upon a $5.125$5.9375 closing price of the Company's Common Stock as reported on the New York Stock Exchange on January 29, 1999,28, 2000, the last business day prior to the end of the fiscal year. (b) Tax gross-up payment relatedThe restrictions applicable to commuting usethese shares are described in notes (c), (i) and (l). Mr. Farah's restricted stock at year-end includes 40,000 shares remaining from his January 9, 1995 award of company car. (c)200,000 12 16 shares of restricted stock (160,000 shares having previously vested over the period of January 31, 1996 through January 31, 1999). The remaining 40,000 shares vested on January 31, 2000.
NAME # OF SHARES OF RESTRICTED STOCK $ VALUE - ---- ------------------------------- --------- D. W. Hilpert................... 160,000 950,000 R. N. Farah..................... 315,000 1,870,313 M. J. Branman................... 40,000 237,500 J. E. DeWolf III................ 40,000 237,500 B. L. Hartman................... 30,000 178,125 S. R. Gaston.................... 40,000 237,500
(e) Includes the dollar value of the premium paid by the Company for a term life insurance policy for the benefit of the named executive and the dollar value of the Company's matching contribution under the 401(k) Plan made to the named executive's account in shares of Common Stock. The dollar values of amounts reported for 19981999 are stated below. The shares of Common Stock for the matching contribution were valued at $6.50$7.00 per share, which represents the closing price of a share of Common Stock on December 31, 1998,1999, the last day of the plan year.
EMPLOYER MATCHING CONTRIBUTION UNDER NAME LIFE INSURANCE PREMIUM 401(K) PLAN - ---- ---------------------- ------------------ D. W. Hilpert.................. $18,000 $1,383 R. N. Farah.................... $5,012 $1,020 D. W. Hilpert.................. $9,840 $1,020$ 3,650 $1,383 M. J. Branman.................. $1,575 $1,020$ 1,528 $1,384 J. E. DeWolf III............... $ 1,538 $1,392 S. R. Gaston................... $ 3,112 $ 483
15 19 (d) Elected to this position in March 1996. (e) Includes $200,000 paid as a discretionary bonus under the terms of Mr. Branman's employment. (f) Dollar value of premium paid by the Company for term life insurance policy for the benefit of the named executive. (g) Held this position from September 8, 1997 until his resignation, effective February 26, 1999. (h) Tax gross-up payment related to relocation. (i) Amount includes reimbursement for relocation expenses of $11,149 and payment of premium of $3,412 for term life insurance policy for the benefit of named executive. (j) Guaranteed bonus paid pursuant to terms of employment. (k) Amount includes a sign-on bonus of $100,000 and reimbursement for relocation expenses of $26,664. (l) Amount includes a sign-on bonus of $200,000 and reimbursement for relocation expenses of $54,620. (m) This payout was made for the 1996-1998 Performance Period. Fifty percent of the total payout listed was made in cash and fifty percent was made in shares of the Company's Common Stock. The amounts shown in the table reflect the total of the cash payment and the value of the shares received on the payment date. In accordance with the provisions of the Long-Term Incentive Compensation Plan, the average of the daily closing prices of a share of the Company's Common Stock in the 60-day period immediately preceding the payment date of April 16, 1999 ($5.91228 per share) was used to determine the stock portion of the payout. If the payouts had been made fully in cash, the cash payment would have been: $1,365,600 for Mr. Farah; $682,800 for Mr. Hilpert; $352,216 for Mr. Branman; and $306,181 for Mr. DeWolf. (g) Served as Chairman of the Board through April 11, 2000 and as Chief Executive Officer through August 15, 1999. (h) Tax gross-up payment related to use of company car. (i) The Company granted to Mr. Farah 275,000 shares of restricted stock on April 26, 1999. The shares would vest over a three-year period beginning January 31, 2000 in increments of 91,666 shares, 91,667 shares and 91,667 shares on the three vesting dates. Mr. Farah has the right to vote the restricted stock and to receive and retain all regular cash dividends payable after April 1999 to record holders of Common Stock. The value of the restricted stock award was calculated by multiplying the closing price of the Company's Common Stock on the New York Stock Exchange on April 26, 1999 ($10.4375) by 275,000. Following the termination of Mr. Farah's employment on April 12, 2000, he forfeited 91,667 shares from this grant. (j) Resigned as an officer of the Company on January 29, 2000 at the end of the 1999 fiscal year. (k) Includes $200,000 paid as a discretionary bonus under the terms of Mr. Branman's employment. (l) On February 1, 1999 the Company granted shares of restricted stock to the following named executive officers. The shares would vest on February 1, 2004 if the executive remained employed by the Company until that date. These shares will vest earlier, on March 15, 2002, if certain performance goals are attained. Upon grant, the executive has the right to vote the shares of restricted stock and to receive and retain all regular cash dividends payable after the grant date to record holders of Common Stock. The value of the restricted stock award was calculated by multiplying the closing price of the Company's 13 17 Common Stock on the New York Stock Exchange on February 1, 1999 ($5.375) by the number of shares granted to the individual:
NUMBER OF NAME SHARES ---- --------- M. J. Branman........................ 40,000 J. E. DeWolf III..................... 40,000 S. R. Gaston......................... 40,000 B. L. Hartman........................ 30,000
Since Messrs. Branman's and DeWolf's employment terminated on February 29, 2000, they forfeited the shares of restricted stock granted to them during 1999. Mr. Gaston will forfeit the shares granted to him in 1999 upon the termination of his employment on May 2, 2000. (m) The Company entered into a termination agreement with Mr. Branman in connection with his termination of employment. The total amount payable under this agreement is $2,300,000, which represents the severance benefit and an amount in lieu of a special incentive bonus to which he would have been entitled under the terms of his employment. A total of $1,870,000 of this amount has been paid; the remaining $430,000 is payable on February 28, 2001. (n) Represents prorated cash payoutDiscretionary bonus in connection with certain real estate projects completed in 1999. (o) The Company entered into a termination agreement with Mr. DeWolf in connection with his termination of employment. The total severance benefit paid to him under this agreement was $420,000. (p) Dollar value of premium paid by the Company for term life insurance policy for the 1996-1998 Performance Period.benefit of the named executive. (q) Elected to this position effective November 30, 1998. Mr. Gaston has resigned from his position effective May 2, 2000. (r) Guaranteed bonus paid pursuant to terms of employment. (s) Tax gross-up payment related to relocation. (t) Amount includes reimbursement of relocation expenses of $4,170. (u) Sign-on bonus. (v) Elected Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer effective February 27, 1999. He was Vice President-Corporate Shared Services from August 12, 1998 to February 26, 1999 and Vice President and Controller from November 18, 1996 to August 11, 1998. (w) Amount includes reimbursement for relocation expenses of $64,778 and $1,384 representing the Company's matching contribution under the 401(k) Plan made to Mr. Hartman's account in shares of Common Stock. The shares of Common Stock for the matching contribution were valued at $7.00 per share, which represents the closing price of a share of Common Stock on December 31, 1999, the last day of the plan year. (x) Reimbursement for relocation expenses. 14 18 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN -- AWARDS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR(a)YEAR (a)
PERFORMANCE ESTIMATED FUTURE PAYOUTS UNDER NUMBER OF PERIOD NON-STOCK PRICE-BASED PLAN SHARES, UNITS UNTIL ------------------------------------------------------------------------ NAME OR OTHER RIGHTS PAYOUT THRESHOLD TARGET MAXIMUM - ---- --------------- ----------- --------- ------------------ ---------- D. W. Hilpert................. 825,000 1999-2001 $189,750 $742,500 $1,485,000 825,000 1999-2000 123,750 495,000 990,000 825,000 1999 66,000 247,500 495,000 R. N. Farah.................. 1,500,000 1998-2000 $337,500 $1,350,000 $2,490,000 D. W. Hilpert................ 825,000 1998-2000 185,625 742,500 1,369,500 M. J. Branman................ 435,000 1998-2000 97,875 391,500 722,100 J. E. DeWolf III............. 406,250 1998-2000 91,406 365,625 674,375 R. Johnson(b)Farah(b)................ 434,000 1998-20001,000,000 1999-2001 N/A N/A N/A 1,000,000 1999-2000 230,000 900,000 1,800,000 1,000,000 1999 110,000 450,000 900,000 M. J. Branman(c).............. 440,000 1999-2001 N/A N/A N/A 440,000 1999-2000 N/A N/A N/A 440,000 1999 35,200 132,000 264,000 J. E. DeWolf III(c)........... 420,000 1999-2001 N/A N/A N/A 420,000 1999-2000 N/A N/A N/A 420,000 1999 33,600 126,000 252,000 S. R. Gaston(c)............... 400,000 1999-2001 N/A N/A N/A 400,000 1999-2000 N/A N/A N/A 400,000 1999 32,000 120,000 240,000 B. L. Hartman................. 400,000 1999-2001 92,000 360,000 720,000 400,000 1999-2000 60,000 240,000 480,000 400,000 1999 32,000 120,000 240,000
- --------------- (a) The named executive officers, excluding Mr. Johnson,M.J. Branman and eight other executive officers and key employees of the CompanyJ. E. DeWolf III, participate in the Long-Term Incentive Compensation Plan ("Long-Term(the "Long-Term Plan"). Mr. JohnsonM. J. Branman and J. E. DeWolf III participated in this plan priorwhile they were officers of the Company. Mr. Gaston will cease to his resignation. Underparticipate in this plan upon the termination of employment on May 2, 2000. Individual target awards under the Long-Term Plan, individual target awards are expressed as a percentage of the participant's annual base salary. In 1999 the Compensation Committee approved awards to the participants for the performance periods of 1999-2001, 1999-2000 and 1999. The amounts shown in the table above under the column headed "Number of Shares, Units or Other Rights" represent the annual rate of base salary for 19981999 for each of the named executive officers. The amounts shown in the columns headed "Threshold," "Target""Target," and "Maximum" represent 22.5 percent, 90 percent and 166 percent, respectively,the following percentages of the named executive officer'sofficers' annual base salarysalaries in the first year of the applicable Performance Period and represent the amount that would be paid to him at the end of the applicable Performance Period if the Company achieves the established goals. No payments were made to the named executive officers under the Long-Term Plan for the 1999 Performance Period since the Company did not meet the performance goals are attained.for this period.
PERFORMANCE PERIOD THRESHOLD TARGET MAXIMUM ------------------ --------- ------ ------- D. W. Hilpert............................. 1999-2001 23% 90% 180% 1999-2000 15% 60% 120% 1999 8% 30% 60% R. N. Farah(b)............................ 1999-2001 N/A N/A N/A 1999-2000 23% 90% 180% 1999 11% 45% 90% M. J. Branman(c).......................... 1999-2001 N/A N/A N/A 1999-2000 N/A N/A N/A 1999 8% 30% 60%
15 19
PERFORMANCE PERIOD THRESHOLD TARGET MAXIMUM ------------------ --------- ------ ------- J. E. DeWolf III(c)....................... 1999-2001 N/A N/A N/A 1999-2000 N/A N/A N/A 1999 8% 30% 60% S. R. Gaston(c)........................... 1999-2001 N/A N/A N/A 1999-2000 N/A N/A N/A 1999 8% 30% 60% B. L. Hartman............................. 1999-2001 23% 90% 180% 1999-2000 15% 60% 120% 1999 8% 30% 60%
Any payout under the Long-Term Plan is calculated based upon the Company's performance in the applicable Performance Period and measured against the performance criteria set for the participant at the beginning of the applicable Performance Period by the Compensation Committee. These performance goals are based on one or more of the following criteria: (i) the attainment of certain target levels of, or percentage increase in, consolidated net income; or (ii) the attainment of certain levels of, or a specified increase in, return on invested capital. In addition, to the extent permitted by Section 162(m) of the Internal 16 20 Revenue Code (if applicable), the Compensation Committee has the authority to incorporate provisions in the performance goals allowing for adjustments in recognition of unusual or non-recurring events affecting the Company or the Company's financial statements, or in response to changes in applicable laws, regulations or accounting principles. Unless otherwise determined by the Compensation Committee, payment in connection with such awards shallunder this plan will be made only if and to the extent performance goals for the Performance Period are attained and generally only if the participant remains employed by the Company throughout the Performance Period. The Compensation Committee may award, after completion of the Performance Period, a pro-rata payment to any participant whose employment terminated during the Performance Period. Upon a Change in Control, as defined in the Long-Term Plan, the Compensation Committee may, to the extent permitted under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code (if applicable), pay out an amount equal to or less than a pro-rata portion (through the date of the Change in Control) of the individual target award based on the actual performance results achieved from the beginning of the Performance Period to the date of the Change in Control and the performance results that would have been achieved had the performance goals been met for the balance of the Performance Period. Payment to a participant under the Long-Term Plan for each Performance Period will be made, at the discretion of the Compensation Committee, either in cash or in shares of Common Stock. If payment is made in shares of Common Stock, the number of shares to be paid to the participant will be determined by dividing the achieved percentage of a participant's annual base salary by the fair market value, as defined in the Long-Term Plan, of the Common Stock on the date of payment. The amount of any payout for the performance periodPerformance Period may not exceed the lesser of 300 percent of the participant's annual base salary or $5,000,000. (b) AlthoughAs a result of the termination of Mr. Johnson was granted an awardFarah's employment, he is eligible to receive a payment under the Long-Term Plan for the 1998-20001999-2000 Performance Period, heif any, prorated to his termination date. He is not entitledeligible to receive any payment for the 1999-2001 Performance Period. (c) Although the Compensation Committee granted awards to M. J. Branman, J. E. DeWolf III and S. R. Gaston under the Long-Term Plan for the 1999-2001 and 1999-2000 Performance Periods, they are not eligible to receive any payments under this plan for these Performance Periods as a result of his resignation.the termination of their employment. 16 20 OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
INDIVIDUAL GRANTS(A) ------------------------------------------------------- NUMBER OF PERCENT OF SECURITIES TOTAL OPTIONS UNDERLYING GRANTED TO EXERCISE GRANT DATE OPTIONS EMPLOYEES PRICE EXPIRATION PRESENT NAME GRANTED(#) IN FISCAL YEAR ($/SHARE) DATE VALUE($)(B) - ---- ---------- -------------- --------- ---------- ----------- D. W. Hilpert................... 150,000 4.01 4.5313 02/10/09 279,490 350,000(c) 9.36 6.9688 11/10/09 1,044,634 R. N. Farah...................... 0 N/A N/A N/A N/A D. W. Hilpert.................... 100,000 3.9 25.2813Farah..................... 500,000 13.37 4.5313 04/08/08 896,06511/02(d) 931,634 175,000 4.68 8.0313 04/11/02(d) 577,955 M. J. Branman....................Branman................... 50,000 2.0 25.2813 04/08/08 448,033 100,000 3.9 13.50 08/12/08 443,685 R. Johnson(c).................... 43,000 1.7 25.2813 02/26/99 N/A1.34 4.5313 05/29/00(e) 93,164 J. E. DeWolf III.................III................ 50,000 2.0 25.2813 04/1.34 4.5313 05/29/00(e) 93,164 S. R. Gaston.................... 50,000 1.34 4.5313 08/08 448,03302/00(f) 93,164 B. L. Hartman................... 35,000 .94 4.5313 02/10/09 62,215 15,000 .40 4.5938 03/10/09 28,335
- --------------- (a) During 1998,1999 the Compensation Committee granted stock options were granted to the named executive officers except Mr. Farah, on April 8, 1998 under the 1998 Stock Option and Award Plan (the "1998 Award Plan") and. Roger N. Farah also received a grant under the 1995 Stock Option and Award Plan (the "1995 Award Plan"). In addition, a stock option was granted to Mr. Branman on August 12, 1998. for 500,000 shares. The per-share exercise price of each stock option may not be less than the fair market value of a share of Common Stock on the date of grant. In general, no portion of any stock option may be exercised until the first anniversary of its date of grant. The options granted on April 8, 1998during 1999 will become exercisable in three equal annual installments, beginning April 8, 1999. The option granted on August 12, 1998 will become exercisable in two equal installments on April 12, 2000 and August 12, 2000.the first anniversary of the date of grant. If an option holdera participant retires, becomes disabled, or dies while employed by the Company or one of its subsidiaries, all unexercised options that are then immediately exercisable, plus those options that would have become exercisable on the next succeeding anniversary of the date of grant of each option, will remain (or become) immediately 17 21 exercisable as of that date. Moreover, upon the occurrence of a "Change in Control," as defined in the 1995 Award Plan and the 1998 Award Plan, all outstanding options will become immediately exercisable as of that date. OptionsIn general, options may remain exercisable for up to three years following an option holder'sa participant's retirement or termination due to disability, and for up to one year for any other termination of employment for reasons other than cause. However, under no circumstances may an option remain outstanding for more than ten years from its date of grant. (b) Values were calculated as of the date of grant using a Black-Scholes option pricing model. The values shown in the table are theoretical and do not necessarily reflect the actual values that the named executive officers may ultimately realize. Any actual value to the officer will depend on the extent to which the market value of the Company's Common Stock at a future date exceeds the option exercise price. In addition to the fair market value of the Common Stock on the date of grant and the exercise price, which are identical, the following assumptions were used to calculate the values shown in the table: a weighted-average risk-free interest rate of 4.575.31 percent; a stock price volatility factor of 3545 percent; a two year weighted-average expected award life and a zero dividend yield. The assumptions and calculations used for the model are consistent with the assumptions for reporting stock option valuations in the Company's 19981999 Annual Report. (c) 117,744 shares of this total stock option grant were granted subject to shareholder approval of an amendment to the 1998 Award Plan eliminating the individual award limitation. (d) In connection with the termination of Mr. JohnsonFarah's employment, the vested portion of his 1999 option grants (449,999 shares) will expire on April 11, 2002. A total of 225,001 shares from his 1999 grants were cancelled as of April 12, 2000. (e) M. J. Branman and J. E. DeWolf III resigned fromas officers of the Company on January 29, 2000 and their employment terminated on February 26, 1999. In accordance with the terms of the 1995 Award Plan and29, 2000. Under the 1998 Award Plan, the entirevested portion of each of 17 21 their grants (16,666 shares) will expire on May 29, 2000. The shares from each of Mr. Branman's and Mr. DeWolf's 1999 option granted to himgrant that had not vested as of February 29, 2000 (33,334 shares) were cancelled on April 8, 1998 wasthat date. (f) In connection with the termination of Mr. Gaston's employment on May 2, 2000, the vested portion of his option (16,666 shares) will expire on August 2, 2000. The unvested portion of the grant (33,334 shares) will be cancelled as of his resignationtermination date. AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR AND FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION VALUES
NUMBER OF SECURITIES VALUE OF UNEXERCISED UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED IN-THE-MONEY OPTIONS AT SHARES OPTIONS AT FY-END(#) FY-END($)(A) ACQUIRED ON VALUE ---------------------------- ---------------------------- NAME EXERCISE(#) REALIZED EXERCISABLE UNEXERCISABLE EXERCISABLE UNEXERCISABLE - ---- ----------- -------- ----------- ------------- ----------- ------------- D. W. Hilpert........ 0 N/A 499,999 600,001 0 243,750 R. N. Farah.......... 0 N/A 800,000 675,000 0 0 0 D. W. Hilpert........ 0 N/A 399,999 200,001 0 0812,500 M. J. Branman........ 0 N/A 75,000 225,000141,666 208,334 0 081,250 J. E. DeWolf III..... 0 N/A 30,000 80,00066,666 93,334 0 081,250 S. R. Johnson...........Gaston......... 0 N/A 16,666 76,33410,000 70,000 0 81,250 B. L. Hartman........ 0 N/A 37,499 75,001 0 80,313
- --------------- (a) The fair market value (the average of the high and low prices of the Company's Common Stock) on Friday, January 29, 1999,28, 2000, the last business day of 1998,1999, was $4.8438. No unexercised options were in-the-money on that date.$6.1563. RETIREMENT PLANS The Company maintains the Venator Group Retirement Plan (the "Retirement Plan"), a defined benefit plan with a cash balance formula, which covers associates of the Company and substantially all of its United States subsidiaries. All qualified associates at least 21 years of age are covered by the Retirement Plan, and plan participants become fully vested in their benefits under this plan upon completion of five years of service or upon attainment of age 65 while actively employed. Under the cash balance formula, each participant has an account, for record keeping purposes only, to which credits are allocated annually based upon a percentage of the participant's W-2 Compensation, as defined in the Retirement Plan. This percentage is determined by the participant's years of service with the 18 22 Company as of the beginning of each calendar year. The following table shows the percentage used to determine credits at the years of service indicated.
