================================================================================
                                  UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
                                 (RULE 14A-101)

           PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(A) OF THE SECURITIES
                      EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 (AMENDMENT NO. )

Filed by the Registrant  |X|
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant |_|
Check the appropriate box:
|_|  Preliminary Proxy Statement
|_|  Confidential, For Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by
     Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
|X|  Definitive Proxy Statement
|_|  Definitive Additional Materials
|_|  Soliciting Material Pursuant to ss.240.14a-12

                               MOVADO GROUP, INC.
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

|X| No fee required.
|_| 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 its filing.
    (1)   Amount previously paid:
    (2)   Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
    (3)   Filing Party:
    (4)   Date Filed:
================================================================================



[GRAPHIC OMITTED - LOGO]
MOVADO GROUP INC.






May 24, 2007


Dear Fellow Shareholder:


     It is our  pleasure  to invite  you to attend the 2007  Annual  Meeting of
Shareholders of Movado Group,  Inc. The meeting will be held on Thursday,  June
14, 2007 at 10:00 a.m. at the Company's  New York office and showrooms  located
at 25 West 39th Street, 15th Floor, New York, NY 10018.

     The  enclosed  Notice of Meeting and Proxy  Statement  describe the formal
business to be transacted at the meeting. We sincerely hope you will be able to
attend.  We will report on the Company's  progress and respond to questions you
may have about the Company's business.

     Whether  or not you  plan to  attend,  the vote of  every  shareholder  is
important and your cooperation in completing,  signing and returning your proxy
promptly will be appreciated.

     We hope to see you at the Annual Meeting.



Sincerely,



Gedalio Grinberg                                         Efraim Grinberg

CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS        PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER



                    650 From Road Paramus, New Jersey 07652
                 Telephone: 201 267 8000   Facsimile: 201 267 8050



                               MOVADO GROUP, INC.
                                 650 From Road
                           Paramus, New Jersey 07652


                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

                                  June 14, 2007



Notice is hereby given that the Annual Meeting of Shareholders of Movado Group,
Inc.  will be held on Thursday,  June 14, 2007 at 10:00 a.m.,  at the Company's
New York office and showrooms  located at 25 West 39th Street,  15th Floor, New
York, NY 10018 for the following purposes:

     1.    To elect nine  directors to serve until the next Annual  Meeting and
           until their successors are elected and qualified.

     2.    To  ratify  the  selection  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  as  the
           Company's independent accountants for the fiscal year ending January
           31, 2008.

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


Holders of the Company's Common Stock and Class A Common Stock of record at the
close of business on May 18, 2006 are  entitled to notice of and to vote at the
Annual Meeting of Shareholders or any postponements or adjournments thereof.




Dated:   May 24, 2007                        By order of the Board of Directors



                                             Timothy F. Michno
                                             Secretary and General Counsel


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT. WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE MEETING, PLEASE
COMPLETE, SIGN AND RETURN YOUR PROXY CARD PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE
WHICH REQUIRES NO POSTAGE IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------




                               MOVADO GROUP, INC.

                                PROXY STATEMENT


INFORMATION CONCERNING THE SOLICITATION

         The Board of  Directors  of Movado  Group,  Inc.  (the  "Company")  is
soliciting  proxies for our 2007  Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders.  The Annual
Meeting will be held on Thursday,  June 14, 2007 at 10:00 a.m. at the Company's
New York office and showrooms  located at 25 West 39th Street,  15th Floor, New
York, NY 10018. This proxy statement and the accompanying proxy card will first
be sent to shareholders on or about May 24, 2007.

WHY AM I RECEIVING THIS PROXY STATEMENT?

         You are receiving this proxy statement and the accompanying  Notice of
Meeting and proxy card because you owned shares of the  Company's  Common Stock
and/or  its Class A Common  stock on May 18,  2007,  the  record  date for this
year's Annual Meeting.

WHO IS ASKING ME FOR MY VOTE?

         The  Company is  soliciting  your proxy on behalf of the Board and has
retained  Georgeson  Stockholder   Communications,   Inc.,  professional  proxy
solicitors,  to assist  with the  solicitation.  We will pay the entire cost of
this  proxy  solicitation,  including  Georgeson's  fee,  which we expect to be
approximately $1,500.

WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF THE ANNUAL MEETING?

         The two matters scheduled to be voted on at the Annual Meeting are:

         1.       The election of nine directors to serve on the Board; and

         2.       The  ratification of the selection of  PricewaterhouseCoopers
                  LLP as the Company's  independent  accountants for the fiscal
                  year ending January 31, 2008.