PERCENT OF W-2 PERCENT OF ALL COMPENSATION YEARS OF SERVICE W-2 COMPENSATION OVER $22,000 - ---------------- ---------------- + -------------- Less than 6................................................. 1.10 0.55 6-10........................................................ 1.50 0.75 11-15....................................................... 2.00 1.00 16-20....................................................... 2.70 1.35 21-25....................................................... 3.70 1.85 26-30....................................................... 4.90 2.45 31-35....................................................... 6.60 3.30 More than 35................................................ 8.90 4.45
In addition, all balances in the participants' accounts earn interest at the fixed rate of six percent, which is credited annually. At retirement or other termination of employment, an amount equal to the vested balance then credited to the account under the Retirement Plan is payable to the participant in the form of a qualified joint and survivor annuity (if the participant is married) or a life annuity (if the participant is not married). 18 22 The participant may elect to waive the annuity form of benefit described above and receive benefits under the Retirement Plan upon retirement in an optional annuity form or an immediate or deferred lump sum, or, upon other termination of employment, in a lump sum. Participants may elect one of the optional forms of benefit with respect to the accrued benefit as of December 31, 1995 if the individual participated in the Retirement Plan as of that date. The Internal Revenue Code limits annual retirement benefits that may be paid to, and compensation that may be taken into account in the determination of benefits for, any person under a qualified retirement plan such as the Retirement Plan. Accordingly, for any person covered by the Retirement Plan whose annual retirement benefit, calculated in accordance with the terms of this plan, exceeds the limitations of the Internal Revenue Code, the Company has adopted the Venator Group Excess Cash Balance Plan (the "Excess Plan"). The Excess Plan is an unfunded, nonqualified benefit plan, under which the individual is paid the difference between the Internal Revenue Code limitations and the retirement benefit to which he or she would otherwise be entitled under the Retirement Plan. In addition, the Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan (the "SERP"), which is an unfunded, nonqualified benefit plan, provides for payment by the Company of supplemental retirement, death and disability benefits to certain executive officers and certain other key employees of the Company and its subsidiaries. The named executive officers, excluding R. Johnson,R.N. Farah, M. J. Branman and fiveJ. E. DeWolf III, and four of the other executive officers of the Company are participantscurrently participate in the SERP. S. R. Gaston will cease to participate in the SERP upon the termination of his employment on May 2, 2000. Under the SERP the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors sets an annual targeted incentive award for each participant consisting of a percentage of salary and bonus based on the Company's performance against target. Achievement of the target causes an eight percent credit to a participant's account. The applicable percentage decreases proportionately to the percentage of the Company's performance below target, but not below 4 percent, and increases proportionately to the percentage of the Company's performance above target, but not above 12 percent. Participants' accounts accrue simple interest at the rate of 6 percent annually. The table below provides the estimated annual benefit for each of the named executive officers stated as a single life annuity (except for R.N. Farah, whose actual retirement benefit is stated as a 50 percent joint and survivor annuity) under the Retirement Plan, the Excess Plan, and where applicable, the SERP. Except for R. Johnson,Messrs. Farah, Branman, DeWolf, and Gaston, the projections contained in the table assume each person's continued employment with the Company to his normal retirement date and that compensation earned during each year after 19981999 to the individual's normal retirement date remains the same as compensation earned by him during 1998.1999. The projections in the table below are based upon the greater of the accrued benefit as of December 31, 1995 or a single life annuity determined by converting the account balance projected to normal retirement date using a 6.00 percent interest rate at normal retirement age based on the average rate as published in Federal statistical release H.15 (519) for 30-year U.S. Treasury Bills for December 1998.1999. The applicable interest rate is the rate specified in sec.417(e)Section 417(e)(3)(A)(ii)(II) of the Internal Revenue Code. 19 23
TOTAL ANNUAL BENEFIT TOTAL ANNUAL BENEFIT FOR YEARS 1-3 FOR YEARS 4 AND SUBSEQUENT NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICER FOLLOWING RETIREMENT(A) FOLLOWING RETIREMENT(A) - ----------------------- ----------------------- -------------------------- R. N. Farah...................................... $2,025,362 $222,816 D.W. Hilpert..................................... $ 422,520 $ 34,336 M.J. Branman..................................... $ 756,118 $ 92,484 J.E. DeWolf III.................................. $ 613,743 $ 60,692 R. Johnson(b)....................................$456,365 $33,112 M. J. Branman (b)................................ N/A N/A J. E. DeWolf III (b)............................. N/A N/A S. R. Gaston (b)................................. N/A N/A B. L. Hartman.................................... $537,674 $48,061
TOTAL ANNUAL BENEFIT NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICER FOLLOWING RETIREMENT - ----------------------- -------------------- R. N. Farah(c)............................................. $ 9,289
- --------------- (a) The amounts stated for years 1-3 following retirement include the SERP benefits, payable as a lump sum spread over a three-year period. The SERP projections include a 4four percent credit to the participants' accounts for 19982000 and assume an annual 8eight percent credit going forward. Beginning with the fourth 19 23 year following retirement, the individuals' annual benefits will not include any SERP payments and, therefore, their annual benefits for those years will be reduced accordingly. (b) As a result of Mr. Johnson's resignation on February 26, 1999, he is ineligibleNot eligible to receive a benefit under the Retirement Plan or the SERP.SERP as a result of the termination of his employment. (c) Not eligible to receive a benefit under the SERP as a result of the termination of his employment. EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS AND TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT AND CHANGE-IN-CONTROL ARRANGEMENTS The Company presently hasWe have employment agreements with R. FarahMr. Hilpert and D. Hilpert. In addition, the Company hasMr. Hartman. Mr. Farah's employment agreement, described below, was terminated as of April 12, 2000. Mr. Gaston's agreement will be terminated effective May 2, 2000. Mr. Branman and Mr. DeWolf had severance agreements with M.J. Branman and J.E. DeWolf III. R.N. FARAH The Company haswhile they were employed by the Company. D. W. HILPERT We entered into an employment agreement with Mr. FarahHilpert in his position as President and Chief Executive Officer, effective August 16, 1999 (the "August 1999 Agreement"), for a term ending on August 31, 2004. This agreement remains in effect following Mr. Hilpert's election as Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer for a term ending on January 31, 2003. This agreementApril 12, 2000. The August 1999 Agreement supersedes the agreement we entered into with Mr. Farah in 1994 (the "1994 Agreement"). The new compensation arrangements reflect a decision by the Company and Mr. Farah to reconfigure his compensation package to reduce significantly his base salary and to increase the amount of his compensation that is tied to the performance of the Company and the price of the Company's Common Stock. During the contract term, Mr. Farah will receive a base salary of not less than $1 million per year, which is a reduction of $500,000 per year from the base salary he was paid under the 1994 Agreement. In addition, Mr. Farah participates in the Annual Incentive Compensation Plan (the "Annual Plan") and the Long-Term Plan. His payout at budget under the Annual Plan is 100 percent of base salary. Under his new employment agreement, Mr. Farah will receive an annual stock option grant to purchase that number of shares of Common Stock having a market value of $5,000,000 on the date of grant. He will also receive a one-time grant of 275,000 shares of restricted stock under the 1998 Award Plan. The shares of restricted stock will be subject to a restriction related to Mr. Farah's continued employment with the Company, and will vest in three equal annual installments beginning January 31, 2000. In the event Mr. Farah's employment is terminated by him for good reason or by the Company without cause, then Mr. Farah would be entitled to payments of any unpaid base salary for the period prior to termination, any declared but unpaid bonuses, and amounts due under any employee benefit or incentive plan. Also, to the extent any shares of restricted stock which were granted to Mr. Farah are unvested, these shares will immediately vest. Thereafter, for a period ending on the earliest of (a) the later of January 31, 2003 or two years from the date of termination, (b) his death, or (c) the violation of any post-employment contract requirements, Mr. Farah would be entitled to receive payments equal to his annual base salary immediately prior to termination. If the sum of the foregoing payments is less than the guaranteed severance amount provided for under the agreement, the Company will pay the difference to Mr. Farah. The guaranteed severance amounts are as follows: (i) if Mr. Farah's employment is terminated earlier than January 31, 2000, his guaranteed severance amount is $4,500,000; (ii) if his termination date is from February 1, 2000 to 20 24 January 31, 2001, his guaranteed severance amount is $4,000,000; and (iii) if his termination date is after January 31, 2001, his guaranteed severance amount is $3,000,000. In the event Mr. Farah's employment is terminated, whether by the Company or by Mr. Farah, following a Change in Control, as defined in the agreement, Mr. Farah would receive the same payments he would have received as if he had terminated his employment for good reason. Also, all of Mr. Farah's unvested shares of restricted stock and all of his unvested stock options would immediately vest. If the sum of the payments to be made to Mr. Farah in the event of his termination following a Change in Control is less than three times his then current base salary plus annual bonus at target in the year of termination, then the Company will pay the difference to Mr. Farah. In the event he becomes entitled to the payments in this paragraph and the payments are determined to constitute payments under Section 280G(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code and subject to an excise tax under Section 4999 of the Internal Revenue Code, the Company will provide him with a gross-up payment for the excise and related income taxes incurred in connection with the gross-up payment. Finally, if the Company does not offer to extend his employment agreement for at least one year beyond January 31, 2003 under the same terms and conditions then existing, then the Company will pay Mr. Farah the sum of $1,500,000. D.W. HILPERT The Company has entered into a new employment agreementApril 1999 with Mr. Hilpert as President and Chief Operating Officer for a term ending on January 31, 2002. This agreement supersedes the agreement entered into with Mr. Hilpert in 1997.Officer. During the contract term of the August 1999 Agreement, Mr. Hilpert will receive a base salary of not less than $825,000$950,000 per year. In addition, Mr. Hilpert participates in the Annual Plan and the Long-Term Plan. His payout at budgettarget under the Annual Plan is 75 percent of base salary. Under the terms of the August 1999 Agreement, the Compensation Committee granted 60,000 shares of restricted stock to Mr. Hilpert. The shares will vest on February 1, 2004 if Mr. Hilpert is employed by the Company until that date. The shares will vest earlier, on March 15, 2002, if the Company attains certain performance targets established by the Compensation Committee. In the event Mr. Hilpert's employment is terminated by him for good reason or by the Company without cause, (or if the Company does not extend the term of the employment agreement for at least one year beyond January 31, 2002 under substantially similar terms and conditions), Mr. Hilperthe would be entitled to payments of any unpaid base salary for the period prior to termination, any declared but unpaid bonuses, and amounts due under any employee benefit or incentive plan. Thereafter, for a period ending on the earliest of (a) the later of JanuaryAugust 31, 20022004 or one yeartwo years from his termination date (b) his death, or (c) thehis violation of any post-employment contract requirements, the Company will pay to Mr. Hilpert would be entitled to receive payments equal to his annual base salary in effect immediately prior to his termination. Mr. Hilpert would receive in a lump sum the same payments described in the paragraph above (a) in the event of the termination of his employment within one year following a Change in Control as defined in the agreement, or (b) if within one year following a Change in Control the Company's Chief Executive Officer immediately prior to a Change in Control ceases to hold this position and Mr. Hilpert(a) he terminates his employment within 90 days of this changethe 30-day period following the Change in Control, (b) we terminate his employment without cause, or (c) he terminates his employment for good reason during the Company's Chief Executive Officer.two-year period following the Change in Control. If the sum of the payments to be made to Mr. Hilpert in the event of his termination following a Change in Control if the payments continued until the later of January 31, 2002 or one year following terminationsuch circumstances is less than three times his then currentthen-current base salary plus annual bonus at target in the year of termination, then the Company will pay the difference to Mr. Hilpert. In the event he becomes entitled to the payments in this paragraph and the payments are determined to constitute payments under Section 280G(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code and subject to an excise tax under Section 4999 of the Internal Revenue Code, the Company will providepay him with a gross-up payment for the excise and related income taxes incurred in connection with the gross-up payment. Also, Mr. Hilpert's restricted stock would immediately vest upon a Change in Control. Finally, if Mr. Hilpert's employment is terminated (a) by him for good reason, or(b) by the Company without cause, or(c) following a Change in Control, or (d) on August 31, 2004 if hiswe do not have an employment with the Company is not extended beyond January 31, 2002,agreement extending Mr. Hilpert's employment, and the amount of retirement benefits Mr. Hilpertto which he is then entitled to under the Retirement Plan, the Excess Plan, and the SERP is less than $1,300,000, the Company will increase the amount in his SERP account so that this total is reached. This provision compensates Mr. Hilpert for the benefit he would have received under his previous employer's supplementary plan. 20 24 R. N. FARAH APRIL 2000 AGREEMENT -- The Company entered into an agreement with Mr. Farah on April 12, 2000 (the "April 2000 Agreement") in connection with his resignation as Chairman of the Board, which terminated his August 1999 Agreement. Under the April 2000 Agreement, the Company paid Mr. Farah his base salary through April 12, 2000. Under the terms of this agreement, he is entitled to receive any payouts under the Annual Plan for the 2000 fiscal year and under the Long-Term Plan for the 1999-2000 performance period, prorated to his termination date. The portions of Mr. Farah's 1999 stock option grants that were scheduled to vest on April 14, 2000, February 10, 2001 and April 14, 2001 were vested on April 12, 2000. The remaining unvested shares from Mr. Farah's 1999 option grants were cancelled as of his termination date. Mr. Farah has until April 11, 2002 to exercise his vested 1999 options and until July 11, 2000 to exercise his vested options from his 1994 stock option grant. In addition, the portion of Mr. Farah's 1999 restricted stock award that was scheduled to vest on January 31, 2001 vested on April 12, 2000. Mr. Farah forfeited the remainder of his 1999 restricted stock award. AUGUST 1999 AGREEMENT -- Mr. Farah resigned as Chief Executive Officer of the Company on August 15, 1999, and we entered into a new employment agreement with him as Chairman of the Board effective as of August 16, 1999 (the "August 1999 Agreement"). This agreement superseded Mr. Farah's April 1999 Agreement, which is described below. The August 1999 Agreement terminated on April 12, 2000 when Mr. Farah resigned as Chairman of the Board. During the term of the August 1999 Agreement, the Company paid Mr. Farah an annual base salary of $250,000. Mr. Farah would continue to participate in the Annual Plan through the 2000 fiscal year, with a payout at target of 100 percent of base salary. He would also continue to participate in the Long-Term Plan for the 1999 and 1999-2000 performance periods. Under the August 1999 Agreement if either the Company or Mr. Farah terminated his employment following a Change in Control, as defined in the August 1999 Agreement, he would be entitled to payments of any unpaid base salary for the period prior to termination, any declared but unpaid bonuses and amounts due under any employee benefit or incentive plans. He also would be entitled to the rights provided under any employee benefit or incentive plans. Additionally, the forfeiture period of the restricted stock would terminate and the shares of restricted stock granted to him in 1999 would immediately vest. The Company would also pay Mr. Farah an amount equal to three times his base salary plus bonus under the Annual Plan at target in the year of his termination following a Change in Control. If Mr. Farah became entitled to the payments in this paragraph following a Change in Control and the payments were determined to be payments under Section 280G(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code and subject to an excise tax under Section 4999 of the Internal Revenue Code, then we would pay Mr. Farah a gross-up payment for the excise and related income taxes incurred in connection with the gross-up payment. APRIL 1999 AGREEMENT -- In April 1999 we entered into an employment agreement (the "April 1999 Agreement") with Mr. Farah as Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, which superseded his original employment agreement from 1994. The April 1999 Agreement was terminated by mutual agreement at the time Mr. Farah and the Company entered into the August 1999 Agreement described above. The April 1999 Agreement reconfigured his compensation package by significantly reducing Mr. Farah's base salary and increasing the amount of his compensation tied to the performance of the Company and the price of our stock. Mr. Farah received an annual base salary of $1 million under the April 1999 Agreement, which was a $500,000 reduction from the salary he received under his original agreement. Mr. Farah also participated in the Annual Plan and the Long-Term Plan, with a payout under the Annual Plan of 100 percent of his base salary. The April 1999 Agreement provided that Mr. Farah would receive an annual stock option grant to purchase that number of shares of the Company's stock having a market value of $5 million on the date of grant. This agreement also provided for a one-time grant to Mr. Farah of 275,000 shares of restricted stock, vesting over a period of three years beginning January 31, 2000, tied to Mr. Farah's continued employment. 21 25 M.J.B. L. HARTMAN We also have an employment agreement with Mr. Hartman in his position as Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of the Company, for a term beginning on January 1, 2000 and ending on December 31, 2001. The term of this agreement will automatically be extended for an additional one-year period unless we give Mr. Hartman notice that the Company does not intend to extend his agreement. If the Company terminates Mr. Hartman's employment without cause or does not extend the term of his agreement beyond its then current termination date, or if he terminates his employment for good reason, the Company will pay his base salary to him through the termination date and a severance benefit of not less than 52 weeks' salary. If Mr. Hartman's employment is terminated for good reason or without cause within 24 months of a Change in Control, he would be entitled to a severance benefit of not less than 104 weeks' salary plus two times his annual bonus at target. The Company would pay Mr. Hartman his severance benefit in two installments -- 50 percent upon termination and 50 percent one year following his termination. Prior to a Change in Control, he would forfeit the second installment of his severance benefit if he engages in competition during the one-year period following his termination date. If, however, a Change in Control occurs before Mr. Hartman receives the remaining 50 percent of his severance benefit, he would be entitled to receive this payment within 10 days following the Change in Control. The Company has an employment agreement with Mr. Gaston as Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer under substantially the same terms as Mr. Hartman's agreement. Mr. Gaston's agreement terminates on May 2, 2000 the effective date of his resignation from the Company. M. J. BRANMAN AND J.E.J. E. DEWOLF III The Company has entered into Senior Executive Severance Agreementshad severance agreements with M.J.Mr. Branman J.E.and Mr. DeWolf III and certain other executive officers,during 1999, which provideprovided for severance payments if their employment iswere terminated by the Company without cause or by them for good reason. The Company entered into agreements with Mr. Branman and Mr. DeWolf in connection with the termination of their employment at the end of the 1999 fiscal year, which terminated their prior severance agreements. The termination agreement with Mr. Branman provided for a total severance payment of $2,300,000, which represents the severance benefit and an amount in lieu of a special incentive bonus to which he would have been entitled under the terms of his employment. The termination agreement with Mr. DeWolf provided for a total severance payment of $420,000, which represents the severance benefit to which he would have been entitled if the Company terminated his employment without cause. In addition, we entered into a consulting agreement with Mr. DeWolf effective March 1, 2000 through June 30, 2000 under which he provides real estate consulting services to the event such officer's employmentCompany for a fee of $40,000 per month. Mr. DeWolf is terminated within 24 months following a Change in Control, he will receive 2 weeks' salary plus prorated annual bonus for each year of service, with a minimum of 104 weeks. If such termination does not occur within 24 months following a Change in Control, he will bealso entitled to receive 2 weeks' salary plus prorated annual bonus for each yeara contingent payment of service, with a minimum of 26 weeks. The severance benefit payable$140,000 related to the executive under this agreement may not be less than 12 months' salary. With respect to Mr. Branman, if the total severance benefit he would be entitled to is less than the sumcompletion of the following amounts in the yearsale of termination: (i) his annual base salary, (ii) his expected annual bonus at target and (iii) $200,000, then he would be entitled to receive additional payments from the Company in the amount of the difference. The Company also had a Senior Executive Severance Agreement with R. Johnson providing for severance payments upon his termination by the Company or by him for good reason. As a result of Mr. Johnson's resignation, however, this agreement is of no further force and effect, and no payments were made to Mr. Johnson under the agreement.certain specified property. TRUST AGREEMENT The Company has established a trust (the "Trust") in connection with certain of its benefit plans, arrangements, and agreements, including certain of those described above, and other benefit plans, agreements or arrangements that subsequently may at the request of the Company, hereafter be covered (collectively, the "Benefit Obligations"). Under the Trust agreement, in the event of a Change in Control of the Company (as defined in the Trust Agreement)agreement), the trustee would pay to the persons entitled to the Benefit Obligations, out of funds held in the Trust, the amounts to which such personsthey may become entitled under the Benefit Obligations. Upon the occurrence of a Potential Change in Control of the Company (as defined in the Trust agreement), the Company is required to fund the Trust with an amount sufficient to pay the total amount of the Benefit Obligations. Following the occurrence, and during the pendency, of a Potential Change in Control, the trustee is required to make payments of Benefit Obligations to the extent suchthese payments are not made by the Company. 22 26 COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION During 1998,1999 the following individuals (none of whom had been an officer or employee of the Company or any of its subsidiaries) served on the Compensation Committee: Philip H. Geier Jr., Margaret P. MacKimm and James E. Preston. There were no interlocks with other companies within the meaning of the SEC's proxy rules. COMPENSATION COMMITTEE'S REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION The Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors (the "Committee"), composed of the directors listed below, has responsibility for all compensation matters involving the Company's executive officers and for significant elements of the compensation of the chief executive officers of its operatingbusiness units. None of the members of the Committee are officers or employees of the Company or any of its subsidiaries. This is our report on the Company's executive compensation in 1998.1999. Compensation Policy. It is the policy of the CommitteeCompany to design and maintain a compensation policy that will enable the Company to attract, motivate, and retain executive officers and the chief executive officers of its operating units by providing a fully competitive total compensation opportunity. This policy, developed under the oversight and with the approval of the Committee, provides for (i) competitive base salaries, which reflect the responsibilities of the position held and performance in the position; (ii) annual incentive opportunities payable in cash, which are based on the Company's achievement of previously specified performance goals; (iii) long-term incentive opportunities, payable in stock or cash, which are based on the Company's achievement of previously specified performance goals; and (iv) long-term 22 26 stock-based incentive opportunities, which are designed to strengthen the mutuality of interest between participating associates and the shareholders. The Committee strives to balance short- and long-term incentive objectives and to employ prudent judgment in establishing performance criteria, evaluating performance, and determining actual incentive payment levels. For senior level management associates the compensation policy provides that a greater percentage of total compensation will be at risk, dependent upon the Company's performance in relation to targets established under incentive compensation plans, or, in the case of stock options, increases in the price of the Company's Common Stock. Compensation Program. TheIn order to implement this compensation policy, the Company, under the oversight and with the approval of the Committee, has established a total compensation program for senior executive officers (the Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, President and Chief Operating Officer, and Senior Vice Presidents) and the chief executive officers of its operating businessesbusiness units consisting of fivefour components: base salary, participation in the Annual Plan, participation in the Long-Term Plan, and grants under the 1995 and 1998 Award Plans, andPlans. These individuals, along with other associates of the Company, also have the opportunity to participate in the employee stock purchase program. We note that the Company's shareholders, at annual meetings in prior years, have approved the Annual Plan, the Long-Term Plan, the 1995 Award Plan, the 1998 Award Plan, and the 1994 Employees Stock Purchase Plan (the "Stock Purchase Plan"). The Company has a substantially similar compensation program for its other officers and senior management employees. A performance evaluation of each member of management associate is conducted by the Company's management at the beginning of each year, based upon goals, responsibilities, and other performance criteria established at the beginning of the prior year. Similarly, the outside directors meet privately each year to evaluate the performance of the Chief Executive Officer. Salary recommendations are then made based upon the results of thisthese performance review.reviews. With regard to executive officers (other than the Chief Executive Officer) and the chief executive officers of the Company's operatingbusiness units, management makes these salary recommendations to the Committee. The Committee then reviews the base salaries of these individuals and determines the changes, if any, that should be made to thosetheir base salaries based upon the officer's performance and the need to maintain a competitive position with other national retail companies. At the beginning of each year, the Committee also establishes the performance goals under the Annual Plan for that year and under the Long-Term Plan for the performance period then beginning. The performance goals under the Annual Plan for 19981999 were based on a combination of pre-tax earnings and percentage return on invested capital, of the Company in relation to targets established by the Committee. In 1998, thesewith targets for executive officers werebeing equal to the budgeted pre-tax earnings and percentage return on invested capital set in the Company's operating budget for the year. Approximately 800 key management employees, including executive officers, are participants in the Annual Plan. The 23 27 chief executive officers of the operatingbusiness units participate in annual bonus plans with goals tied to operating results of their respective units. Payments under the Long-Term Plan have beenare based on a combination of cumulative net income and percentage return on invested capital of the Company during the performance period, in relation to targets established by the Committee. In 1999, in order to provide continued incentive to the key executives who participate in the Long-Term Plan, the Committee established performance goals for three performance periods beginning in 1999 and ending in each of 1999, 2000, and 2001. Each year the Committee considers granting options to purchase Common Stock to key employees, including executive officers. Stock option grants are intended to provide additional incentive for superior performance by officers and key employees who have the most impact on the management and success of the Company's businesses. Stock options granted by the Committee in 1998 generally1999 vest in three equal annual installments beginning on the first anniversary of the date of grant. Approximately 450400 employees participate. Also, qualifiedAs part of a program designed to retain key executives in a difficult business environment and drive superior performance over the ensuing three-year period, in 1999 the Committee also granted restricted stock to the executive officers, the chief executive officers of the business units, and certain other employees may purchase shareskey executives of Common Stock under the Stock Purchase Plan.Company. The restrictions on the stock lapse after five years (assuming continued employment of the executive with the Company) or after three years if certain performance targets established by the Committee are met. In determining the number of options and shares of restricted stock to be granted to executive officers, the Committee considered a number ofseveral factors, including the position held by the individual, his or her performance, the number of options granted to these individuals in previous years, the financial results of the Company for the prior year, the price of a share of Common Stock, and the fact that management was implementing a turn-around plan forneed to retain key executives during the Company. In 1998, the Committee granted to the named executive officers the stock options shown in the table on page 17. In January 1999 the Committee approved grants of restricted stock to a group of 35 senior managers and key employees ofperiod when the Company not including the Chief Executive Officer. The size of the individual grants ranged from 5,000 shares to 100,000 shares, with the average grant being for 24,000 shares. Restrictions on the shares lapse for each individual if that individual continues to be employed by the Company on the fifth anniversary 23 27 of the grant date. The restrictions will lapse on the third anniversary of the grant date if certain performance targets, set by the Committee, are met. In the view of the Committee, the granting of this restricted stock was to the benefit of the Company andcompleting its shareholders by providing a means of retaining key managers, many of whom had been recruited to the Company in the past several years, and by motivating key managers to achieve performance goals.turnaround. The performance of the Company's continuing operations in 19981999 did not meet the performance targets established by the Committee under the Annual Plan or the Long-Term Plan, and therefore no payments were made to the executive officers under that plan. Principally as a result of the Company's performance in 1996 and 1997, the performance of the Company's continuing operations in the 1996-1998 performance period under the Long-Term Plan was above the threshold levels established by the Committee for cumulative net income and percentage return on invested capital for the performance period, and therefore, below-target payments were made to the participants in that plan, including the named executive officers shown in the table on page 15.those plans. Chief Executive Officer's Compensation. Mr. Farah's compensation arrangements in 1998 were unchanged from those negotiated by the Company and Mr. Farah at the time he joined the Company in 1994, which were embodied in an employment agreement entered into at that time (the "1994 Agreement"). In 1998, Mr. Farah was paid a base salary of $1,500,000, and was eligible to earn a bonus at target under the Annual Plan of 50 percent of his base salary. Options to purchase 800,000 shares of Common Stock and 200,000 shares of restricted stock were issued to him in 1994, and no additional stock options were granted to him in 1998. The shares of restricted stock are subject to a restriction related to Mr. Farah's continued employment, and vest at 20 percent per year at the end of the first through fifth years of employment. As of January 31, 1999, the restrictions have lapsed on 160,000 of these shares and the restrictions on the remaining shares lapse in January 2000. Also, in 1998 Mr. Farah purchased 1,046 shares of Common Stock at $16.58 per share under the Stock Purchase Plan, which was the maximum number of shares he was permitted to purchase under the terms of that plan. Based upon the Company's performance in 1998 compared to targets established under the Annual Plan, as discussed above, no payment was made to Mr. Farah under the Annual Plan for 1998. The target payout under the Long-Term Plan for the 1996-98 performance period was 163 percent of base salary. Because the performanceWhen Dale W. Hilpert became Chief Executive Officer of the Company in 1998 was significantly below plan, following two years of essentially on-plan performance in 1996 and 1997,August 1999, the Company's performance did not meet the targets established by the Committee for the 1996-98 performance period. Consequently, the Long-Term Plan payout to Mr. Farah for the performance period was 91.04 percent of his base salary, which would translate to a cash amount of $1,365,600. This compares to the 163 percent of base salary that he would have earned had the performance targets been achieved. Fifty percent of this bonus was paid to Mr. Farah in cash and 50 percent in shares of Common Stock. As noted, Mr. Farah's compensation arrangements in 1998 were unchanged from those negotiated by the Company and Mr. Farah at the time he joined the Company in 1994. In approving these compensation arrangements at that time, the Committee considered that the elements of Mr. Farah's compensation package were the result of negotiation between the Company and Mr. Farah, following a search that identified Mr. Farah as the best candidate for the Chief Executive Officer's position. It has been the Company's practice, with regard to its senior executives, to negotiate new employment agreements approximately one year prior to the end of the then-current agreement, so as to be assured of securing, on an ongoing basis, the services of its key executives. Consequently, the Company and Mr. Farah have entered into a new employment agreement thewith him. The terms of whichthat agreement are summarized on page 20, forPage 20. As a term ending January 31, 2003 (the "1999 Agreement"). Inresult of Mr. Hilpert's new position, the 1999 Agreement, the Company and Mr. Farah have agreed to reconfigure his compensation package to reduce significantlyCommittee adjusted his base salary and to increase the amountpercentage of his compensation that is "at risk" based upon the performance of the Company (through increased "at target" payoutsbase salary payable under the Annual Plan, at target. Additional stock options and the Long-Term Plan) and the price of the Company's shares (through a restricted stock grant and ongoing stock option grants). It was the view of the Committee that it was in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders to enter into a new employment agreement with Mr. Farah in order to secure his services for a reasonable future period and, after consulting with independent 24 28 compensation consultants, to reconfigure the components of his compensation to provide greater incentives tied to the performance of the Company and its share price.were also granted. In approving the new compensation arrangements forwith Mr. Farah contained in the 1999 Agreement,Hilpert, the Committee considered the compensation arrangements with Mr. Farah reflected in the 1994 Agreement, the importance to the Company of retaining Mr. Farah's services for a reasonable period in the future, compensation arrangements of chief executive officers of other companies in the retail and athletic footwear and apparel industries and the benefits to the Company and its shareholders that itwere expected to result from providing Mr. Hilpert with a meaningful compensation opportunity tied to the performance of the Company and the price of its Common Stock. Roger N. Farah served as the Company's Chief Executive Officer until August 1999. Prior to April 1999, Mr. Farah's compensation package was unchanged from the employment agreement negotiated by the Company and Mr. Farah at the time he joined the Company in 1994 (the "1994 Agreement"). The 1994 Agreement provided for a base salary of $1,500,000 per year, and a bonus at target under the Annual Plan of 50 percent of base salary. Two hundred thousand shares of restricted stock were granted to Mr. Farah in 1994 subject to a restriction related to his continued employment, to vest at 20 percent per year at the end of the first through fifth years of employment. As of January 31, 2000, the restrictions have lapsed on all of these shares. In April 1999 the Company and Mr. Farah entered into a new employment agreement, the terms of which are summarized on Page 21, for a term ending January 31, 2003 (the "1999 Agreement"). In the 1999 Agreement, the Company and Mr. Farah agreed to reconfigure his compensation package to reduce significantly his base salary and to increase the amount of his compensation that was "at risk" based upon the performance of the Company (through increased "at target" pay-outs under the Annual Plan and the Long- 24 28 Term Plan) and the price of the Company's Common Stock (through a restricted stock grant and on-going stock option grants). When Mr. Farah resigned as Chief Executive Officer of the Company in August 1999, the Company and Mr. Farah entered into a new employment agreement in connection with his services as Chairman of the Board of the Company, the terms of which are summarized on Page 21, and the 1999 Agreement was terminated. As noted, Mr. Farah's compensation arrangements prior to April 1999 were unchanged from those negotiated by the Company and Mr. Farah at the time he joined the Company in 1994. In approving the compensation arrangements for Mr. Farah contained in the 1999 Agreement, the Committee considered his prior compensation arrangements, the compensation of chief executive officers of other companies in the retail and athletic footwear and apparel industries, and the benefits to the Company and its shareholders that were expected to result from providing Mr. Farah with a meaningful incentive compensation opportunity tied to the performance of the Company and the price of its Common Stock. Based upon the Company's performance in 1999 compared to targets established under the Annual Plan, as discussed above, no payments were made to Mr. Farah or Mr. Hilpert under the Annual Plan for 1999 or under the Long-Term Plan for the performance periods ended in 1999. One Million Dollar Pay Deductibility Cap. Under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code, public companies are precluded from receiving a federal tax deduction on compensation paid to certain executive officers in excess of $1 million per year unless certain requirements are met. It is generally the Committee's view that the compensation plans and programs of the Company should be designed and administered in a manner that ensures the tax deductibility by the Company of compensation paid to its executives. As a consequence, the Annual Plan, the Long-Term Plan, and the 1995 and 1998 Stock Option and Award Plans are structured so that cash compensation paid and stock options granted under those plans qualify for an exemption from the $1 million pay deductibility limit. At this year's annual meeting, the Company is again seeking shareholder approval of the performance goals of the Annual Plan so that the Plan continues to qualify under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code. The Committee recognizes, however, that situations may arise when it is in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders to pay compensation to an executive that cannot be deducted for tax purposes. Most of the compensation related to the restricted stock grants made to Mr. Farah,Hilpert, and potentially some portion of the restricted stock grants made to certain other officers, isare not expected to be deductible. It was the view of the Committee that the benefits of securing the services of Mr. FarahHilpert and these officers outweighsoutweigh the Company's inability to obtain a tax deduction for those elements of compensation. 25 29 2000 Annual Meeting. At the recommendation of the Compensation Committee, the Board of Directors has approved three changes to compensation programs and is submitting these for shareholder approval at this year's annual meeting. First, we are seeking to increase the number of authorized shares under the 1998 Award Plan. The Committee believes that, particularly in this period, stock options are a significant tool for recruiting and motivating key associates and are a prime means of aligning the interests of these associates with those of the shareholders. The Committee has also recommended an amendment to the 1998 Award Plan that will eliminate the annual cap on the number of options that can be granted to any one individual (while retaining a cap on the overall number of options that can be granted to an individual). In administering the stock option plans, the Committee has found the individual annual cap to be ineffective in certain limited recruitment or promotion situations, such as this year's promotion of Mr. Hilpert to the Chief Executive Officer's position, while providing no benefit to shareholders that is not provided through the overall cap. Finally, the Committee has recommended an amendment increasing the percentage of salary (but not the dollar limitation) that may be paid to an executive under the Annual Plan. As with the cap under the stock option plan, the Committee has found, in administering the Annual Plan, that this restriction has limited its ability to design effective compensation packages -- in particular in creating a compensation package for Mr. Hilpert where more of his compensation would be at risk, dependent upon the performance of the Company, and less would be in the form of base salary. James E. Preston, Chairman Philip H. Geier Jr. Margaret P. MacKimm 2526 2930 PERFORMANCE GRAPHS The following performance graph compares the cumulative total shareholder return on the Company's Common Stock against the cumulative total return of the S&P 500 Index and the S&P Retail Stores Composite Index from January 31, 199429, 1995 through January 30, 1999.29, 2000. The graph assumes an investment of $100 in the Company's Common Stock and in each index on January 31, 1994,29, 1995, and that all dividends were reinvested. [PERFORMANCE GRAPH]
VENATOR GROUP S&P 500 S&P RETAIL ------------- ------- ---------- Jan 9495 100.00 100.00 100.00 Jan 95 60.87 97.68 91.13 Jan 96 43.48 132.06 96.7269.60 132.70 102.80 Jan 97 78.74 163.24 114.05127.20 164.23 122.44 Jan 98 84.06 203.54 167.35138.40 209.50 183.31 Jan 99 19.81 265.70 272.3432.80 272.04 297.40 Jan 00 38.00 289.16 292.51
2627 3031 The next graph compares the cumulative total shareholder return on the Company's Common Stock against the Russell 2000 Index and a selected peer group from September 27, 1996 (the date on which all peer group members were publicly held) through January 30, 1999.29, 2000. The peer group consists of The Finish Line, Inc., Footstar, Inc., (whose business includes operations outside of athletic footwear and apparel retailing) and The Sports Authority, Inc. Just For Feet, Inc., and The Sports Authority, Inc.which was previously included in this graph, was omitted since its stock is no longer publicly traded. The Company believes that this selected group reflects the Company's peers as retailers in the athletic footwear and apparel industry.
VENATOR GROUP RUSSELL 2000 PEER ------------- ------------ ---- Sept 96 100.00 100.00 100.00 Jan 97 98.79 106.93 86.2796.36 106.00 83.74 Jan 98 105.45 124.46 61.30104.85 125.03 67.96 Jan 99 24.85 123.65 49.2148.23 Jan 00 28.79 146.05 41.47
On January 29, 1999, which wasPROPOSAL 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS The Company's Certificate of Incorporation provides that the last trading daymembers of the Company's most recently completed fiscal yearBoard of Directors be divided into three classes serving staggered three-year terms, each class to be as nearly equal in number as the other two. The terms of Matthew D. Serra and the final date usedfour directors who constitute Class III expire at the 2000 annual meeting upon the election and qualification of their successors. John J. Mackowski and Margaret P. MacKimm are retiring as directors and are not standing for re-election following the expiration of their terms at the 2000 annual meeting. Jarobin Gilbert Jr., Allan Z. Loren, and David Y. Schwartz will be considered for election as directors in Class III, each to hold office for a three-year term expiring at the above performance graphs,annual meeting in 2003. Matthew D. Serra will be considered for election as a director in Class I, to hold office for a one-year term expiring at the closing price of a shareannual meeting in 2001. The six remaining directors will continue in office, in accordance with their previous elections, until the expiration of the Company's Common Stockterms of their classes at the 2001 or 2002 annual meeting. Each nominee has been nominated by the Board of Directors for election and has consented to serve for the specified term. Messrs. Gilbert, Loren and Serra are presently serving as directors. Mr. Gilbert and Mr. Loren were elected to serve for their present terms at the annual meetings in 1997 and 1998, respectively. Mr. Serra was $5.125. On June 14, 1999,elected to the closing price ofBoard on April 12, 2000. Mr. Schwartz is not presently serving as a sharedirector. 28 32 If, prior to the annual meeting, any of the Company's Common Stock was $8.75.four nominees becomes unable to serve as a director for any reason, the persons designated as proxies on the enclosed proxy card will have full discretion to vote the shares represented by proxies held by them for another person to serve as a director in place of that nominee. Biographical information follows for the four nominees and for each of the six other directors of the Company whose present terms as directors will continue after the 2000 annual meeting. Any reference to a person's tenure as a director of the Company includes service as a director of F.W. Woolworth Co. for the period prior to the 1989 share exchange between the Company and F.W. Woolworth Co. There are no family relationships among the directors or executive officers of the Company. THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR THE ELECTION TO THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE NOMINEES IDENTIFIED FOR ELECTION. NOMINEE FOR DIRECTOR TERM EXPIRING IN 2001 [SERRA PHOTO] MATTHEW D. SERRA. Age 55. Director since April 12, 2000. The Company's President since April 12, 2000 and Chief Operating Officer since February 9, 2000. He was President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company's Foot Locker Worldwide division from September 21, 1998 to February 8, 2000. Mr. Serra previously served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Sterns, a division of Federated Department Stores, Inc., from March 1993 to September 1998.
NOMINEES FOR DIRECTORS TERMS EXPIRING IN 2003 [GILBERT PHOTO] JAROBIN GILBERT JR. Age 53. Director since 1981. President and Chief Executive Officer of DBSS Group, Inc. (management, planning and trade consulting services) since 1992. He is a director of Whitman Corp. and Midas, Inc. He is a trustee of Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company and a director of its subsidiaries, Atlantic Specialty Insurance Company and Centennial Insurance Company. Mr. Gilbert is also a director of Valley Agency for Youth and a permanent member of the Council on Foreign Relations. [LOREN PHOTO] ALLAN Z. LOREN. Age 61. Director since 1998. Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer of American Express Company (travel and financial services) from May 1994 to April 2000. He is a director of Reynolds & Reynolds Company and Hershey Foods Corp. [SCHWARTZ PHOTO] DAVID Y. SCHWARTZ. Age 59. Mr. Schwartz is not currently serving as a director. Independent business adviser and consultant since July 1997. He was a partner with Arthur Andersen LLP (public accounting firm) from 1972 until he retired in 1997. Mr. Schwartz is a director of Walgreen Co.
29 33 DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE TERMS EXPIRING IN 2001 [PRESTON PHOTO] JAMES E. PRESTON. Age 67. Director since 1983. Chairman of the Board of Avon Products, Inc. (manufacture and sale of beauty and related products) from 1989 to May 6, 1999, and Chief Executive Officer of Avon Products, Inc. from 1989 to June 1998. He is a director of ARAMARK Corporation, Reader's Digest Association, Outpost.com, Project Hope, The Edna McConnell Clarke Foundation, The New Milford Hospital, and the Kent Land Trust. [SINCLAIR PHOTO] CHRISTOPHER A. SINCLAIR. Age 49. Director since 1995. Chairman of the Board of Caribiner International (business communications) since May 5, 1999 and Chief Executive Officer from December 22, 1998 to present. He was President of Caribiner International from December 22, 1998 to May 4, 1999. Mr. Sinclair was President and Chief Executive Officer of Quality Food Centers, Inc. (supermarket chain) from September 12, 1996 to March 1998. He was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Pepsi-Cola Company, a division of PepsiCo, Inc. ("PepsiCo") (beverages, snack foods and restaurants) from April 1996 to July 1996; and President and Chief Executive Officer of PepsiCo Foods and Beverages International, a division of PepsiCo, from 1993 to April 1996. He is a director of Caribiner International, Mattel, Inc. and the Amos Tuck School of Business Administration at Dartmouth College.
DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE TERMS EXPIRING IN 2002 [BACOT PHOTO] J. CARTER BACOT. Age 67. Director since 1993. Chairman of the Board of The Bank of New York Company, Inc. (bank holding company) and of The Bank of New York, its wholly owned subsidiary, from 1982 to February 7, 1998; Chief Executive Officer of The Bank of New York Company, Inc. and of The Bank of New York from 1982 to July 1, 1997. He is a trustee of Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company and a director of its subsidiaries, Atlantic Specialty Insurance Company and Centennial Insurance Company; and a director of The Bank of New York Company, Inc., Time Warner, Inc., Associates First Capital Corporation, Phoenix Home Life Mutual Insurance Company and United Way of New York City. He is also a Trustee of Hamilton College. [CRAWFORD PHOTO] PURDY CRAWFORD. Age 68. Director since 1995. Chairman of the Board of AT&T Canada (telecommunications) since June 1999. Chairman of the Board of Imasco Limited (Canada) (consumer products and services) from 1987 to February 2000 and its Chief Executive Officer from 1987 to 1995. Mr. Crawford is a director of Camco, Inc., Canadian National Railway Company, Inco Limited, Maple Leaf Foods Ltd., Petro- Canada and Nova Scotia Power Inc. He is Governor Emeritus of McGill University; Chancellor of Mount Allison University; a member of the Advisory Board of Oxford Frozen Foods Limited; and Counsel to the Canadian law firm of Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt.
30 34 [GEIER PHOTO] PHILIP H. GEIER JR. Age 65. Director since 1994. Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (advertising agencies and other marketing communication services) since 1980. He is a director of Fiduciary Trust Company International, AEA Investors, Inc. and the International Tennis Hall of Fame. He is also a member of the Board of Overseers and Managers of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, the Board of Overseers of Columbia Business School, and the Board of Trustees of the Whitney Museum of American Art. [HILPERT PHOTO] DALE W. HILPERT. Age 57. Director since 1995. The Company's Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer since April 12, 2000. He was President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company from August 16, 1999 to April 11, 2000, and President and Chief Operating Officer of the Company from May 15, 1995 to August 15, 1999. Mr. Hilpert was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Payless Shoe Source division of The May Department Stores Company (retail merchants) from 1985 to April 1995.
PROPOSAL 2. RATIFICATION OF THE APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS The Board of Directors, onOn the recommendation of the Audit Committee, the Board of Directors has appointed KPMG LLP ("KPMG") as independent accountants of the Company for the fiscal year that began January 31, 1999,30, 2000, subject to ratification by the shareholders at the 19992000 annual meeting. A resolution for ratification will be presented at the 1999 annual meeting. KPMG has no interest, financial or otherwise, direct or indirect, in the Company other than as independent accountants. Representatives of KPMG are expected to be present at the annual meeting and will have an opportunity to make a statement and respond to appropriate questions. THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR PROPOSAL 2. 27 31 GREENWAY SOLICITATION Greenway has nominated four individuals for election to thePROPOSAL 3. APPROVAL OF AMENDMENTS TO THE 1998 STOCK OPTION AND AWARD PLAN The Board of Directors in oppositionof the Company has adopted amendments to the Company's nominees for election1998 Award Plan, subject to shareholder approval at the 2000 annual meeting. The amendments would increase by 6,000,000 shares the total number of shares authorized to be issued under this plan and would remove the limit on the number of shares that may be granted to a participant in each year. The amendments would also increase the number of shares that may be issued as restricted stock and other stock-based awards from 1.5 million shares to 3 million shares. Approximately 400 employees participate in the 1998 Award Plan. The material provisions of the 1998 Award Plan are described on Page 17. The complete text of the 1998 Award Plan, as proposed to be amended, is attached as Appendix A. SUMMARY OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENTS. In June 1998 shareholders approved the 1998 Award Plan, which authorized the grant of awards in the form of stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock, and other stock-based awards. There are currently 6,000,000 shares authorized under this Plan. As of April 12, 2000, prior to the Boardoption grants made on that date, there were outstanding awards covering 4,385,559 shares, and only 1,562,980 shares remained available as of Directors. Greenway has also statedthis date for awards under this plan. Therefore, additional shares are needed so that the Company is able to continue its stock option and stock award incentive programs for key executives. We 31 35 believe that these programs provide participants with additional incentive to contribute to the success of the Company and help the Company maintain a competitive compensation program that allows the Company to recruit and retain the best qualified individuals. The plan approved by shareholders in 1998 provided that no more than 1.5 million shares, or 25 percent of the total authorized shares, would be available for awards of restricted stock. The number of shares that would be available for awards of restricted stock and other stock-based awards under the 1998 Award Plan, as amended, would be increased to 3 million shares, or 25 percent of the total authorized shares. The amendments to the 1998 Award Plan would remove the provision that limited the number of shares that may be awarded to a participant in any one year to 600,000 shares. On November 10, 1999 the Compensation Committee granted a stock option to Mr. Hilpert for a total of 350,000 shares under the 1998 Award Plan in connection with his assumption of the position of Chief Executive Officer. Since the number of shares in this stock option grant exceeded the individual share limitation by 117,744 shares, the Committee granted the portion of Mr. Hilpert's option covering 117,744 shares subject to shareholder approval of an amendment to the 1998 Award Plan removing this limitation. If shareholders do not approve the amendment of the 1998 Award Plan, Mr. Hilpert's option for 117,744 shares would be cancelled. In addition, the 1998 Award Plan provides that no participant may receive awards which in the aggregate exceed 10 percent of the total number of shares authorized under the plan. This limitation is not being amended; however, if shareholders approve the amendment to the 1998 Award Plan, the effect will be to increase the 10 percent aggregate award limitation from 600,000 shares to 1.2 million shares. 1999 GRANTS AND AWARDS The Compensation Committee granted the stock options and awarded the restricted stock to the named executive officers shown in the tables on Pages 12 and 17 during 1999. The Company did not grant any stock options to the non-employee directors during 1999. The Company granted stock options, restricted stock, and other stock based awards during 1999 under the 1998 Award Plan to the executive officers as a group, including the named executive officers, covering 2,045,232 shares, and to all employees as a group covering 4,667,232 shares. The fair market value of a share of the Company's Common Stock on April 20, 2000 was $11.00. 2000 GRANTS AND AWARDS On April 12, 2000 the Compensation Committee granted stock options under the 1998 Award Plan to certain officers and key employees of the Company and its subsidiaries, as follows:
NUMBER OF SECURITIES UNDERLYING NAME AND POSITION OPTIONS GRANTED ----------------- --------------- Named Executive Officers.................................... 40,000 All Current Executive Officers as a Group (Including the Named Executive Officers).................. 160,000 All Current Non-Executive Directors......................... N/A All Employees as a Group.................................... 1,300,000
The per-share exercise price of the options granted on April 12, 2000 is $11.3125, which is the fair market value of a share of Common Stock on April 12, 2000. Any benefit to the grantees will be based on the spread between the fair market value on the exercise date and $11.3125. Since it intendsis not possible to presentdetermine when the Greenway Proposals. FOR THE REASONS GIVEN BELOW,options will be exercised by the grantees, benefits, if any, under the 1998 Award Plan are not determinable. 32 36 U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES OF STOCK OPTIONS A participant does not realize taxable income, and no tax deduction is available to the Company, upon either the grant or exercise of an incentive stock option ("ISO"). If a Participant holds the shares acquired upon the exercise of an ISO for more than one year after the option exercise and more than two years after the date of the option grant (the "Holding Period"), the difference between the option price and the amount realized upon the sale of the shares will be treated as long-term capital gain or loss and no deduction will be available to the Company. If the shares are sold before the expiration of the Holding Period, the Participant will realize ordinary income and the Company will be entitled to a deduction for the portion of the gain, if any, equal to the difference between the option price and the lesser of the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise or the amount realized on the disposition. Any further gain or loss will be taxable as long-term or short-term capital gain or loss depending upon the holding period before disposition. A participant does not realize taxable income, and no deduction is available to the Company, upon the grant of a nonstatutory option. When an option is exercised, the excess of the fair market value of the shares on the date of exercise over the exercise price of the option will be taxable to the participant and deductible by the Company. The tax basis of shares acquired will be the fair market value of the shares on the exercise date. For shares held for more than one year following the exercise date, the participant will realize long-term capital gain or loss upon disposition. The Company believes that compensation received by participants on the exercise of nonstatutory options or the disposition of shares acquired upon the exercise of any ISOs will be considered performance-based compensation and thus not subject to the $1 million limit of Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code. THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS BELIEVES THAT THE ELECTIONRECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR PROPOSAL 3. PROPOSAL 4. REAPPROVAL OF THE GREENWAY SLATE OF NOMINEESPERFORMANCE GOALS AND THE APPROVAL OF THE GREENWAY PROPOSALS WOULD BE HARMFUL TO THE COMPANY AND ITS SHAREHOLDERS AND UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT SHAREHOLDERS VOTE ON THE ENCLOSED WHITE PROXY CARD IN FAVORAMENDMENT OF THE SLATEANNUAL INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PLAN Under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code, the Company cannot deduct certain compensation in excess of $1 million paid to the named executive officers of the Company. Certain compensation, including compensation paid based on the achievement of preestablished performance goals, is excluded from this deduction limit if the material terms under which the compensation is to be paid, including the performance goals to be used, are approved by shareholders. Shareholders approved the Annual Plan, amended and restated as of January 28, 1996, at the 1996 annual meeting, which satisfied these requirements. Section 162(m) requires that shareholders reapprove the performance goals under the plan every five years. MATERIAL FEATURES OF DIRECTORS PROPOSED BY THE BOARD (SEE PAGES 12-13) AND AGAINST THE TWO GREENWAY PROPOSALS. THE BOARDANNUAL PLAN The following is a summary of the principal features of the Annual Plan and is qualified in its entirety by the complete text of the Annual Plan, as proposed to be amended, which is attached as Appendix B. Capitalized terms used but not defined in the following summary shall have the meanings contained in the Annual Plan. The purposes of the Annual Plan are to reinforce corporate, organizational, and business development goals; to promote the achievement of year-to-year financial and other business objectives; to reward the performance of individual officers and other employees in fulfilling their personal responsibilities for year-to-year achievements; and to serve as a qualified performance-based compensation program under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code with regard to Covered Employees. The Annual Plan is administered by a Committee, composed of two or more members of the Compensation Committee of the Board, each of whom is an "outside director" under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code. The Committee has the authority to grant awards, determine performance criteria, 33 37 certify attainment of performance goals, construe and interpret the Annual Plan and make all other determinations deemed necessary or advisable for the administration of the Annual Plan. Participation in the Annual Plan is limited to those officers and other key employees of the Company as selected by the Committee. In determining the persons to whom awards shall be granted, the Committee takes into account such factors as the Committee deems appropriate to accomplish the purposes of the Annual Plan. Annual Plan awards relate to a period coinciding with the Company's fiscal year (the "Performance Period"). The individual target award for each participant is expressed as a percentage of Annual Base Salary. Unless otherwise determined by the Committee, payment for such awards shall be made only if and to the extent performance goals for the Performance Period are attained and, in the case of Participants who are executive officers of the Company ("Covered Employees"), generally only if the participant remains employed by the Company throughout the fiscal year. The Committee, in its sole discretion, may make an Interim Payment to any participant other than a Covered Employee who terminates employment prior to the end of the Performance Period. Payment to Covered Employees may be made only after attainment of the performance goals has been certified by the Committee. Notwithstanding the foregoing, pursuant to a written agreement executed prior to the beginning of the relevant Plan Year in accordance with any deferred compensation program applicable to a participant (a "Deferred Compensation Program"), the participant may elect to defer receipt of payments earned under the Annual Plan. Any award deferred by a Covered Employee shall not increase (between the date on which the award is credited to any Deferred Compensation Program applicable to such Covered Employee and the payment date) by a measuring factor for each year greater than either (x) one hundred and twenty percent (120%) of the applicable federal long-term rate, compounded annually, and as set as of the first day of the calendar year; or (y) a hypothetical investment in shares of the Company's Common Stock (as determined under such Deferred Compensation Program), as irrevocably elected by the Covered Employee in the deferral agreement. The participant shall have no right to receive payment of any deferred amount until he or she has a right to receive such amounts under the terms of the applicable Deferred Compensation Program. In no event shall payment for a fiscal year be made to a Covered Employee under the Annual Plan, as amended, in an amount which exceeds $1.5 million. The Committee may at any time and from time to time alter, amend, suspend or terminate the Annual Plan in whole or in part; provided, however, that no amendment which requires shareholder approval in order for the Annual Plan to continue to comply with Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code shall be effective unless it is approved by the required vote of the shareholders of the Company. Notwithstanding the foregoing, no amendment shall affect adversely any of the rights of any participant, without such participant's consent, under an award previously granted under the Annual Plan. Since performance goal criteria may vary from year to year, benefits under the Annual Plan are not determinable. The Annual Plan is designed to provide payments only if the performance goals established by the Committee have been met and the attainment of such performance goals has been certified by the Committee. For example, since the targets established by the Committee for 1999 were not achieved, no awards were paid for 1999 under the Annual Plan. REAPPROVAL OF DIRECTORS ALSO URGES SHAREHOLDERS NOT TO VOTE ON ANY PROXY CARD THAT MAY BE FURNISHED BY GREENWAY. ELECTIONPERFORMANCE GOALS The Annual Plan provides that the Compensation Committee generally has the authority to determine the performance goals that will be in effect for a performance period. The Committee also has the authority to incorporate provisions in the performance goals allowing for adjustments in recognition of unusual or non-recurring events affecting the Company or our financial statements or in response to changes in applicable laws, regulations or accounting principles. The Committee has the authority to determine the performance goals of the executive officers ("Covered Employees") solely to the extent permitted by Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code. 34 38 The performance goals for the Covered Employees will be determined by the Compensation Committee based on one or more of the following criteria: - the attainment of certain target levels of, or percentage increase in, - pretax profit; - after-tax profits of the Company (or a subsidiary, division, or other operational unit of the Company); - after-tax or pre-tax return on shareholders' equity of the Company (or any subsidiary, division or other operational unit of the Company); - the attainment of certain target levels of, or a specified increase in, - operational cash flow of the Company (or a subsidiary, division, or other operational unit of the Company); - return on invested capital or return on investment; - the achievement of a certain level of, reduction of, or other specified objectives with regard to limiting the level of increase in, all or a portion of, the Company's bank debt or other long-term or short-term public or private debt or other similar financial obligations of the Company, if any, which may be calculated net of such cash balances and/or other offsets and adjustments as may be established by the Compensation Committee; - the attainment of a specified percentage increase in earnings per share or earnings per share from continuing operations of the Company (or a subsidiary, division or other operational unit of the Company); - the attainment of certain target levels of, or a specified percentage increase in, revenues, net income, or earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and/or amortization of the Company (or a subsidiary, division or other operational unit of the Company); - the attainment of a certain target level of, or a reduction in, selling, general and administrative expense as a percentage of revenue of the Company (or any subsidiary, division or other operational unit of the Company). AMENDMENT OF DIRECTORS.PLAN The Company believes that its Board of Directors should be composed of individuals who are business leaders, representing a broad range of business and community experience, active service on public company boards, and bringing to Board membership background, experience, and skills that enable them to contributeadopted an amendment to the Company's long-term objectives. The Company believes, based uponprovision in the experience of its nominees set forth below,Annual Plan that each oflimited the existing directors being proposed for reelectionmaximum payment in Class II is a seasoned business leader with the depth of experiencefiscal year to represent all of the Company's shareholders. Each of the outside directors standing for reelection is or has been the Chief Executive Officer of a multi-billion dollar publicly traded company. All of the directors being proposed for reelection were first electedCovered Employee to the Board within the past six years. - Carter Bacot served for over 15 yearslesser of 100 percent of that employee's Annual Base Salary or $1.5 million. In his position as the Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Hilpert's payout at target under the Annual Plan is 75 percent of his base salary. However, if the Company exceeds the performance goals set out in the plan, Mr. Hilpert's (and other Covered Employees') potential payout could exceed 100 percent of base salary. Therefore, in order to allow for a payout that could exceed 100 percent of base salary if the Company exceeds its performance goals, the Compensation Committee amended the plan, subject to shareholder approval, to remove the cap calculated as a percentage of salary. The Bankprovision of New York Company, Inc.the plan that limits the maximum payment to a Covered Employee in a fiscal year under the plan to a maximum of $1.5 million will remain in place. We are seeking shareholder approval of the performance goals originally approved by shareholders in 1996 and the above amendment to the plan regarding the maximum payment limitation. THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR PROPOSAL 4. PROPOSAL 5. APPROVAL OF THE VENATOR GROUP DIRECTORS STOCK OPTION PLAN The Board of Directors has adopted, subject to shareholder approval, the Venator Group Directors Stock Option Plan (the "Directors Option Plan"), effective upon shareholder approval at the 2000 annual meeting. The following is a summary of the material terms of the Directors Option Plan and is qualified in its entirety 35 39 by the complete text of the Directors Option Plan, which is attached as Appendix C. The capitalized terms used in this summary but not defined in this summary have the meanings given to them in the Directors Option Plan. PURPOSE The purpose of the Directors Option Plan is to promote the interests of the Company and our shareholders by increasing the proprietary interest of non-employee directors in the growth and performance of the Company. ELIGIBILITY Directors of the Company who are not employees of the Company or our subsidiaries or affiliates ("Eligible Directors") are eligible to participate in the Directors Option Plan. There are currently nine Eligible Directors on the Board, although it is not intended that the two retiring directors will participate in this plan. David Y. Schwartz would become an Eligible Director upon his election to the Board. TYPES OF AWARDS UNDER THE DIRECTORS OPTION PLAN Effective on the date the Company's shareholders approve the Directors Option Plan and on the first business day of each fiscal year of the Company commencing thereafter, each Eligible Director will be granted an option under the plan to purchase that number of shares of Common Stock having a directormarket value of $50,000 on the date of grant, at a per share exercise price equal to the fair market value of a share of the Company's Common Stock on such date. All options granted under the plan will be nonstatutory options not intended to qualify under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code. Each stock option granted will: - vest in three equal annual installments, beginning with the first anniversary of the date of grant; and - expire on the earlier of the tenth anniversary of the date of grant or one year from the date on which the participant ceases to be an Eligible Director. The exercise price per share of Common Stock shall be 100 percent of the fair market value on the date the option is granted. The exercise price of options must be paid in cash. NUMBER OF AUTHORIZED SHARES The maximum number of shares of Common Stock that may be granted under the Directors Option Plan is 100,000. Shares of Common Stock subject to options that are forfeited, terminated or cancelled will again be available for awards. The shares of Common Stock to be delivered upon exercise under the Directors Option Plan will be made available from the authorized but unissued shares of Common Stock or from treasury shares. The number and class of shares available under the Directors Option Plan and/or subject to outstanding options may be adjusted by the Board of Directors to prevent dilution or enlargement of rights if various changes in the capitalization occur. ADMINISTRATION OF THE DIRECTORS OPTION PLAN The Directors Option Plan will be administered by the Board of Directors. Subject to the provisions of the Directors Option Plan, the Board will be authorized to interpret the Directors Option Plan, to establish, amend and rescind any rules and regulations relating to the plan and to make all other public companies. - Purdy Crawford isdeterminations necessary or advisable for its administration; provided however, that the ChairmanBoard will not have discretion with respect to the selection of directors to receive options, the number of shares of Common Stock subject to any such options, the purchase price or the timing or term of grants of options. The determinations of the Board of Imasco Limited, a $10 billion (Canadian) corporation, and served as that company's Chief Executive Officer for eight years. As a Canadian business leader and a director of a number of leading Canadian corporations, he brings an international perspective toin the Board, which, given the global natureadministration of the Company's operations, is an important contribution. - Philip Geier is the Chairman of the BoardDirectors Option Plan shall be final and Chief Executive Officer of Interpublic Group of Companies, an advertising and marketing communications company, a position he has held for nineteen years. He is also an active community leader, participating on the boards of a number of community organizations. - Dale Hilpert, the Company's President and Chief Operating Officer, has over 20 years experience as a senior executive of retail companies, including 10 years as the Chief Executive Officer of Payless Shoe Source, then a division of May Department Stores Company. Greenway, a minority shareholderconclusive. The Secretary of the Company is proposingshall be authorized to replace these directors with Greenway's four nominees. Two of Greenway's nominees (Alfred D. Kingsley and Gary K. Duberstein) have been principals of Greenway since 1993; one of Greenway's nominees (Andrew P. Hines) has been an officer of a company controlled by Greenway since 1997; and one of Greenway's nominees (Howard Stein) currently is a limited partner of Greenway. Additional information concerningimplement the backgrounds and experience of Greenway's nominees is set forth in the proxy statement being furnished by Greenway in connection with its solicitation of proxies from the Company's shareholders and,Directors Option Plan in accordance with Rule 14a-5(c)its terms and to take such actions of a ministerial nature as shall be necessary to effectuate the intent and purposes of the plan. The 36 40 validity, construction and effect of the Directors Option Plan and any rules and regulations relating to it shall be determined in accordance with the laws of the State of New York. TRANSFERABILITY The options granted under the Exchange Act, such information is incorporated hereinDirectors Option Plan may not be assigned or transferred, except by reference. Onewill or the laws of the Greenway nominees, Howard Stein, is 72 years old. As noted on page 8 above, the Company has a policy that no persondescent and distribution TERM OF PLAN No option may be nominated or stand for election as a directorgranted under the Directors Option Plan after reaching age 72. This policy, which is expressed in a resolution ofJune 8, 2010. AMENDMENTS The Directors Option Plan may be amended by the Company's Board of Directors, has beenas it shall deem advisable or to conform to any change in place for over 10 years and the Company has adhered to it duringany applicable law or regulation; provided, that time. This policy is not contained in the Company's By-laws or its Certificate of Incorporation. Should Mr. Stein be elected as a director at the 1999 annual meeting, the Company does not intend to rely on this policy to preclude his service as a director. 28 32 Since being advised of the Greenway proposals, the Company has engaged in discussions with Greenway in an effort to resolve this matter. These discussions included an offer by the Company that two of the Greenway nominees -- Alfred D. Kingsley and Gary K. Duberstein -- be included as additional directors to serve for two-year terms on the slate recommended for election by the Board of Directors at the 1999 annual meeting. The Company's offer was conditioned on (i) Mr. Kingsley's and Mr. Duberstein's willingness to agree to comply with the policies and restrictions applicable to members of the Company's Board of Directors relatingmay not, except in certain limited circumstances, without the approval of the shareholders: - increase the number of shares of Common Stock that may be purchased pursuant to restrictionsoptions, either individually or in the aggregate; - change the requirement that options granted be priced at fair market value; - modify in any manner the class of individuals who constitute Eligible Directors; or - materially increase benefits to the participants in the plan. AWARDS No options have been granted under the Directors Option Plan to date. Subject to shareholder approval of the Directors Option Plan, the following table sets forth the number of securities underlying the options that would be granted during fiscal 2000 under the plan, effective on the periods during which stock under their control maydate of the 2000 annual meeting, assuming eight Eligible Directors on that date and a fair market value per share on that date of $10.00. The exercise price of the options will be traded and restrictions on public statements and media contacts regarding the Company, (ii) Greenway's agreeing not to nominate candidates or solicit proxies for the election of candidatesequal to the Company's Boardfair market value on the date of Directors for a specified periodgrant. Each option will vest in three equal annual installments, beginning with the first anniversary of time (which, following discussions with Greenway, was determined to be the two-year period that they would have served as directors -- i.e. any time priordate of grant. 37 41 2000 NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS STOCK PLAN BENEFITS TABLE
NUMBER OF SECURITIES UNDERLYING OPTIONS NAME AND POSITION GRANTED ----------------- -------------------- Non-Employee Director Group................................. 40,000 Shares (assuming 8 eligible non-employee directors and a fair market value per share of $10.00)
Any benefit to the 2001 annual meeting), and (iii) Greenway's withdrawing the two Greenway Proposals (which Greenway was prepared to do). In the course of these discussions the Company informed Messrs. Kingsley and Duberstein of the Company's policy thatnon-employee directors and senior officers abide by determinations of the Company's counsel as to whether they were in possession of material non-public information and, accordingly, were required to refrain from trading in the Company's stock. While Messrs. Kingsley and Duberstein took the position that they would comply with the policies and other reasonable restrictions applicable to the Company's directors generally, including, but not limited to, restrictionsbe based on the periods in which the Company's stock under their control may be traded, they were unwilling to agree that they necessarily would abide by such determinations made by the Company's counsel. Messrs. Kingsley and Duberstein did not assert the right to trade in the Company's stock while in possession of material non-public information. The differencespread between the Company and Messrs. Kingsley and Duberstein was over the issue of how, and by whom, decisions regarding trading by directors in the Company's stock would be made. The Board believes that a procedure, such as that of the Company, to clear trading in its shares by directors and senior management through the Company's counsel, is consistent with good corporate practice and in the best interest of all shareholders. The position taken by Messrs. Kingsley and Duberstein as set forth above created concernfair market value on the part ofexercise date and the Board that there couldexercise price. Since it is not possible to determine when the options will be disruptive and time-consuming disputes as to the issue of whether Messrs. Kingsley and Duberstein, or investment funds controlled by them, could trade in the Company's stock. The Board of Directors also was concerned about the unwillingness of Messrs. Kingsley and Duberstein to agree to refrain from making public statements regarding the Company without prior consultation with the Company -- a policy which is applicable to all of the Company's directors. The Board believed that this created a risk of premature disclosure of confidential corporate information that, in the normal course, would be provided to directors. The Board believed that such premature disclosure,exercised, benefits, if it occurred, would not be in the best interests of the Company or its shareholders. In light of the foregoing concerns, the Board concluded that it was not in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders to invite Messrs. Kingsley and Duberstein to join the Board. THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS BELIEVES THAT SHAREHOLDERS WOULD BE FAR BETTER SERVED BY ELECTING THE COMPANY'S NOMINEES -- CARTER BACOT, PURDY CRAWFORD, PHILIP GEIER AND DALE HILPERT -- TO THE BOARD, AND YOU ARE URGED TO VOTE FOR THESE INDIVIDUALS ON THE ENCLOSED WHITE PROXY CARD. PROPOSAL 3. GREENWAY PROPOSAL RELATING TO CHANGE IN NAME CHANGE OF COMPANY NAME. Greenway is seeking shareholder approval for a proposal recommending that the Company change its name back to Woolworth Corporation. At the 1998 annual meeting, 69.6 percent of the holders of the Company's outstanding shares (and 79.4 percent of the shares voting at the meeting) approved an amendment to the Certificate of Incorporation changing the Company's name to Venator Group, Inc. In the view of the Board of Directors, the Company's new name better reflects its current portfolio of businesses and its position as a leading global retailer of merchandise designed for active lifestyles. 29 33 The restructuring of the Company's business that occurred between 1994 and 1997 led the Company to consider the need for a change in its corporate name. In particular, it closed its Woolworth operations in the United States in 1997. In 1998, after the change in the Company's name, the Company sold its Woolworth operations in Germany and Austria, so that it no longer operates Woolworth stores anywhere in the world. Following careful study, the Company changed its name to Venator Group, Inc. As part of the process of identifying a new name, the Company conducted a study which showed that there was a negative perception of the Woolworth name among key stakeholders, including real estate developers, employees, and institutional investors. Further, it showed that investors did not associate the Woolworth name with the type of business the Company had become. Having carried out the name change in 1998, the Company believes that to now change its name yet again would be costly and disruptive and serve no useful purpose. Also, as there are businesses operating in various parts of the world under the Woolworth name thatany, are not relateddeterminable. U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES OF STOCK OPTIONS An Eligible Director does not realize taxable income, and no deduction is available to the Company, upon the Company believes that its use of Woolworth as its corporate name would be confusing to stakeholders, real estate developers and suppliers. FOR THESE REASONS, THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE AGAINST THE GREENWAY PROPOSAL CONCERNING A CHANGE IN THE COMPANY'S NAME (PROPOSAL 3). PROPOSAL 4. GREENWAY PROPOSAL RELATING TO RIGHTS PLAN SHAREHOLDER RIGHTS PLAN. Greenway is also proposing that shareholders approve a resolution recommending that the Board of Directors terminate the 1998 Rights Plan, redeem the rights distributed thereunder, and not adopt any new rights agreement unless approved by the affirmative vote of the then-holdersgrant of a majoritynonstatutory option. When an option is exercised, the excess of the outstanding shares of the Company. The Company has had a Rights Plan in place since 1988. In the view of the Board of Directors, the Rights Plan maximizes shareholder value and protects shareholders and the Company from abusive takeover tactics. Last year, the Board of Directors adopted a new Rights Plan along the lines of the plan originally adopted in 1988. The Rights Plan is designed to ensure that, if there is a sale of the Company, the Board of Directors will have the opportunity to effect a transaction on optimal terms. No assurance can be given, however, that the Rights Plan will create or result in the opportunity to effect a transaction on optimal terms or will not deter unsolicited third party takeover proposals. At the 1998 annual meeting, shareholders voted in favor of a non-binding proposal requesting that the Board of Directors terminate the Rights Plan. Since the last annual meeting, the Board has given very careful consideration to its decision to continue to maintain a Rights Plan. The Board has concluded that, given the volatility of the share price of the Company's Common Stock in the past year, caused at least in part by industry and market factors outside the control of the Company's managers, it is in the best interests of all shareholders to have some form of Rights Plan in place. As a result of the Board's analysis, and taking into account the views expressed by shareholders at last year's annual meeting, the Board recently adopted certain amendments to the Rights Plan that would make the Rights Plan inapplicable to certain kinds of qualifying offers to purchase all of the Company's Common Stock. In general, the requirements for a qualifying offer are as follows: - The person making the offer to purchase the stock (the "Offeror") has provided firm written financial commitments from responsible financial institutions for any cash portion of the offer and the opinion of a nationally recognized investment bank with respect to any securities portion of the offer. - The offer to purchase the Company's Common Stock remains open for at least 120 days. - The Offeror makes an irrevocable written commitment (1) to purchase those shares that were not acquired through the original offer for the same price paid for the shares that were acquired through the original offer, (2) that the Offeror will not materially amend the offer except to increase the offering price, and (3) that the Offeror will not make any offer for the Company's stock for six months after the commencement of the original offer. 30 34 - After the consummation of the transaction, the Offeror owns at least 80 percent of the outstanding Common Stock. In addition, the Independent Directors, defined in the Rights Plan as directors who are not current or former officers of the Company, holders of five percent or more of the Company's shares, or the persons who have made the tender offer, have the discretion to shorten the time periods related to the qualifying offer provisions. The Rights Plan is not intended to prevent or deter an offer to acquire the Company's stock at a price and on terms that would be in the best interests of all shareholders. It is designed to ensure that, if there is a sale of the Company, the Board of Directors will have the opportunity to effect a transaction on the optimal terms. If the Board determines that an unsolicited offer is fair, and on terms that reflect full value, and that are otherwise in the best interests of the shareholders, the Board can redeem the Rights issued to shareholders pursuant to the provisions of the Rights Agreement and permit the offer to proceed. As amended, the Rights Plan would not apply in any event to an offer that met the criteria for a qualifying offer. Although the Board believes that the Rights Plan, as amended, is in the best interest of shareholders, there are a number of persons and entities, including certain academics, corporate governance experts, and institutional investors, who believe that rights plans are not aligned with shareholder interests. The ability of a New York corporation to implement a rights plan has been legislatively sanctioned by the New York legislature, and many New York corporations, like many corporations domiciled in other states, have adopted such plans. Nevertheless, in recent years many companies, including the Company, have been subject to shareholder proposals, seeking to cause the redemption of rights plans unilaterally adopted by a board of directors. The proponents of these proposals assert that rights plans create an obstacle to making a takeover offer directly to shareholders, permit a board of directors to oppose a takeover, and therefore may permit a board of directors and management to become entrenched. There have been a number of academic studies of rights plans in recent years. A 1992 study (Brickley/Coles/Terry) found that average stock market reaction to rights plans is positive when the board has a majority of outside directors and negative when it does not. A 1993 study (Comment and Schwert) found "no evidence of deterrence" of rights plans on takeover offers. Finally, two studies in 1997 (Georgeson and J.P. Morgan) found that companies with rights plans receive higher takeover premiums than those without rights plans. However, it is not clear that such studies establish causality. In general, the Company is not aware of any study that has conclusively demonstrated the effect of rights plans in a manner which has been generally accepted by all interested commentators. CERTAIN PRESENT PROVISIONS OF THE CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION, BY-LAWS AND NEW YORK LAW. Set forth below is a description of certain present provisions of the Certificate of Incorporation and By-laws of the Company and New York law, which may be deemed to have an anti-takeover effect. Article Seventh of the Certificate of Incorporation provides for a "classified" Board of Directors, pursuant to which the Board of Directors is divided into three classes of directors serving staggered three-year terms. Under the Company's By-laws a minimum of 9 directors and a maximum of 17 directors constitutes the entire Board. Article Seventh also provides that directors may be removed from office only for cause and expressly delegates to incumbent directors the power to fill any newly created directorship or vacancy on the Board of Directors, however occurring. Article Eighth of the Certificate of Incorporation includes an "anti-greenmail" provision which prohibits the Company from repurchasing any shares of its capital stock at a price above the fair market value of suchthe shares aton the timedate of such repurchase from an Interested Shareholder (any person, with certain exceptions, who is or who has announced or publicly disclosed a plan or intention to become, a beneficial owner of 5 percent or moreexercise over the exercise price of the Company's voting stock) or certain related parties who have not beneficially owned alloption will be taxable to the participant and deductible by the Company. The tax basis of their shares for at least two years, unless such repurchase is approved by a majority vote of shareholders other than such Interested Shareholder and related parties. In addition, underacquired will be the "self-dealing" provisions of Article Eighth, Business Transactions (as defined therein, including certain mergers, consolidations, sales or dispositions of assets or securities, business 31 35 arrangements, liquidation plans, or reclassifications of securities or other transactions which have the effect of increasing the proportionate sharefair market value of the Company or a subsidiaryshares on the exercise date. For shares held by an Interested Shareholder) involving the Company or any of its subsidiaries with, or proposed by or on behalf of, an Interested Shareholder or certain related parties, require (in addition to any vote which may be required by law) the approval of either a majority vote of shareholders other than such Interested Shareholder and certain related parties or the Board of Directors acting at a time when Disinterested Directors constitute a majority of the Board of Directors. A "Disinterested Director," as used in Article Eighth, is any member of the Board of Directors who is not affiliated or associated with such Interested Shareholder and who was a director of the Company prior to the date on which such Interested Shareholder became an Interested Shareholder, and any successor to such Disinterested Director who is not affiliated or associated with such Interested Shareholder and was recommended or elected by a majority of Disinterested Directors. The By-laws of the Company presently provide that (a) shareholder nominations for directors must meet certain timing and procedural requirements, which are described on page 33 under the caption "Deadlines for Nominations and Shareholders Proposals," and (b) only the Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, a Vice Chairman of the Board, the President and Chief Operating Officer, or a majority of the entire Board may direct that a special meeting of shareholders be called. Pursuant to Section 912 of the New York Business Corporation Law (the "BCL"), a New York "domestic corporation" may not engage in certain business combinations (including, among other things, mergers and consolidations, certain sales or dispositions of assets, liquidations and recapitalizations) with interested shareholders (beneficial owners of 20 percent or more of the corporation's voting power). The Company believes that it is a domestic corporation within the meaning of the BCL. Section 912 would prohibit an interested shareholder from effecting any business combination with the Company for a period of five years following the date that such person first becomes an interested shareholder, unless there was approval by the Board of Directors of either the purchase of the 20 percent or greater interest or of the proposed business combination prior to the 20 percent acquisition. Section 912 further provides that, at the expiration of the five-year period, the interested shareholder could engage in a business combination with the Company only if such transaction is approved by a majority of the disinterested shareholders or if the price paid meets a statutory formula. Section 513(c) of the BCL prohibits a domestic corporation from purchasing more than 10 percent of its stock from a shareholder for more than market value, unlessone year following the transaction is approved by a majority ofexercise date, the shareholders, the offer is made to all shareholders,participant will realize long-term capital gain or the selling shareholder has been the beneficial owner of the stock for more than two years. Section 717(b) of the BCL entitles a director in taking action, including action which may involve a potential change in control of the corporation to consider both the long-term and the short-term interests of the corporation and its shareholders, and the effects of the corporation's actions on prospects for potential growth, current and retired employees, customers and creditors, and the communities in which the corporation does business.loss upon disposition. THE BOARD CONSIDERS THE CONTINUATION OF THE RIGHTS PLAN, AS AMENDED, TO BE IN THE BEST INTERESTS OF ALL SHAREHOLDERS AND, THEREFORE, UNANIMOUSLYDIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE AGAINST THE GREENWAYFOR PROPOSAL RELATING TO THE RIGHTS PLAN (PROPOSAL 4). PARTICIPANTS IN THE SOLICITATION Under applicable regulations of the SEC, each member of the Board of Directors, certain executive officers of the Company and certain other corporate officers of the Company may be deemed to be a "participant" in the Company's solicitation of proxies. The principal occupation and business address of each person who may be deemed a participant are set forth in Appendix A hereto. Information about the present ownership by the directors and named executive officers of the Company of the Company's securities is provided in this proxy statement and the present ownership of the Company's securities by other participants is listed in Appendix A. 32 365. DEADLINES FOR NOMINATIONS AND SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS The Company's By-laws require that notice of nominations to the Board of Directors proposed by shareholders be received by the Secretary of the Company, along with certain other specified material, at least 75 days prior to the meeting of shareholders at which directors are to be elected. Any shareholder who wishes to nominate a candidate for election to the Board should obtain a copy of the relevant section of the By-laws from the Secretary of the Company. Proposals of shareholders intended to be presented pursuant to Rule 14a-8 under the Exchange Act at the 20002001 annual meeting must be received by the Secretary of the Company no later than February 16,December 28, 2000 in order to be considered for inclusion in the 20002001 proxy statement. In order for proposals of shareholders made outside of Rule 14a-8 to be considered "timely" within the meaning of Rule 14a-4(c) under the Exchange Act, such proposals must be received by the Secretary of the Company no later than May 1, 2000.March 13, 2001. All proposals should be addressed to the Secretary, Venator Group, Inc., 233 Broadway,112 West 34th Street, New York, New York 10279.10120. OTHER BUSINESS The Board of Directors knows of no other business whichthat will be presented at the 19992000 annual meeting. If other matters properly come before the meeting, including matters which may have been proposed for inclusion in the Company's proxy materials but were omitted pursuant to the rules of the SEC, the persons named as proxies will exercise their discretionary authority to vote on such matters in accordance with their best judgment. By Order of the Board of Directors GARY M. BAHLER Secretary June 15, 1999April 27, 2000 ------------------------------------ If you have any questions or require assistance, please contact: INNISFREE M&A INCORPORATED 501 Madison Avenue, 20th Floor New York, New York 10022 Toll Free (888) 750-5834 Banks and Brokerage Firms Please Call Collect: (212) 750-5833 3338 3742 APPENDIX A INFORMATION CONCERNING THE DIRECTORSVENATOR GROUP 1998 STOCK OPTION AND CERTAIN OFFICERS OF THE COMPANY WHO MAY ALSO SOLICIT PROXIESAWARD PLAN, AS AMENDED 1. PURPOSE. The purpose of the Venator Group 1998 Stock Option and Award Plan (the "Plan") is to align the interests of officers and other employees of Venator Group, Inc. and its subsidiaries (collectively, the "Company") with those of the shareholders of Venator Group, Inc. ("Venator Group"); to reinforce corporate, organizational and business-development goals; to promote the achievement of year-to-year and long-range financial and other business objectives; and to reward the performance of individual officers and other employees in fulfilling their personal responsibilities for long-range achievements. 2. DEFINITIONS. The following table sets forthterms, as used herein, shall have the name, principal business address andfollowing meanings: (a) "Award" shall mean any Option, Restricted Stock, SAR or Other Stock-Based Award granted pursuant to the present officePlan. (b) "Award Agreement" shall mean any written agreement, contract, or other principal occupationinstrument or document between Venator Group and a Participant evidencing an Award. (c) "Board" shall mean the Board of Directors of Venator Group. (d) "Cause" shall mean, with respect to a Participant's Termination of Employment, (i) in the case where there is no employment and the name, principal business and the address of any corporation or other organization in which their employment is carried on, of the directors and certain officers of the Company ("Participants") who may also solicit proxies from shareholders of the Company. Unless otherwise indicated, the principal occupation refers to such person's position withagreement between the Company and the business addressParticipant, or where there is an employment agreement, but such agreement does not define cause (or words of like import), termination due to a Participant's dishonesty, fraud, material insubordination or refusal to perform for any reason other than illness or incapacity or materially unsatisfactory performance of his or her duties for the Company, or (ii) in the case where there is an employment agreement between the Company and the Participant, termination that is or would be deemed to be for cause (or words of like import) as defined under such employment agreement. (e) "Change in Control" shall mean the occurrence of an event described in Section 9(f) hereof. (f) "Code" shall mean the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. (g) "Committee" shall mean a committee or subcommittee of the Board appointed from time to time by the Board, which committee or subcommittee shall be intended to consist of two (2) or more non-employee directors, each of whom shall be an "non-employee director" as defined in Rule 16b-3 and an "outside director" as defined under Section 162(m) of the Code. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if and to the extent that no Committee exists which has the authority to administer the Plan, the functions of the Committee shall be exercised by the Board. If for any reason the appointed Committee does not meet the requirements of Rule 16b-3 or Section 162(m) of the Code, such noncompliance with the requirements of Rule 16b-3 or Section 162(m) of the Code shall not affect the validity of the awards, grants, interpretations or other actions of the Committee. (h) "Company" shall mean, collectively, Venator Group and all of its subsidiaries now held or hereafter acquired. (i) "Disability" shall mean a disability which would qualify as such under Venator Group's Long-Term Disability Plan. (j) "Exchange Act" shall mean the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. (k) "Fair Market Value" of a share of Stock shall mean, as of any date, the average of the high and low prices of a share of such Stock as reported for such date on the Composite Tape for New York Stock Exchange-Listed Stocks, or, if Stock was not traded on the New York Stock Exchange on such date, the "Fair Market Value" of a share of Stock as of such date shall be the average of the high and low prices of a share of A-1 43 such Stock as reported on said Composite Tape on the next preceding date on which such trades were reported on said Composite Tape. (l) "Good Reason" shall mean, with respect to a Participant's Termination of Employment, (1) in the case where there is no employment agreement between the Company and the Participant, or where there is an employment agreement, but such agreement does not define good reason (or words of like import), a voluntary termination due to "good reason," as the Committee, in its sole discretion, decides to treat as a Good Reason termination; or (2) in the case where there is an employment agreement between the Company and the Participant, a termination due to "good reason" (or words of like import), as specifically provided in such employment agreement. (m) "Incentive Stock Option" shall mean an Option that meets the requirements of Section 422 of the Code, or any successor provision, and that is designated by the Committee as an Incentive Stock Option. (n) "Nonqualified Stock Option" shall mean an Option other than an Incentive Stock Option. (o) "Other Stock-Based Award" shall mean an award, granted pursuant to this Plan, that is valued in whole or in part by reference to, or is payable in or otherwise based on Stock. (p) "Option" shall mean the right, granted pursuant to this Plan, of a holder to purchase shares of Stock under the Stock Option and SAR Program at a price and upon the terms to be specified by the Committee. (q) "Participant" shall mean an officer or other employee of the Company who is, pursuant to Section 4 of the Plan, selected to participate herein. (r) "Plan" shall mean the Venator Group 1998 Stock Option and Award Plan. (s) "Plan Year" shall mean Venator Group's fiscal year. (t) "Restricted Stock" shall mean any shares of Stock issued to a Participant, without payment to the Company to the extent permitted by applicable law, pursuant to Section 7(a) of the Plan. (u) "Restriction Period" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 7(b)(4). (v) "Retirement" shall mean a Participant's Termination of Employment without Cause from the Company who (i) has retired from the employ of the Company and is entitled to a distribution from the Venator Group Retirement Plan, any successor plan thereto or any other tax-qualified, tax-registered or tax-favored retirement plan or scheme sponsored or maintained by any member of the Company or, (ii) if a Participant is not covered by such plan, has attained at least his or her 65th birthday. (w) "Rule 16b-3" shall mean Rule 16b-3 under Section 16(b) of the Exchange Act as then in effect or any successor provisions. (x) "Section 162(m) of the Code" shall mean the exception for performance-based compensation under Section 162(m) of the Code and any Treasury regulations thereunder. (y) "Stock" shall mean shares of common stock, par value $.01 per share, of Venator Group. (z) "SAR" shall mean a tandem or freestanding stock appreciation right, granted to a Participant under Section 6(a)(7) or 6(b), as the case may be, to be paid in an amount measured by the appreciation in the Fair Market Value of Stock from the date of grant to the date of exercise of the right. (aa) "Stock Option and SAR Program" shall mean the program set forth in Section 6 hereof. (bb) "Ten Percent Shareholder" shall mean a Participant who, at the time an Incentive Stock Option is to be granted to such Participant, owns (within the meaning of Section 422(b)(6) of the Code) stock possessing more than ten percent (10%) of the total combined voting power of all classes of stock of the Company or a parent corporation or subsidiary corporation within the meaning of Code Sections 424(e) or 424(f), respectively. (cc) "Termination of Employment" shall mean (1) a termination of service for reasons other than a military or personal leave of absence granted by the Company or a transfer of a Participant from or among the A-2 44 Company and a parent corporation or subsidiary corporation, as defined under Code Sections 424(e) or 424(f), respectively; or (2) when a subsidiary, which is employing a Participant, ceases to be a subsidiary corporation, as defined under Section 424(f) of the Code. (dd) "Transfer" or "Transferred" or "Transferable" shall mean anticipate, alienate, attach, sell, assign, pledge, encumber, charge, hypothecate or otherwise transfer. (ee) "Venator Group" shall mean Venator Group, Inc., 233 Broadway,a New York New York 10279. DIRECTORScorporation. 3. ADMINISTRATION. (a) The principal occupationsCommittee. The Plan shall be administered and interpreted by the Committee. The Committee shall have the authority in its sole discretion, subject to and not inconsistent with the express provisions of the Company's directors who are deemed ParticipantsPlan, to administer the Plan and to exercise all the powers and authorities either specifically granted to it under the Plan or necessary or advisable in the solicitation are set forth on pages 12 through 14 of this proxy statement. The principal business address of Messrs. Farah and Hilpert is thatadministration of the Company. The name, businessPlan, including, without limitation, the authority to grant Awards; to determine the persons to whom and addressthe time or times at which Awards shall be granted; to determine the type and number of Awards to be granted and the other director-Participants' organization of employment are as follows:
NAME ADDRESS - ---- ------- J. Carter Bacot......................................... The Bank of New York Company, Inc. One Wall Street New York, NY 10286 Purdy Crawford.......................................... Imasco Limited Royal Bank Plaza 200 Bay Street North Tower, Suite 2000 Toronto, Ontario M5J 2J2 Canada Philip H. Geier Jr...................................... Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. 1271 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10020 Jarobin Gilbert Jr...................................... DBSS Group, Inc. 301 East 57th Street New York, NY 10022 Allan Z. Loren.......................................... American Express Company 200 Vesey Street New York, NY 10285 Margaret P. MacKimm..................................... c/o Venator Group, Inc. 233 Broadway New York, NY 10279 John J. Mackowski....................................... c/o Venator Group, Inc. 233 Broadway New York, NY 10279 James E. Preston........................................ c/o Venator Group, Inc. 233 Broadway New York, NY 10279 Christopher A. Sinclair................................. Caribiner International 16 West 61st Street New York, NY 10023
A-1 38 EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CERTAIN CORPORATE OFFICERS
NAME PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION - ---- -------------------- Gary M. Bahler.............................. Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary M. Jeffrey Branman.......................... Senior Vice President -- Corporate Development John E. DeWolf III.......................... Senior Vice President -- Real Estate S. Ronald Gaston............................ Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer John F. Gillespie........................... Senior Vice President -- Human Resources Bruce L. Hartman............................ Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Maryann M. McGeorge......................... Senior Vice President -- Merchandise Operations John H. Cannon.............................. Vice President and Treasurer Lauren B. Peters............................ Vice President and Controller Juris Pagrabs............................... Vice President -- Investor Relations Frances E. Trachter......................... Vice President -- Public Affairs Sheilagh M. Clarke.......................... Counsel and Assistant Secretary
INFORMATION REGARDING OWNERSHIP OF THE COMPANY'S SECURITIES BY PARTICIPANTS None of the Participants owns any of the Company's securities of record but not beneficially. The number of shares of Common Stock heldto which an Award may relate; to determine the terms, conditions, restrictions and performance criteria, not inconsistent with the terms of this Plan, relating to any Award (including, but not limited to, the share price, any restriction or limitation, any vesting schedule or acceleration thereof, or any forfeiture or waiver thereof, based on such factors, if any, as the Committee shall determine in its sole discretion); to determine whether, to what extent and under what circumstances grants of Awards are to operate on a tandem basis and/or in conjunction with or apart from other awards made by directorsthe Company outside this Plan; to determine whether, to what extent and under what circumstances an Award may be settled, cancelled, forfeited, exchanged or surrendered (provided that in no event shall the foregoing be construed to permit the repricing of an Option (whether by amendment, cancellation and regrant or otherwise) to a lower exercise price); to make adjustments in recognition of unusual or non-recurring events affecting the Company or the financial statements of the Company, or in response to changes in applicable laws, regulations, or accounting principles; to construe and interpret the Plan and any Award; to determine whether to require, as a condition of the granting of any Award, a Participant to not sell or otherwise dispose of Stock acquired pursuant to the exercise of an Option or Award for a period of time as determined by the Committee, in its sole discretion, following the date of the acquisition of such Option or Award; to prescribe, amend and rescind rules and regulations relating to the Plan; to determine the terms and provisions of Award Agreements; and to make all other determinations deemed necessary or advisable for the administration of the Plan. Subject to Section 9(e) hereof, the Committee shall have the authority to adopt, alter and repeal such administrative rules, guidelines and practices governing this Plan and perform all acts, including the delegation of its administrative responsibilities, as it shall, from time to time, deem advisable; to construe and interpret the terms and provisions of this Plan and any Award issued under this Plan (and any agreements relating thereto); and to otherwise supervise the administration of this Plan. The Committee may correct any defect, supply any omission or reconcile any inconsistency in this Plan or in any agreement relating thereto in the manner and to the extent it shall deem necessary to carry this Plan into effect but only to the extent any such action would be permitted under the applicable provisions of both Rule 16b-3 and Section 162(m) of the Code. The Committee may adopt special guidelines for persons who are residing in, or subject to taxes of, countries other than the United States to comply with applicable tax and securities laws. The Committee may appoint a chairperson and a secretary and may make such rules and regulations for the conduct of its business as it shall deem advisable, and shall keep minutes of its meetings. All determinations of the Committee shall be made by a majority of its members either present in person or participating by conference telephone at a meeting or by written consent. The Committee may delegate to one or more of its members or to one or more agents such administrative duties as it may deem advisable, and the named executive officers is set forthCommittee or any person to whom it has delegated duties as aforesaid may employ one or more persons to render advice with respect to any responsibility the Committee or such person may have under the Plan. All decisions, determinations and interpretations of the Committee shall be final and binding on page 5all persons, A-3 45 including the Company, the Participant (or any person claiming any rights under the Plan from or through any Participant) and any shareholder. The Company, the Board or the Committee may consult with legal counsel, who may be counsel for the Company or other counsel, with respect to its obligations or duties hereunder, or with respect to any action or proceeding or any question of law, and shall not be liable with respect to any action taken or omitted by it in good faith pursuant to the advice of such counsel. (b) Designation of Consultants/Liability. The Committee may designate employees of the Company and professional advisors to assist the Committee in the administration of this proxy statement.Plan and may grant authority to employees to execute agreements or other documents on behalf of the Committee. The Committee may employ such legal counsel, consultants and agents as it may deem desirable for the administration of this Plan and may rely upon any opinion received from any such counsel or consultant and any computation received from any such consultant or agent. Expenses incurred by the Committee or Board in the engagement of any such counsel, consultant or agent shall be paid by the Company. The Committee, its members and any person designated pursuant to Section 3(b) shall not be liable for any action or determination made in good faith with respect to this Plan. To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, no officer of the Company or member or former member of the Committee shall be liable for any action or determination made in good faith with respect to this Plan or any Award granted hereunder. To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law and the Certificate of Incorporation and By-Laws of the Company and to the extent not covered by insurance, each officer and member or former member of the Committee or of the Board shall be indemnified and held harmless by the Company against any cost or expense (including reasonable fees of counsel reasonably acceptable to the Company) or liability (including any sum paid in settlement of a claim with the approval of the Company), and advanced amounts necessary to pay the foregoing at the earliest time and to the fullest extent permitted, arising out of any act or omission to act in connection with the Plan, except to the extent arising out of such officer's, member's or former member's own fraud or bad faith. Such indemnification shall be in addition to any rights of indemnification the officers, directors or members of former officers, directors or members may have under applicable law or under the Certificate of Incorporation or By-Laws of the Company or Subsidiary. Notwithstanding anything else herein, this indemnification will not apply to the actions or determinations made by an individual with regard to Awards granted to him or her under this Plan. 4. ELIGIBILITY. Awards may be granted to officers and other employees of the Company in the sole discretion of the Committee. In determining the persons to whom Awards shall be granted and the type of Award, the Committee shall take into account such factors as the Committee shall deem relevant in connection with accomplishing the purposes of the Plan. 5. STOCK SUBJECT TO THE PLAN; LIMITATION ON GRANTS. (a) The maximum number of shares of Common Stock heldreserved for issuance pursuant to the Plan or with respect to which Awards may be granted shall be twelve million (12,000,000) shares, subject to adjustment as provided herein, except that the number of such shares reserved for issuance as Restricted Stock and Other Stock-Based Awards shall be three million (3,000,000) shares. Such shares may, in whole or in part, be authorized but unissued shares or shares that shall have been or may be reacquired by the other Participants asCompany in the open market, in private transactions or otherwise. If any shares subject to an Award are forfeited, cancelled, exchanged or surrendered, or if an Award otherwise terminates or expires without a distribution of June 1, 1999 is set forth below. The information includes shares to the Participant, the shares of Stock with respect to such Award shall, to the extent of any such forfeiture, cancellation, exchange, surrender, termination or expiration, again be available for Awards under the Plan; provided that, mayto the extent required for the Plan to comply with Rule 16b-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act, in the case of forfeiture, cancellation, exchange or surrender of shares of Restricted Stock, the number of shares with respect to such Awards shall not be acquired byavailable for Awards hereunder unless dividends paid on such A-4 46 shares are also forfeited, cancelled, exchanged or surrendered. Upon the exercise of stock options within 60 days of June 1, 1999:
SHARE NAME OWNERSHIP - ---- --------- Gary M. Bahler.............................................. 128,681 John H. Cannon.............................................. 112,585 S. Ronald Gaston............................................ 40,000 John F. Gillespie........................................... 92,614 Bruce L. Hartman............................................ 64,970 Maryann M. McGeorge......................................... 73,355 Lauren B. Peters............................................ 8,332 Juris Pagrabs............................................... 16,999 Frances E. Trachter......................................... 62,467 Sheilagh M. Clarke.......................................... 8,499
INFORMATION REGARDING TRANSACTIONS IN THE COMPANY'S SECURITIES BY PARTICIPANTS The following table sets forth purchases and salesany Award granted in tandem with any other Awards, such related Awards shall be cancelled to the extent of the Company'snumber of shares of Stock as to which the Award is exercised and, notwithstanding the foregoing, such number of shares shall no longer be available for Awards under the Plan. Notwithstanding any provision of this Plan to the contrary, if authorized but previously unissued shares of Stock are issued under this Plan, such shares shall not be issued for a consideration which is less than par value. (b) During the term of this Plan, no Participant can receive Options, Restricted Stock, Other Stock-Based Awards and freestanding SARs, relating to shares of Stock which in the aggregate exceed ten percent (10%) of the total number of shares of Stock authorized pursuant to the Plan, as adjusted pursuant to the terms hereof. (c) The existence of the Plan and the Awards granted hereunder shall not affect in any way the right or power of the Board or the shareholders of Venator Group to make or authorize any adjustment, recapitalization, reorganization or other change in Venator Group's capital structure or its business, any merger or consolidation of the Company or any part thereof, any issue of bonds, debentures, preferred or prior preference stock ahead of or affecting Stock, the dissolution or liquidation of the Company or any part thereof, any sale or transfer of all or part of its assets or business or any other corporate act or proceeding. (d) In the event that the Committee shall determine that any dividend or other distribution (whether in the form of cash, Stock or other property), recapitalization, Stock split, reverse Stock split, reorganization, merger, consolidation, spin-off, combination, repurchase, or share exchange, reclassification of any capital stock, issuance of warrants or options to purchase Stock or securities convertible into Stock, or other similar corporate transaction or event, affects the Stock such that an adjustment is appropriate in order to prevent dilution or enlargement of the rights of Participants under the Plan, then the Committee shall make such equitable changes or adjustments as it deems necessary or appropriate to any or all of (i) the number and kind of shares of Stock which may thereafter be issued in connection with Awards, (ii) the number and kind of shares of Stock issued or issuable in respect of outstanding Awards, and (iii) the exercise price, grant price or purchase price relating to any Award; provided that, with respect to Incentive Stock Options, such adjustment shall be made in accordance with Section 424 of the Code. (e) Fractional shares of Stock resulting from any adjustment in Options and other Awards pursuant to this Section shall be aggregated until, and eliminated at, the time of exercise by rounding-down for fractions less than one-half ( 1/2) and rounding-up for fractions equal to or greater than one-half ( 1/2). No cash settlements shall be made with respect to fractional shares of Stock eliminated by rounding. Notice of any adjustment shall be given by the Participants listed belowCommittee to each Participant whose Option or other Award has been adjusted and such adjustment (whether or not such notice is given) shall be effective and binding for all purposes of the Plan. (f) In the event of a merger or consolidation in which Venator Group is not the surviving entity or in the event of any transaction that results in the acquisition of substantially all of Venator Group's outstanding Stock by a single person or entity or by a group of persons and/or entities acting in concert, or in the event of the sale or transfer of all of Venator Group's assets (all of the foregoing being referred to as "Acquisition Events"), then the Committee may, in its sole discretion, terminate all outstanding Options and/or any Award, effective as of the date of the Acquisition Event, by delivering notice of termination to each Participant at least twenty (20) days prior to the date of consummation of the Acquisition Event; provided, that during the past two years. Unlessperiod from the date on which such notice of termination is delivered to the consummation of the Acquisition Event, each Participant shall have the right to exercise in full all of his or her Options and Awards that are then outstanding (without regard to any limitations on exercisability otherwise indicated, all transactions arecontained in the public market.
NUMBER OF SHARES OF COMMON COMMON STOCK NAME DATE PURCHASED OR (SOLD) FOOTNOTE - ---- -------- ------------------- -------- DIRECTORS J. Carter Bacot...................................... 07/01/97 879 (1) 07/01/98 1,129 (1) Purdy Crawford....................................... 07/01/97 818 (1) 07/01/98 1,050Option or Award Agreements) but contingent on occurrence of the Acquisition Event, and, provided that, if the Acquisition Event does not take place within a specified period after giving such notice for any reason whatsoever, the notice and exercise shall be null and void. A-5 47 6. STOCK OPTION AND SAR PROGRAM. Each Option or freestanding SAR granted pursuant to this Section 6 shall be evidenced by an Award Agreement, in such form and containing such terms and conditions as the Committee shall from time to time approve, which Award Agreement shall comply with and be subject to the following terms and conditions, as applicable: (a) Stock Options (1)
A-2 39
NUMBER OF SHARES OF COMMON COMMON STOCK NAME DATE PURCHASED OR (SOLD) FOOTNOTE - ---- -------- ------------------- -------- Roger N. Farah....................................... 03/19/98 (15,000) (3) 06/01/98 1,046 (2) 02/10/99 500,000 (4) 04/14/99 175,000 (4) 04/16/99 115,488 (10) 04/26/99 275,000 (11) 06/01/99 1,282 (2) 06/01/99 314 (6) Philip H. Geier Jr................................... 07/01/97 818 (1) 07/01/98 1,050 (1) 04/01/99 6,000 (7) Jarobin Gilbert Jr................................... 07/01/97 879 (1) 09/10/97 (982) (3) 07/01/98 1,129 (1) Dale W. Hilpert...................................... 04/08/98 100,000 (4) 06/01/98 1,046 (2) 06/12/98 100 (7) 02/01/99 100,000 (5) 02/10/99 150,000 (4) 04/16/99 57,744 (10) 06/01/99 2,239 (6) Allan Z. Loren....................................... 04/09/98 100 (7) 07/01/98 788 (1) Margaret P. MacKimm.................................. 07/01/97 879 (1) 07/01/98 1,129 (1) John J. Mackowski.................................... 07/01/97 879 (1) 07/01/98 1,129 (1) 10/01/98 1,000 (7) James E. Preston..................................... 07/01/97 1,759 (1) 07/01/98 2,259 (1) 10/28/98 8,000 (7) 03/15/99 5,000 (7) Christopher A. Sinclair.............................. 07/01/97 818 (1) 07/01/98 1,050 (1) EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CERTAIN CORPORATE OFFICERS Gary M. Bahler....................................... 02/10/98 2,000 (8) 02/10/98 (1,793) (9) 04/08/98 25,000 (4) 06/01/98 729 (2) 02/01/99 30,000 (5) 02/10/99 35,000 (4) 04/16/99 3,253 (10) 06/01/99 538 (2) 06/01/99 314 (6)
A-3 40
NUMBER OF SHARES OF COMMON COMMON STOCK NAME DATE PURCHASED OR (SOLD) FOOTNOTE - ---- -------- ------------------- -------- M. Jeffrey Branman................................... 04/08/98 50,000 (4) 06/01/98 1,046 (2) 08/12/98 100,000 (4) 09/25/98 7,000 (7) 12/04/98 7,000 (7) 12/28/98 (5,000) (3) 02/01/99 40,000 (5) 02/10/99 50,000 (4) 04/16/99 29,786 (10) 06/01/99 275 (6) John E. DeWolf III................................... 04/08/98 50,000 (4) 02/01/99 40,000 (5) 02/10/99 50,000 (4) 04/16/99 25,893 (10) 04/23/99 (11,000) (3) 04/26/99 (14,893) (3) S. Ronald Gaston..................................... 11/30/98 30,000 (4) 02/01/99 40,000 (5) John F. Gillespie.................................... 04/08/98 30,000 (4) 06/01/98 632 (2) 02/01/99 30,000 (5) 02/10/99 35,000 (4) 04/16/99 23,566 (10) 04/29/99 (23,000) (3) 06/01/99 1,141 (2) 06/01/99 275 (6) Bruce L. Hartman..................................... 04/08/98 25,000 (4) 02/01/99 30,000 (5) 02/10/99 35,000 (4) 03/10/99 15,000 (4) 06/01/99 1,020 (6) 06/01/99 218 (2) Maryann M. McGeorge.................................. 04/08/98 10,000 (4) 02/01/99 30,000 (5) 02/10/99 35,000 (4) 04/16/99 3,072 (10) 06/01/99 284 (6) John H. Cannon....................................... 02/09/98 5,357 (8) 02/09/98 (4,952) (9) 04/08/98 17,000 (4) 10/07/98 10,000 (7) 01/22/99 10,000 (7) 02/10/99 17,000 (4) 06/01/99 1,328 (6) Lauren B. Peters..................................... 04/08/98 5,000 (4) 09/01/98 12,000 (4) 02/10/99 25,000 (4) Juris Pagrabs........................................ 04/09/97 17,000 (4) 04/08/98 17,000 (4) 02/10/99 30,000 (4)
A-4 41
NUMBER OF SHARES OF COMMON COMMON STOCK NAME DATE PURCHASED OR (SOLD) FOOTNOTE - ---- -------- ------------------- -------- Frances E. Trachter.................................. 04/09/97 10,000 (4) 02/10/98 2,000 (8) 02/10/98 (1,793) (9) 04/08/98 10,000 (4) 02/10/99 10,000 (4) 06/01/99 314 (6) Sheilagh M. Clarke................................... 04/09/97 2,000 (4) 04/08/98 2,000 (4) 02/10/99 3,000 (4)
- --------------- FOOTNOTES: (1) AcquisitionNumber of Shares. Each Award Agreement shall state the number of shares of Stock to which the Option relates. (2) Type of Option. Each Award Agreement shall specifically state that the Option constitutes an Incentive Stock Option or a Nonqualified Stock Option. To the extent that any Option does not qualify as an Incentive Stock Option (whether because of its provisions or the time or manner of exercise or otherwise), such Option or portion thereof which does not qualify, shall constitute a separate Nonqualified Stock Option. (3) Option Price. Except as set forth in Section 6(a)(8)(B) herein relating to Incentive Stock Options granted to a Ten Percent Shareholder, each Award Agreement shall state the Option price, which shall not be less than one hundred percent (100%) of the Fair Market Value of the shares of Stock covered by the Option on the date of grant. The Option price shall be subject to adjustment as provided in Section 5 hereof. The date as of which the Committee adopts a resolution expressly granting an Option shall be considered the day on which such Option is granted. (4) Method and Time of Payment. The Option price shall be paid in full, at the time of exercise, in cash or in shares of Stock having a Fair Market Value equal to such Option price or in a combination of cash and Stock or, in the sole discretion of the Committee, through a cashless exercise procedure. Options may contain provisions permitting the use of shares of Stock to exercise and settle an Option ("Stock Swaps"). With respect to Stock Swaps, shares of Stock shall be valued at Fair Market Value on the date of exercise and shall have the same remaining time period as the shares of Stock that were swapped. (5) Term and Exercisability of Options. Each Award Agreement shall provide that each Option shall become exercisable as to fifty percent (50%) of the Stock covered by the Option on the first anniversary of the date the Option was granted and as to an additional fifty percent (50%) of the Stock covered by the Option on the second anniversary of the date the Option was granted, unless the Committee prescribes an exercise schedule of longer duration; provided, that, the Committee shall have the authority to accelerate the exercisability of any outstanding Option at such time and under such circumstances as it, in its sole discretion, deems appropriate. The exercise period shall be ten (10) years from the date of the grant of the Option or such shorter period as is determined by the Committee. The exercise period shall be subject to earlier termination as provided in Section 6(a)(6) hereof. An Option may be exercised, as to any or all full shares of Stock as to which the Option has become exercisable, by written notice delivered in person or by mail to the Secretary of Venator Group, specifying the number of shares of Stock with respect to which the Option is being exercised. For purposes of the preceding sentence, the date of exercise will be deemed to be the date upon which the Secretary of Venator Group receives such notification. (6) Termination. Upon a Participant's Termination of Employment by the Company, Options granted to such Participant prior to such termination shall remain exercisable following the effective date of such termination as follows: (i) Cause. If a Participant's Termination of Employment is for Cause, all Options granted to such Participant shall be cancelled as of the effective date of such termination. (ii) Retirement, Termination of Employment for Good Reason or Disability. Upon a Participant's Retirement, Termination of Employment for Good Reason or Disability, all Options granted A-6 48 to such Participant that are "deemed exercisable" (as defined in the following sentence) on the effective date of such Participant's Retirement, Termination of Employment for Good Reason or Disability shall remain exercisable for a period of three (3) years following such effective date (or for such longer period as may be prescribed by the Committee, but in no event beyond the expiration date of such Option). Those Options that are "deemed exercisable" on and after the effective date of a Participant's Retirement, Termination of Employment for Good Reason or Disability, as provided above, shall consist of all unexercised Options (or portions thereof) that are immediately exercisable on such date plus those Options (or portions thereof) that would have become exercisable had such Participant not retired or had his employment not terminated until after the next succeeding anniversary of the date of grant of each such Option; (iii) Other Terminations of Employment. If a Participant's Termination of Employment by the Company is for any reason other than those described in subsections (i) or (ii) above, his "deemed exercisable" Options, which, for purposes of this subsection, shall mean all Options (or portions thereof) granted to such Participant that are immediately exercisable on the effective date of such Termination of Employment shall remain exercisable as follows: (A) if such Participant has ten (10) or more years of service with the Company, such period of service to be determined as of such effective date of termination, for a period of one year from the effective date of such Termination of Employment (or for such longer period as may be prescribed by the Committee, but in no event beyond the expiration date of such Option), or (B) if a Participant has less than ten (10) years of service with the Company, for a period of three (3) months from the effective date of such Termination of Employment (or for such longer period as may be prescribed by the Committee, but in no event beyond the expiration date of such Option). (iv) Death. (A) If a Participant dies during the applicable Option exercise period following the effective date of his Retirement, Disability or other Termination of Employment, as described in subsections (ii) or (iii) above, his executors, administrators, legatees or distributees shall have a period expiring on the date one year from the date of his death (or for such longer period as may be prescribed by the Committee, but in no event beyond the expiration date of such Option) within which to exercise his "deemed exercisable" Options, as described in such applicable subsection. (B) If a Participant dies while employed by the Company, his executors, administrators, legatees or distributees shall have a period expiring on the date one year from the date of his death (or for such longer period as may be prescribed by the Committee, but in no event beyond the expiration date of such Option) within which to exercise his "deemed exercisable" Options, which shall consist of all unexercised Options (or portions thereof) that are immediately exercisable on such date of death plus those Options (or portions thereof) that would have become exercisable had such Participant not died until after the next succeeding anniversary of the date of grant of each such Option. (v) Buyout and Settlement Provisions. The Committee may at any time on behalf of the Company offer to buy out an Option previously granted, based on such terms and conditions as the Committee shall establish and communicate to the Participant at the time that such offer is made. (7) Tandem Stock Appreciation Rights. The Committee shall have authority to grant a tandem SAR to the grantee of any Option under the Directors'Plan with respect to all or some of the shares of Stock Plan. (2) Acquisitioncovered by such related Option. A tandem SAR shall, except as provided in this paragraph (7), be subject to the same terms and conditions as the related Option. Each tandem SAR granted pursuant to the Plan shall be reflected in the Award Agreement relating to the related Option. (A) Time of Grant. A tandem SAR may be granted either at the time of grant, or at any time thereafter during the term of the Option; provided, however that tandem SARs related to Incentive Stock Options may only be granted at the time of grant of the related Option. A-7 49 (B) Payment. A tandem SAR shall entitle the holder thereof, upon exercise of the tandem SAR or any portion thereof, to receive payment of an amount computed pursuant to paragraph (D) below. (C) Exercise. A tandem SAR shall be exercisable at such time or times and only to the extent that the related Option is exercisable, and will not be Transferable except to the extent the related Option may be Transferable. A tandem SAR granted in connection with an Incentive Stock Option shall be exercisable only if the Fair Market Value of a share of Stock on the date of exercise exceeds the purchase price specified in the related Incentive Stock Option. Upon the exercise of a tandem SAR, the related Option or part thereof to which such SAR relates, shall be deemed to have been exercised for the purpose of the limitations set forth in Section (a) of the Plan on the number of shares of Stock to be issued under the 1994 EmployeesPlan. (D) Amount Payable. Upon the exercise of a tandem SAR, the Participant shall be entitled to receive an amount determined by multiplying (i) the excess of the Fair Market Value of a share of Stock Purchase Plan.on the date of exercise of such SAR over the price of the Option, by (ii) the number of shares of Stock as to which such tandem SAR is being exercised. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Committee may limit in any manner the amount payable with respect to any tandem SAR by including such a limit at the time it is granted. (E) Treatment of Related Options and Tandem SARs Upon Exercise. Upon the exercise of a tandem SAR, the related Option shall be cancelled to the extent of the number of shares of Stock as to which the tandem SAR is exercised and upon the exercise of an Option granted in connection with a tandem SAR, the tandem SAR shall be cancelled to the extent of the number of shares of Stock as to which the Option is exercised. (F) Method of Exercise. Tandem SARs shall be exercised by a Participant only by a written notice delivered in person or by mail to the Secretary of Venator Group, specifying the number of shares of Stock with respect to which the tandem SAR is being exercised. If requested by the Committee, the Participant shall deliver the Award Agreement evidencing the tandem SAR and the related Option to the Secretary of Venator Group, who shall endorse thereon a notation of such exercise and return such Award Agreement to the Participant. For purposes of this paragraph (F), the date of exercise will be deemed to be the date upon which the Secretary of Venator Group receives such notification. (G) Form of Payment. Payment of the amount determined under paragraph (D) above may be made solely in whole shares of Stock in a number determined based upon their Fair Market Value on the date of exercise of the tandem SAR or, alternatively, at the sole discretion of the Committee, solely in cash, or in a combination of cash and shares of Stock as the Committee deems advisable. (H) Limited SARs. The Committee may, in its sole discretion, grant tandem SARs or freestanding SARs either as general SARs or as limited SARs. Limited SARs may be exercised only upon the occurrence of a Change in Control or such other event as the Committee may, in its sole discretion, designate at the time of grant or thereafter. (8) Incentive Stock Options. Options granted as Incentive Stock Options shall be subject to the following special terms and conditions, in addition to the general terms and conditions specified in this Section 6. (A) Value of Shares. The aggregate Fair Market Value (determined as of the date the Incentive Stock Option is granted) of the shares of Stock with respect to which Incentive Stock Options granted under this Plan and all other Plans of the Company become exercisable for the first time by each Participant during any calendar year shall not exceed one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000). To the extent that such aggregate Fair Market Value exceeds such one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) limitation, such Options shall be treated as Options which are not Incentive Stock Options and shall be treated as Nonqualified Stock Options. A-8 50 (B) Ten Percent Shareholder. In the case of an Incentive Stock Option granted to a Ten Percent Shareholder, (x) the Option Price shall not be less than one hundred ten percent (110%) of the Fair Market Value of the shares of Stock on the date of grant of such Incentive Stock Option, and (y) the exercise period shall not exceed five (5) years from the date of grant of such Incentive Stock Option. (C) Exercise Following Termination of Employment. If an Eligible Employee does not remain employed by the Company, any parent corporation or subsidiary corporation (within the meaning of Code Sections 424(e) and 424(f), respectively) at all times from the time the Option is granted until three (3) Open market sale.months prior to the date of exercise (or such other period as required by applicable law), such Option shall be treated as a Nonqualified Stock Option. (D) Should either (A), (B) or (C) above not be necessary in order for the Options to qualify as Incentive Stock Options, or should any additional provisions be required, the Committee may amend the Plan accordingly, without the necessity of obtaining the approval of the shareholders of Venator Group. (b) Freestanding Stock Appreciation Rights. The Committee shall have authority to grant a freestanding SAR which is not related to any Option. Freestanding SARs shall be subject to the following terms and conditions: (1) Number of Shares. Each Award Agreement relating to freestanding SARs shall state the number of shares of Stock to which the freestanding SARs relate. (2) Exercise Price. Each Award Agreement shall state the exercise price, which shall not be less than one hundred percent (100%) of the Fair Market Value of the shares of Stock (to which the freestanding SARs relate) on the date of grant. The exercise price shall be subject to adjustment as provided in Section 5 hereof. (3) Term and Exercisability of Freestanding SARs. Each Award Agreement shall provide the exercise schedule for the freestanding SAR as determined by the Committee, provided, that, the Committee shall have the authority to accelerate the exercisability of any freestanding SAR at such time and under such circumstances as it, in its sole discretion, deems appropriate. The exercise period shall be ten (10) years from the date of the grant of the freestanding SAR or such shorter period as is determined by the Committee. The exercise period shall be subject to earlier termination as provided in paragraph (b)(7) hereof. A freestanding SAR may be exercised, as to any or all full shares of Stock as to which the freestanding SAR has become exercisable, by written notice delivered in person or by mail to the Secretary of Venator Group, specifying the number of shares of Stock with respect to which the freestanding SAR is being exercised. For purposes of the preceding sentence, the date of exercise will be deemed to be the date upon which the Secretary of Venator Group receives such notification. (4) Payment. A freestanding SAR shall entitle the holder thereof, upon exercise of the freestanding SAR or any portion thereof, to receive payment of an amount computed pursuant to paragraph (5) below. (5) Amount Payable. Upon the exercise of a freestanding SAR, the Participant shall be entitled to receive an amount determined by multiplying (i) the excess of the Fair Market Value of a share of Stock option grant.on the date of exercise of such SAR over the exercise price of such SAR, by (ii) the number of shares of Stock as to which such freestanding SAR is being exercised. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Committee may limit in any manner the amount payable with respect to any freestanding SAR by including such a limit at the time it is granted. (6) Form of Payment. Payment of the amount determined under paragraph (5) above may be made solely in whole shares of Stock in a number determined based upon their Fair Market Value on the date of exercise of the freestanding SAR or, alternatively, at the sole discretion of the Committee, solely in cash, or in a combination of cash and shares of Stock as the Committee deems advisable. A-9 51 (7) The terms and conditions set forth in Section 6(a)(6) hereof, relating to exercisability of Options in the event of Termination of Employment with the Company, shall apply equally with respect to the exercisability of freestanding SARs following Termination of Employment. 7. RESTRICTED STOCK. Awards granted pursuant to this Section 7 shall be evidenced by an Award Agreement in such form as the Committee shall from time to time approve and the terms and conditions of such Awards shall be set forth therein. Shares of Restricted stock awardStock may be issued either alone or in addition to other Awards granted under the Plan. (a) Restricted Stock. The Committee shall determine the eligible persons to whom, and the time or times at which, grants of Restricted Stock will be made, the number of shares to be awarded, the price (if any) to be paid by the recipient, the time or times within which such Awards may be subject to forfeiture, the vesting schedule and rights to acceleration thereof, and all other terms and conditions of the Awards. The Committee may condition the grant of Restricted Stock upon the attainment of specified performance goals or such other factors as the Committee may determine, in its sole discretion. (b) Awards and Certificates. The prospective Participant selected to receive Restricted Stock shall not have any rights with respect to such Award, unless and until such Participant has delivered a fully executed copy of the Award Agreement to the Company and has otherwise complied with the applicable terms and conditions of such Award. Further, such Award shall be subject to the following conditions: (1) Purchase Price. Subject to the last sentence of Section 5(a), the purchase price for shares of Restricted Stock may be less than their par value and may be zero, to the extent permitted by applicable law. (2) Acceptance. Awards of Restricted Stock must be accepted within a period of sixty (60) days (or such shorter period as the Committee may specify at grant) after the Award date, by executing a Restricted Stock Award Agreement and by paying whatever price (if any) the Committee has designated thereunder. (3) Certificates/Legend. Upon an Award of Restricted Stock, the Committee may, in its sole discretion, decide to either have the Company or other escrow agent appointed by the Committee hold the share certificates representing such shares of Restricted Stock in escrow or issue share certificates to the Participant. Regardless of whether the certificates are held in escrow or are given to Participants, each certificate shall be registered in the name of such Participant, and shall bear an appropriate legend referring to the terms, conditions and restrictions applicable to such Award, substantially in the following form: "The anticipation, alienation, attachment, sale, transfer, assignment, pledge, encumbrance or charge of the shares of stock represented hereby are subject to the terms and conditions (including forfeiture) of the Venator Group (the "Company") 1998 Stock Option and Award Plan and an Agreement entered into between the registered owner and the Company dated . Copies of such Plan and Agreement are on file at the principal office of the Company." (4) Restrictions. During a period set by the Committee commencing with the date of an Award of Restricted Stock (the "Restriction Period"), shares of Restricted Stock may not be sold, assigned, Transferred, pledged, hypothecated or otherwise disposed of, except by will or the laws of descent and distribution, as set forth in the Award Agreement and such Award Agreement shall set forth a vesting schedule and any events which would accelerate vesting of the shares of Restricted Stock. Any attempt to dispose of any such shares of Stock in contravention of such restrictions shall be null and void and without effect. Notwithstanding the foregoing, no vesting limitation shall apply, and the Participant's interest in such shares shall be fully vested, in the event of a Change in Control which occurs prior to the expiration of the vesting period set forth in the Award Agreement. Within these limits, based on service, performance and/or such other factors or criteria as the Committee may determine in its sole discretion, A-10 52 the Committee may provide for the lapse of such restrictions in installments in whole or in part, or may accelerate the vesting of all or any part of any Restricted Stock Award and/or waive the deferral limitations for all or any part of such Award (including, without limitation, any deferral of dividends). (5) Forfeiture. Subject to such exceptions as may be determined by the Committee, if the Participant's continuous employment with the Company shall terminate for any reason prior to the expiration of the Restriction Period of an Award, or to the extent any goals for the Restriction Period are not met, any shares of Stock remaining subject to restrictions shall thereupon be forfeited by the Participant and Transferred to, and reacquired by, Venator Group at no cost to Venator Group. (6) Ownership. Except to the extent otherwise set forth in the Award Agreement, during the Restriction Period the Participant shall possess all incidents of ownership of such shares, subject to Section 7(b)(4), including the right to receive dividends with respect to such shares and to vote such shares and, subject to and conditioned upon the full vesting of shares of Restricted Stock, the right to tender such shares. The Committee, in its sole discretion, as determined at the time of the Award, may permit or require the payment of dividends to be deferred. (7) Lapse of Restrictions. If and when the Restriction Period expires without a prior forfeiture of the Restricted Stock subject to such Restriction Period, the certificates for such shares shall be delivered to the Participant. All legends shall be removed from said certificates at the time of delivery to the Participant. 8. OTHER STOCK-BASED AWARDS. (a) Other Awards. Other Awards of Stock and other Awards that are valued in whole or in part by reference to, or are payable in or otherwise based on, Stock ("Other Stock-Based Awards"), including, without limitation, Awards valued by reference to performance of a subsidiary, may be granted either alone or in addition to or in tandem with Stock Options, SARs or Restricted Stock. Subject to the provisions of the Plan, the Committee shall have authority to determine the persons to whom and the time or times at which such Awards shall be made, the number of shares of Stock to be awarded pursuant to such Awards, and all other conditions of the Awards. The Committee may also provide for the grant of Stock under such Awards upon the completion of a specified performance goal or period. (b) Terms and Conditions. Other Stock-Based Awards made pursuant to this Section 8 shall be subject to the following terms and conditions: (1) Dividends. Unless otherwise determined by the Committee at the time of Award, subject to the provisions of the Award Agreement and this Plan, the recipient of an Award under this Section shall be entitled to receive, currently or on a deferred basis, dividends or dividend equivalents with respect to the number of shares of Stock covered by the Award, as determined at the time of the Award by the Committee, in its sole discretion. (2) Vesting. Any Award under this Section and any Stock covered by any such Award shall vest or be forfeited to the extent so provided in the Award Agreement, as determined by the Committee, in its sole discretion. (3) Waiver of Limitation. In the event of the Participant's Retirement, Termination of Employment for Good Reason, Disability or death, or in cases of special circumstances, the Committee may, in its sole discretion, waive in whole or in part any or all of the limitations imposed hereunder (if any) with respect to any or all of an Award under this Section 8. (4) Price. Stock issued on a bonus basis under this Section 8 may be issued for no cash consideration; Stock purchased pursuant to a purchase right awarded under this Section shall be priced as determined by the Committee. A-11 53 9. GENERAL PROVISIONS. (a) Compliance with Legal Requirements. The Plan and the granting and exercising of Awards, and the other obligations of the Company under the Plan and any Award Agreement or other agreement shall be subject to all applicable federal and state laws, rules and regulations, and to such approvals by any regulatory or governmental agency as may be required. The Company, in its discretion, may postpone the issuance or delivery of Stock under any Award as the Company may consider appropriate, and may require any Participant to make such representations and furnish such information as it may consider appropriate in connection with the issuance or delivery of Stock in compliance with applicable laws, rules and regulations. (b) Nontransferability. No Award shall be Transferred by the Participant otherwise than by will or by the laws of descent and distribution. All Awards shall be exercisable, during the Participant's lifetime, only by the Participant. No Award shall, except as otherwise specifically provided by law or herein, be Transferred in any manner, and any attempt to Transfer any such Award shall be void, and no such Award shall in any manner be used for the payment of, subject to, or otherwise encumbered by or hypothecated for the debts, contracts, liabilities, engagements or torts of any person who shall be entitled to such Award, nor shall it be subject to attachment or legal process for or against such person. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Committee may determine at the time of grant or thereafter, that an Award, other than an Incentive Stock Option, that is otherwise not Transferable pursuant to this Section 9(b) is Transferable in whole or part and in such circumstances, and under such conditions, as specified by the Committee. (c) No Right To Continued Employment. Nothing in the Plan or in any Award granted or any Award Agreement or other agreement entered into pursuant hereto shall confer upon any Participant the right to continue in the employ of the Company or to be entitled to any remuneration or benefits not set forth in the Plan or such Award Agreement or other agreement or to interfere with or limit in any way the right of the Company to terminate such Participant's employment. (d) Withholding Taxes. Where a Participant or other person is entitled to receive shares of Stock pursuant to the exercise of an Option or is otherwise entitled to receive shares of Stock or cash pursuant to an Award hereunder, the Company shall have the right to require the Participant or such other person to pay to the Company the amount of any taxes which the Company may be required to withhold before delivery to such Participant or other person of cash or a certificate or certificates representing such shares. Upon the disposition of shares of Stock acquired pursuant to the exercise of an Incentive Stock Option, the Company shall have the right to require the payment of the amount of any taxes which are required by law to be withheld with respect to such disposition. Unless otherwise prohibited by the Committee or by applicable law, a Participant may satisfy any such withholding tax obligation by any of the following methods, or by a combination of such methods: (a) tendering a cash payment; (b) authorizing the Company to withhold from the shares of Stock or cash otherwise payable to such Participant (1) one or more of such shares having an aggregate Fair Market Value, determined as of the date the withholding tax obligation arises, less than or equal to the amount of the total withholding tax obligation or (2) cash in an amount less than or equal to the amount of the total withholding tax obligation; or (c) delivering to the Company previously acquired shares of Stock (none of which shares may be subject to any claim, lien, security interest, community property right or other right of spouses or present or former family members, pledge, option, voting agreement or other restriction or encumbrance of any nature whatsoever) having an aggregate Fair Market Value, determined as of the date the withholding tax obligation arises, less than or equal to the amount of the total withholding tax obligation. A Participant's election to pay his or her withholding tax obligation (in whole or in part) by the method described in (b)(1) above is irrevocable once it is made. (e) Amendment and Termination of the Plan. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Plan, the Board or the Committee may at any time and from time to time alter, amend, suspend, or terminate the Plan in whole or in part; provided that, no amendment which requires shareholder approval under applicable New York law or in order for the Plan to continue to comply with Rule 16b-3 or Section 162(m) of the Code shall be effective unless the same shall be approved by the requisite vote of the shareholders of the Company. A-12 54 Notwithstanding the foregoing, no amendment shall affect adversely any of the rights of any Participant, without such Participant's consent, under any Award theretofore granted under the Plan. The power to grant Options under the Plan will automatically terminate ten years after the adoption of the Plan by the shareholders. If the Plan is terminated, any unexercised Option shall continue to be exercisable in accordance with its terms and the terms of the Plan in effect immediately prior to such termination. (f) Change in Control. Notwithstanding any other provision of the Plan to the contrary, if, while any Awards remain outstanding under the Plan, a "Change in Control" of Venator Group (as defined in this Section 9(f)) shall occur, (1) all Options and freestanding SARs granted under the Plan that are outstanding at the time of such Change in Control shall become immediately exercisable in full, without regard to the years that have elapsed from the date of grant; (2) unless the Committee determines otherwise at the time of grant pursuant to an Award Agreement or other arrangement or plan granting such Award, all restrictions with respect to shares of Restricted Stock shall lapse, and such shares shall be fully vested and nonforfeitable; and (3) unless the Committee determines otherwise at the time of grant pursuant to an Award Agreement datedor other arrangement or plan granting such Award, with respect to Other Stock-Based Awards, any performance periods or goals outstanding at the time of a Change in Control shall be deemed to have been attained or any restrictions outstanding at the time of a Change in Control shall lapse. For purposes of this paragraph 9(f), a Change in Control of Venator Group shall occur upon the happening of the earliest to occur of the following: (i) (A) the making of a tender or exchange offer by any person or entity or group of associated persons or entities (within the meaning of Section 13(d)(3) or 14(d)(2) of the Exchange Act) (a "Person") (other than Venator Group or its subsidiaries) for shares of Stock pursuant to which purchases are made of securities representing at least twenty percent (20%) of the total combined voting power of Venator Group's then issued and outstanding voting securities; (B) the merger or consolidation of Venator Group with, or the sale or disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of Venator Group to, any Person other than (a) a merger or consolidation which would result in the voting securities of Venator Group outstanding immediately prior thereto continuing to represent (either by remaining outstanding or by being converted into voting securities of the surviving or parent entity) fifty percent (50%) or more of the combined voting power of the voting securities of Venator Group or such surviving or parent entity outstanding immediately after such merger or consolidation; or (b) a merger or capitalization effected to implement a recapitalization of Venator Group (or similar transaction) in which no Person is or becomes the beneficial owner, directly or indirectly (as determined under Rule 13d-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act), of securities representing more than the amounts set forth in (C) below; (C) the acquisition of direct or indirect beneficial ownership (as determined under Rule 13d-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act), in the aggregate, of securities of Venator Group representing twenty percent (20%) or more of the total combined voting power of Venator Group's then issued and outstanding voting securities by any Person acting in concert as of the date of the Plan; provided, however, that the Board may at any time and from time to time and in the sole discretion of the Board, as the case may be, increase the voting security ownership percentage threshold of this item (C) to an amount not exceeding forty percent (40%); or (D) the approval by the shareholders of Venator Group of any plan or proposal for the complete liquidation or dissolution of Venator Group or for the sale of all or substantially all of the assets of Venator Group; or (ii) during any period of not more than two (2) consecutive years, individuals who at the beginning of such period constitute the Board, and any new director (other than a director designated by a person who has entered into agreement with the Company to effect a transaction described in clause (i)) whose election by the Board or nomination for election by Venator Group's shareholders was approved by a vote of at least two-thirds ( 2/3) of the directors then still in office who either were directors at the beginning of the period or whose election or nomination for election was previously so approved, cease for any reason to constitute at least a majority thereof. (g) Participant Rights. No Participant shall have any claim to be granted any Award under the Plan, and there is no obligation for uniformity of treatment for Participants. Except as provided specifically herein, a Participant or a transferee of an Award shall have no rights as a shareholder with respect to any shares covered by any Award until the date of the issuance of a Stock certificate to him for such shares. A-13 55 (h) Unfunded Status of Awards. The Plan is intended to constitute an "unfunded" plan for incentive and deferred compensation. With respect to any payments not yet made to a Participant pursuant to an Award, nothing contained in the Plan or any Award shall give any such Participant any rights that are greater than those of a general creditor of the Company. (i) No Fractional Shares. Except with respect to fractional shares resulting from any adjustment in Awards pursuant to Section 5, no fractional shares of Stock shall be issued or delivered pursuant to the Plan or any Award. (j) Legend. The Committee may require each person purchasing shares pursuant to a Stock Option or other Award under the Plan to represent to and agree with the Company in writing that the Participant is acquiring the shares without a view to distribution thereof. In addition to any legend required by this Plan, the certificates for such shares may include any legend which the Committee deems appropriate to reflect any restrictions on Transfer. All certificates for shares of Stock delivered under the Plan shall be subject to such stop transfer orders and other restrictions as the Committee may deem advisable under the rules, regulations and other requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission, any stock exchange upon which the Stock is then listed or any national securities association system upon whose system the Stock is then quoted, any applicable Federal or state securities law, and any applicable corporate law, and the Committee may cause a legend or legends to be put on any such certificates to make appropriate reference to such restrictions. (k) Other Plans. Nothing contained in this Plan shall prevent the Board from adopting other or additional compensation arrangements, subject to shareholder approval if such approval is required; and such arrangements may be either generally applicable or applicable only in specific cases. (l) Listing and Other Conditions. (1) As long as the Stock is listed on a national securities exchange or system sponsored by a national securities association, the issue of any shares of Stock pursuant to an Option or other Award shall be conditioned upon such shares being listed on such exchange or system. The Company shall have no obligation to issue such shares unless and until such shares are so listed, and the right to exercise any Option or other Award with respect to such shares shall be suspended until such listing has been effected. (2) If at any time counsel to the Company shall be of the opinion that any sale or delivery of shares of Stock pursuant to an Option or other Award is or may in the circumstances be unlawful or result in the imposition of excise taxes under the statutes, rules or regulations of any applicable jurisdiction, the Company shall have no obligation to make such sale or delivery, or to make any application or to effect or to maintain any qualification or registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or otherwise with respect to shares of Stock or Awards, and the right to exercise any Option or other Award shall be suspended until, in the opinion of said counsel, such sale or delivery shall be lawful or will not result in the imposition of excise taxes. (3) Upon termination of any period of suspension under this Section, any Award affected by such suspension which shall not then have expired or terminated shall be reinstated as to all shares available before such suspension and as to shares which would otherwise have become available during the period of such suspension, but no such suspension shall extend the term of any Option. (m) Governing Law. The Plan and all determinations made and actions taken pursuant hereto shall be governed by the laws of the State of New York without giving effect to the conflict of laws principles thereof. (n) Effective Date. The Plan shall take effect upon its adoption by the Board, but the Plan (and any grants of Awards made prior to the shareholder approval mentioned herein) shall be subject to the requisite approval of the shareholders of the Company. In the absence of such approval, such Awards shall be null and void. (o) Death/Beneficiary. The Committee may in its sole discretion require the transferee of a Participant to supply it with written notice of the Participant's death or Disability and to supply it with a copy of the will A-14 56 (in the case of the Participant's death) or such other evidence as the Committee deems necessary to establish the validity of the Transfer of an Option. The Committee may also require that the agreement of the transferee to be bound by all of the terms and conditions of the Plan. A Participant may file with the Committee a written designation of a beneficiary on such form as may be prescribed by the Committee and may, from time to time, amend or revoke such designation. If no designated beneficiary survives the Participant, the executor or administrator of the Participant's estate shall be deemed to be the grantee's beneficiary. (p) Interpretation. The Plan is designed and intended to comply with Rule 16b-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act and, to the extent applicable, with Section 162(m) of the Code, and all provisions hereof shall be construed in a manner to so comply. (q) Severability of Provisions. If any provision of the Plan shall be held invalid or unenforceable, such invalidity or unenforceability shall not affect any other provisions hereof, and the Plan shall be construed and enforced as if such provisions had not been included. (r) Headings and Captions. The headings and captions herein are provided for reference and convenience only, shall not be considered part of the Plan, and shall not be employed in the construction of the Plan. A-15 57 APPENDIX B AS AMENDED THROUGH JANUARY 30, 2000 VENATOR GROUP ANNUAL INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PLAN (SHORT-TERM PLAN) Effective as of February 1, 1999. (6)1983, the Board of Directors of F.W. Woolworth Co. adopted an Annual Incentive Compensation Plan (the "Prior Plan") for certain employees of F.W. Woolworth Co. Effective as of August 7, 1989, Venator Group, Inc. ("Venator Group") adopted the Prior Plan, as amended. For "Covered Employees" (as defined below), the Prior Plan was amended and restated effective as of January 1, 1994 (the "1994 Plan") and was approved by the shareholders at the 1994 annual meeting. For all other employees, the 1994 Plan was amended and restated effective as of January 1, 1994. For Covered Employees, the 1994 Plan was further amended and restated as of January 28, 1996 (the "1996 Plan"), and was approved by the shareholders at the 1996 annual meeting. For all other employees, the 1996 Plan was further amended and restated as of January 28, 1996. The aggregateBoard of Directors further amended the 1996 Plan effective January 30, 2000 (the "Plan"), subject to shareholder approval at the 2000 annual meeting. The purposes of the Plan are: (a) to reinforce corporate organizational and business development goals. (b) to promote the achievement of year-to-year and long-range financial and other business objectives such as high quality of service and product, improved productivity and efficiencies for the benefit of our customers' satisfaction and to assure a reasonable return to Venator Group's shareholders. (c) to reward the performance of officers and key employees in fulfilling their personal responsibilities for annual achievements. (d) to serve as a qualified performance-based compensation program under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code") or any successor section and the Treasury regulations promulgated thereunder ("Section 162(m) of the Code"). 1. DEFINITIONS. The following terms, as used herein, shall have the following meanings: (a) "Annual Base Salary" with respect to any Plan Year shall mean the total amount paid by Venator Group and its subsidiaries to a participant during such Plan Year without reduction for any amounts withheld pursuant to participation in a qualified "cafeteria plan" under Section 125 of the Code or in a cash or deferred arrangement under Section 401(k) of the Code. Annual Base Salary shall not include any amount paid or accruing to a participant under the Venator Group Long-Term Incentive Compensation Plan or any other incentive compensation or bonus payment or extraordinary remuneration, expense allowances, imputed income or any other amounts deemed to be indirect compensation, severance pay and any contributions made by Venator Group to this or any other plan maintained by Venator Group or any other amounts which, in the opinion of the Committee, are not considered to be Annual Base Salary for purposes of the Plan. (b) "Board shall mean the Board of Directors of Venator Group. (c) "Committee" shall mean two or more members of the Compensation Committee of the Board, each of whom is an "outside director" within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the Code. B-1 58 (d) "Covered Employee" shall mean an officer or key employee of Venator Group who is designated as an executive officer for purposes of Rule 3b-7 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 for the relevant Plan Year. (e) "Individual Target Award" shall mean the targeted performance award for a Plan Year specified by the Committee as provided in Section 5 herein. (f) "Plan Year" shall mean Venator Group's fiscal year during which the Plan is in effect. 2. ADMINISTRATION OF THE PLAN. The Plan shall be administered by the Committee. No member of the Committee while serving as such shall be eligible for participation in the Plan. The Committee shall have exclusive and final authority in all determinations and decisions affecting the Plan and its participants. The Committee shall also have the sole authority to interpret the Plan, to establish and revise rules and regulations relating to the Plan, to delegate such responsibilities or duties as it deems desirable, and to make any other determination that it believes necessary or advisable for the administration of the Plan including, but not limited to: (i) approving the designation of eligible participants; (ii) setting the performance criteria within the Plan guidelines; and (iii) certifying attainment of performance goals and other material terms. The Committee shall have the authority in its sole discretion, subject to and not inconsistent with the express provisions of the Plan, to incorporate provisions in the performance goals allowing for adjustments in recognition of unusual or non-recurring events affecting Venator Group or the financial statements of Venator Group, or in response to changes in applicable laws, regulations, or accounting principles; provided that the Committee shall have such authority with regard to the performance goals of Covered Employees solely to the extent permitted by Section 162(m) of the Code. To the extent any provision of the Plan creates impermissible discretion under Section 162(m) of the Code or would otherwise violate Section 162(m) of the Code with regard to the performance goals of Covered Employees, such provision shall have no force or effect. 3. PARTICIPATION. Participation in the Plan is limited to officers or key employees of Venator Group. Individual participants shall be those employees selected in the sole discretion of the Committee (in the case of Covered Employees) or its designee (in the case of all other officers and key employees). In determining the persons to whom awards shall be granted, the Committee shall take into account such factors as the Committee shall deem appropriate in connection with accomplishing the purposes of the Plan. The Committee may from time to time designate additional participants who satisfy the criteria for participation as set forth herein and shall determine when an officer or key employee of Venator Group ceases to be a participant in the Plan. 4. RIGHT TO PAYMENT. Unless otherwise determined by the Committee in its sole discretion, a participant shall have no right to receive payment under this Plan unless the participant remains in the employ of Venator Group at all times during the applicable Plan Year, provided, however, that the Committee may, in its sole discretion, make an "Interim Payment" to any participant (other than a Covered Employee). Such Interim Payment shall be equal to the amount of the payment the participant would have received, pursuant to Sections 5 and 6 hereof, at the completion of the Plan Year during which such Interim Payment is made (the "Interim Year") and shall be the sum of: (a) the actual performance results achieved relative to the Plan's performance goals with respect to the period from the commencement of the Interim Year to the date of the Interim Payment, and (b) the performance results that would have been achieved had the Plan's budget goal been met for the balance of such Interim Year, multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the number of shares owned,completed months between the commencement of the Interim Year and the date of the Interim Payment and the denominator of which is 12. Following the close of the Interim Year, the Committee shall make a "Final Payment" to each participant who received an Interim Payment in an amount equal to the difference, if any, between the amount of the Interim Payment and the amount of the payment that would have been made pursuant to Sections 5 and 6 hereof, absent such Interim Payment. B-2 59 5. PAYMENT. (a) Payment under this Plan to a participant will be made in cash in an amount equal to the achieved percentage of such participant's Annual Base Salary as determined by the Committee for each Plan Year. Such percentage shall be based on the participant's achievement of his or her Individual Target Award. Except to the extent provided for in Section 4 hereof with respect to Interim Payments, payment shall be made only if and to the extent the performance goals with respect to the Plan Year are attained. (b) At the beginning of each Plan Year (or, with respect to Covered Employees, within the time period prescribed by Section 162(m) of the Code), the Committee shall establish all performance goals and the Individual Target Awards for such Plan Year and Venator Group shall inform each participant of the Committee's determination with respect to such participant for such Plan Year. Individual Target Awards shall be expressed as a percentage of such participant's Annual Base Salary. At the time the performance goals are established, the Committee shall prescribe a formula to determine the percentages of the Individual Target Award which may be payable based upon the degree of attainment of the performance goals during the Plan Year. (c) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in this Plan, (1) the performance goals in respect of awards granted to participants who are Covered Employees, shall be based on one or more of the following criteria: (i) the attainment of certain target levels of, or percentage increase in, pre-tax profit of Venator Group (or a subsidiary, division, or other operational unit of Venator Group); (ii) the attainment of certain target levels of, or a percentage increase in, after-tax profits of Venator Group (or a subsidiary, division, or other operational unit of Venator Group); (iii) the attainment of certain target levels of, or a specified increase in, operational cash flow of Venator Group (or a subsidiary, division, or other operational unit of Venator Group); (iv) the achievement of a certain level of, reduction of, or other specified objectives with regard to limiting the level of increase in, all or a portion of, Venator Group's bank debt or other long-term or short-term public or private debt or other similar financial obligations of Venator Group, if any, which may be calculated net of such cash balances and/or other offsets and adjustments as may be established by the Committee; (v) the attainment of a specified percentage increase in earnings per share or earnings per share from continuing operations of Venator Group (or a subsidiary, division or other operational unit of Venator Group); (vi) the attainment of certain target levels of, or a specified percentage increase in, revenues, net income, or earnings before (A) interest, (B) taxes, (C) depreciation and/or (D) amortization, of Venator Group (or a subsidiary, division, or other operational unit of Venator Group); (vii) the attainment of certain target levels of, or a specified increase in, return on invested capital or return on investment; (viii) the attainment of certain target levels of, or a percentage increase in, after-tax or pre-tax return on shareholders' equity of Venator Group (or any subsidiary, division or other operational unit of Venator Group); and (ix) the attainment of a certain target level of, or reduction in, selling, general and administrative expense as a percentage of revenue of Venator Group (or any subsidiary, division or other operational unit of Venator Group) and (2) in no event shall payment in respect of an award granted for a performance period be made to a participant who is a Covered Employee as of the dated indicated,end of such Plan Year in an amount which were purchased through periodic payments and/or the annual Company Match under the Company's 401(k) Plan. (7) Open market purchase. (8) Stock option exercise. (9) Shares swapped inexceeds $1.5 million. Subject to the Company to exercise stock option. (10) Payment under the Long-Term Plan in shares of Common Stock of a portionSection 2 of the bonus earnedPlan regarding certain adjustments, in connection with the establishment of the performance goals, the criteria listed above for the 1996-1998 Performance Period. (11) Restricted stock award granted under the 1998 Stock Option and AwardVenator Group (or any subsidiary, division or other operational unit of Venator Group) shall be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles consistently applied by Venator Group, but before consideration of payments to be made pursuant to this Plan and pursuant to the Venator Group Long-Term Incentive Compensation Plan. 6. TIME OF PAYMENT. Subject to Section 4 hereof, all payments earned by participants under this Plan will be paid within a Restricted Stock Agreement datedreasonable period after performance goal achievements for the Plan Year have been finalized, reviewed, approved, and to the extent required by Section 162(m) of the Code, certified by the Committee, except as may otherwise be agreed by a participant and Venator Group in a written agreement executed prior to the beginning of the fiscal year to which it relates in accordance with any deferred compensation program (a "Deferred Compensation Program") applicable to such participant. Venator Group's independent accountants B-3 60 shall examine as of April 26, 1999.the close of the Plan Year and communicate the results of such examination to the Committee as to the appropriateness of the proposed payments under the Plan. Any award deferred by a Covered Employee shall not increase (between the date on which the award is credited to any Deferred Compensation Program applicable to such Covered Employee and the payment date) by a measuring factor for each fiscal year greater than either (x) one hundred and twenty percent (120%) of the applicable federal long-term rate, compounded annually, and as set as of the first day of the calendar year; or (y) a hypothetical investment in such shares of Venator Group Common Stock, par value $0.01 per share (as determined under such Deferred Compensation Program), as irrevocably elected by the Covered Employee in the deferral agreement. The participant shall have no right to receive payment of any deferred amount until he or she has a right to receive such amounts under the terms of the applicable Deferred Compensation Program. 7. MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION CONCERNING PARTICIPANTS Except as described in this AppendixPROVISIONS. (a) A participant's rights and interests under the Plan may not be sold, assigned, transferred, pledged or alienated. (b) In the case of a participant's death, payment, if any, under the Plan shall be made to his or her designated beneficiary, or in the proxy statement, noneevent no beneficiary is designated or surviving, to the participant's estate. (c) Neither this Plan nor any action taken hereunder shall be construed as giving any employee any right to be retained in the employ of Venator Group. (d) Venator Group shall have the right to make such provisions as it deems necessary or appropriate to satisfy any obligations it may have to withhold federal, state or local income or other taxes incurred by reason of payments made pursuant to the Plan. (e) The Plan is designed and intended to comply with Section 162(m) of the Participants norCode with regard to awards made to Covered Employees, and all provisions hereof shall be limited, construed and interpreted in a manner so to comply. (f) The Board or the Committee may at any time and from time to time alter, amend, suspend or terminate the Plan in whole or in part; provided, that, no amendment which requires shareholder approval in order for the Plan to continue to comply with the exception for performance based compensation under Section 162(m) of the Code shall be effective unless the same shall be approved by the requisite vote of the shareholders of Venator Group as determined under Section 162(m) of the Code. Notwithstanding the foregoing, no amendment shall affect adversely any of their respective affiliates or associates (together, the "Participant Affiliates"), (i) directly beneficially ownsrights of any sharesparticipant, without such participant's consent, under the award theretofore granted under the Plan. B-4 61 APPENDIX C VENATOR GROUP DIRECTORS STOCK OPTION PLAN 1. PURPOSE The purpose of Commonthe Venator Group Directors Stock Option Plan (the "Plan") is to promote the interests of Venator Group, Inc. (the "Company") and its shareholders by increasing the proprietary interest of non-employee directors in the growth and performance of the Company by granting such directors options to purchase shares of common stock. 2. ADMINISTRATION The Plan shall be administered by the Company's Board of Directors (the "Board"). Subject to the provisions of the Plan, the Board shall be authorized to interpret the Plan, to establish, amend, and rescind any rules and regulations relating to the Plan and to make all other determinations necessary or advisable for the administration of the Plan; provided, however, that the Board shall have no discretion with respect to the selection of directors to receive options, the number of shares subject to any securitiessuch options, the purchase price thereunder or the timing of any subsidiarygrants of options under the Plan. The determinations of the Board in the administration of the Plan, as described herein, shall be final and conclusive. The Secretary of the Company or (ii) has hadshall be authorized to implement the Plan in accordance with its terms and to take such actions of a ministerial nature as shall be necessary to effectuate the intent and purpose thereof. The validity, construction and effect of the Plan and any relationshiprules and regulations relating to the Plan shall be determined in accordance with the Company in any capacity other than as a shareholder, employee, officer or director. Furthermore, except as described in this Appendix A or inlaws of the proxy statement, no Participant or Participant Affiliate is either a partyState of New York. 3. ELIGIBILITY The class of individuals eligible to any transaction or seriesreceive grants of transactions since February 1, 1998, or has knowledgeoptions shall be directors of any currently proposed transaction or series of transactions, (i) to which the Company or anywho are not employees of its subsidiaries was or is to be a party, (ii) in which the amount involved exceeds $60,000, and (iii) in which any Participant or Participant Affiliate had or will have, a direct or indirect material interest. Except for the employment agreements described in the proxy statement, no Participant or Participant Affiliate has entered into any agreement or understanding with any person respecting any future employment by the Company or its affiliates ("Eligible Directors"). Any holder of an option hereunder shall hereinafter be referred to as a "Participant." 4. SHARES SUBJECT TO THE PLAN Subject to adjustment as provided in Section 6, an aggregate of 100,000 shares of the Company's Common Stock, $.01 per share ("Shares") shall be available for issuance under the Plan. The Shares deliverable upon the exercise of options may be made available from authorized but unissued Shares or treasury Shares. If any future transactionsoption granted under the Plan shall be terminated for any reason without having been exercised, the Shares subject to, but not delivered under, such option shall be available for issuance under the Plan. 5. GRANT, TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF OPTIONS (a) Subject to shareholder approval of the Plan, each Eligible Director on the date of such approval will be granted on such date an option to purchase that number of shares having a market value of $50,000 on the date of grant. Such market value shall be determined by dividing 50,000 by the Fair Market Value of a Share on the date of grant. "Fair Market Value" shall mean the average of the high and low prices of a Share as reported for such date on the Composite Tape for New York Stock Exchange-Listed Stocks, or, if Shares were not traded on the New York Stock Exchange on such date, the "Fair Market Value" of a Share as of such date shall be the average of the high and low prices of a Share as reported on said Composite Tape on the next preceding date on which such trades were reported on said Composite Tape. (b) Each Eligible Director on the first business day of a fiscal year of the Company beginning thereafter, will be granted on such a day an option to purchase that number of shares having a market value of $50,000 on the date of grant. Such market value shall be determined by dividing 50,000 by the Fair Market Value on the date of grant. C-1 62 (c) The options granted will be nonstatutory stock options not intended to qualify under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code") and shall have the following terms and conditions: (i) Price. The purchase price per Share deliverable upon the exercise of each option shall be 100 percent of the Fair Market Value per Share on the date the option is granted. (ii) Payment. Options may be exercised only upon the cash payment of the purchase price thereof in full. (iii) Exercisability and Term of Options. Options shall become exercisable in three equal annual installments commencing on the first anniversary of the date of grant, provided the holder of such Option is an Eligible Director on such anniversary, and shall be exercisable until the earlier of ten years from the date of grant or the expiration of the one-year period from the date upon which the Participant ceases to be a Director, provided that in no event shall the options be exercisable beyond the period provided for in paragraph (iv) below. (iv) Termination of Service as Eligible Director. Upon termination of a Participant's service as a director of the Company for any reason, all outstanding options held by such Eligible Director, to the extent then exercisable, shall be exercisable in whole or in part for a period of one year from the date upon which the Participant ceases to be a Director, provided that in no event shall the options be exercisable beyond the period provided for in paragraph (iii) above. (v) Nontransferability of Options. No option may be assigned, alienated, pledged, attached, sold or otherwise transferred or encumbered by a Participant otherwise than by will or the laws of descent and distribution, and during the lifetime of the Participant to whom an option is granted it may be exercised only by the Participant or by the Participant's guardian or legal representative. (vi) Option Agreement. Each option granted hereunder shall be evidenced by an agreement with the Company which shall contain the terms and provisions set forth herein and shall otherwise be consistent with the provisions of the Plan. 6. ADJUSTMENT OF AND CHANGES IN SHARES In the event of a stock split, stock dividend, extraordinary cash dividend, subdivision or combination of the Shares or other change in corporate structure affecting the Shares, the number of Shares authorized by the Plan shall be increased or decreased proportionately, as the case may be, and the number of Shares subject to any outstanding option shall be increased or decreased proportionately, as the case may be, with appropriate corresponding adjustment in the purchase price per Share thereunder. 7. NO RIGHTS OF SHAREHOLDERS Neither a Participant nor a Participant's legal representative shall be, or have any of its affiliates will orthe rights and privileges of, a shareholder of the Company in respect of any Shares that may be a party. Exceptpurchased under any option, in whole or in part, unless and until certificates for such Shares shall have been issued. 8. PLAN AMENDMENTS The Plan may be amended by the Board as describedit shall deem advisable or to conform to any change in this Appendix Aany law or regulation applicable thereto; provided, that the Board may not, without the authorization and approval of shareholders of the Company: - increase the number of Shares which may be purchased pursuant to options hereunder, either individually or in the proxy statement, there are no contracts, arrangementsaggregate, except as permitted by Section 6, - change the requirement of Section 5(b) that option grants be priced at Fair Market Value, except as permitted by Section 6, - modify in any respect the class of individuals who constitute Eligible Directors or understandings by any Participant or Participant Affiliate withinC-2 63 - materially increase the past year with any person with respectbenefits accruing the Participants hereunder. 9. LISTING AND REGISTRATION Each Share shall be subject to the requirement that if at any time the Board shall determine, in its discretion, that the listing, registration or qualification of the Shares upon any securities exchange or under any state or federal law, or the consent or approval of any governmental regulatory body, is necessary or desirable as a condition of, or in connection with, the granting of such Shares, no such Shares may be disposed of unless such listing, registration, qualification, consent or approval shall have been effected or obtained free of any condition not acceptable to the Board. 10. EFFECTIVE DATE AND DURATION OF PLAN The Plan shall become effective on the date the Company's Common Stock. A-5shareholders approve the Plan. The Plan shall terminate on the day following the 2010 annual shareholders meeting unless the Plan is extended or terminated at an earlier date or is terminated by exhaustion of the Shares available for issuance hereunder. C-3 42 PROXY64 P R O X Y VENATOR GROUP, INC. THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE COMPANY FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING TO BE HELD ON JULY 16, 1999.JUNE 8, 2000 Gary M. Bahler, Roger N. Farah,Dale W. Hilpert, Bruce L. Hartman, or any of them, each with power of substitution, are hereby authorized to vote the shares of the undersigned at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders of Venator Group, Inc., to be held on July 16, 1999,June 8, 2000, at 1:10:00 P.M.A.M., local time, at 311 ManateeTappan Hill, 81 Highland Avenue, West, Bradenton, Florida 34205Tarrytown, New York 10591, and at any adjournment or postponement thereof, upon the matters set forth in the Venator Group, Inc. Proxy Statement and upon such other matters as may properly come before the Annual Meeting, voting as specified on the reverse side of this card with respect to the matters set forth in the Proxy Statement, and voting in the discretion of the above-named persons on such other matters as may properly come before the Annual Meeting. PROPOSALProposal 1. - ELECTION OF DIRECTORS.Election of Directors. (Address Changes) Nominees for Terms Expiring at the Annual Meeting in 2002: J. Carter Bacot, Purdy Crawford, Philip H. Geier2003: _____________________________ Jarobin Gilbert Jr., Allan Z. Loren and Dale W. HilpertDavid Y. Schwartz _____________________________ Nominee for Term Expiring at the Annual Meeting in 2001: _____________________________ Matthew D. Serra _____________________________ PLEASE SIGN AND DATE THE REVERSE SIDE OF THIS PROXY CARD AND PROMPTLY RETURN IT IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. YOU MAY SPECIFY YOUR CHOICES BY MARKING THE APPROPRIATE BOXES, SEE REVERSE SIDE, BUT YOU NEED NOT MARK ANY BOX IF YOU WISH TO VOTE IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS' RECOMMENDATIONS. THE PERSONS NAMED ABOVE AS PROXIES CANNOT VOTE YOUR SHARES UNLESS YOU SIGN AND RETURN THIS CARD. (continued on------------- | SEE REVERSE | | SIDE | ------------- 65 ------ Please mark your | X | votes as in this ------ example DIRECTORS RECOMMEND A VOTE "FOR" PROPOSALS 1, 2, 3, 4 AND 5 FOR WITHHELD 1. ELECTION OF ------- -------- Nominees: 01 Jarobin Gilbert Jr. DIRECTORS | | | | 02 Allan Z. Loren (see reverse | | | | 03 David Y. Schwartz side) 43 [X] PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTES AS IN THIS EXAMPLE.------- -------- 04 Matthew D. Serra FOR, except vote withheld from the following nominees(s): ___________________________________________ FOR AGAINST ABSTAIN 2. APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS. ------- -------- --------- | | | | | | ------- -------- --------- 3. AMENDMENT OF 1998 STOCK OPTION ------- -------- --------- AND AWARD PLAN. | | | | | | ------- -------- --------- 4. REAPPROVAL OF PERFORMANCE GOALS AND ------- -------- --------- AMENDMENT OF ANNUAL INCENTIVE | | | | | | COMPENSATION PLAN. ------- -------- --------- 5. APPROVAL OF DIRECTORS STOCK ------- -------- --------- OPTION PLAN. | | | | | | ------- -------- --------- I plan to attend meeting. ------- | | ------- THIS PROXY WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED WILL BE VOTED IN THE MANNER DIRECTED HEREIN. IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED FOR PROPOSALS 1, 2, 3, 4 AND 2 AND AGAINST PROPOSALS 3 AND 4. DIRECTORS RECOMMEND A VOTE "FOR" PROPOSALS 1 AND 2 FOR WITHHELD 1. ELECTION OF [ ] [ ] DIRECTORS (see reverse side) FOR, except vote withheld from the following nominee(s): - ------------------------------------------------------- FOR AGAINST ABSTAIN 2. APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS [ ] [ ] [ ] DIRECTORS RECOMMEND A VOTE "AGAINST" PROPOSALS 3 AND 4 FOR AGAINST ABSTAIN 3. GREENWAY PROPOSAL TO [ ] [ ] [ ] CHANGE THE COMPANY'S NAME FOR AGAINST ABSTAIN 4. GREENWAY PROPOSAL TO [ ] [ ] [ ] TERMINATE THE RIGHTS PLAN. I plan to attend [ ] meeting.5. SIGNATURE(S) _______________________________________ DATE , 1999 ---------------------------------- ---------------------______________, 2000 NOTE: Please sign exactly as name appears hereon. Joint owners should each sign. When signing as attorney, executor, administrator, trustee or guardian, give full title as such. If signing on behalf of a corporation, sign the full corporate name by authorized officer. The signer hereby revokes all proxies heretofore given by the signer to vote at the 19992000 Annual Meeting of Shareholders of Venator Group, Inc. and any adjournment or postponement thereof. ______________________________________________________________________________ * FOLD AND DETACH HERE * You may also vote the shares held in your account by telephone or via the Internet. Your electronic vote authorizes the named proxies in the same manner as if you marked, signed, dated and returned the proxy card. IF YOU CHOOSE TO VOTE BY TELEPHONE OR VIA THE INTERNET, THERE IS NO NEED FOR YOU TO MAIL BACK YOUR PROXY CARD. To vote electronically, please use the following directions: * HAVE YOUR PROXY CARD AND SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER AVAILABLE. * BE READY TO ENTER THE PIN NUMBER PRINTED ON THIS CARD JUST BELOW THE PERFORATION. Proxy Vote-By-Phone * DIAL 1-877-PRX-VOTE (1-877-779-8683) 24 HOURS A DAY, 7 DAYS A WEEK. Proxy Vote-By-Internet * LOG ON TO THE INTERNET AND GO TO THE WEB SITE http://www.eproxyvote.com/z Both voting systems preserve the confidentiality of your vote and will confirm your voting instructions with you. You may also change your selections on any or all of the proposals to be voted. YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT. THANK YOU FOR VOTING.