         In  addition,  such other  business  as may  properly  come before the
Annual Meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof may be voted on.

WHAT ARE MY VOTING RIGHTS?

         All owners of the Company's  Common Stock and its Class A Common Stock
on the record  date are  entitled  to attend and to vote on all items  properly
presented at the Annual Meeting.  Each share of Common Stock is entitled to one
vote and each  share of Class A Common  Stock is  entitled  to 10 votes on each
such  matter.  On May 7, 2007  there  were  19,277,378  shares of Common  Stock
outstanding and 6,638,239  shares of Class A Common Stock  outstanding . A list
of all  shareholders  as of the record date will be available  during  ordinary
business hours at the Company's principal place of business located at 650 From
Road,  Paramus,  NJ 07652, from the Secretary of the Company,  at least 10 days
before the Annual Meeting and will also be available at the Annual Meeting.

HOW DOES THE BOARD RECOMMEND THAT I VOTE?

          The Board recommends that you vote:

         1.       FOR the election of each of the director nominees; and

         2.       FOR  the  appointment  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP as our
                  independent  public  accounting  firm for the current  fiscal
                  year.



HOW DO I VOTE?

         If you are a shareholder on the record date you may vote by mail or by
voting in person at the Annual Meeting.

         To vote by mail,  sign,  date and mail your proxy card in the enclosed
prepaid  envelope and it will voted by one of the individuals  indicated on the
card (your "proxy") as you direct.  If you return your signed proxy card but do
not mark the boxes showing how you wish to vote,  your shares will be voted FOR
the  election  of  the   director   nominees   and  FOR  the   appointment   of
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP as our independent  public  accounting firm for the
current  fiscal year. If your shares are held by your broker in "street  name,"
you will  receive a form from your broker  seeking  instruction  as to how your
shares  should be voted.  We urge you to complete  this form and instruct  your
broker how to vote on your behalf.

         You may also vote in person at the Annual Meeting. If you wish to vote
your shares in person at the Annual Meeting and they are held by your broker in
"street  name," you must bring a letter from the broker to the meeting  showing
that you were the beneficial owner of the shares on May 18, 2007.

CAN I CHANGE MY VOTE AFTER I HAVE RETURNED MY PROXY CARD?

         Yes. You may change your vote at any time before  voting  concludes at
the Annual Meeting by:

         o        Sending in another proxy with a later date; or

         o        Notifying  the  Company's  Secretary  in  writing  before the
                  Annual Meeting that you wish to revoke your proxy; or

         o        Voting in person at the Annual Meeting.

WHAT IS A QUORUM?

         For the  purposes of the Annual  Meeting,  a "quorum" is a majority in
voting power of the outstanding shares of Common Stock and Class A Common Stock
owned  by  shareholders  on the  record  date  who are  present  in  person  or
represented  by proxy at the  Annual  Meeting.  There  must be a quorum for the
Annual Meeting to be held. If you submit a properly  executed proxy card,  even
if you abstain from voting,  your shares will be considered part of the quorum.
Broker  "non-votes" are not considered a part of the quorum.  Broker  non-votes
occur when a broker  holding  shares for a beneficial  owner does not vote on a
particular matter because the broker does not have  discretionary  voting power
with respect to that item and has not  received  voting  instructions  from the
beneficial owner.

WHAT IS BROKER "DISCRETIONARY" VOTING?

         Under the rules of the New York Stock Exchange  ("NYSE"),  if you hold
your shares  through a broker,  your broker is permitted to vote your shares on
the election of directors and the  ratification of our  independent  registered
public  accounting  firm in its  discretion  if it has  transmitted  the  proxy
materials to you and has not received  voting  instructions  from you on how to
vote your shares before the deadline set by your broker.

HOW ARE MATTERS PRESENTED AT THE ANNUAL MEETING APPROVED?

         Directors  are elected by a plurality  of the votes cast at the Annual
Meeting.   The   approval  of  the   proposal  to  ratify  the   selection   of
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP as the Company's independent accountants for fiscal
2008  requires  the  affirmative  vote of a  majority  of the votes cast at the
Annual Meeting.

MAY I VOTE CONFIDENTIALLY?

         Yes. Our policy is to keep your vote confidential, except as otherwise
legally required, to allow for the tabulation and certification of votes and to
facilitate proxy solicitation.

                                       2


WHO WILL COUNT THE VOTES?

         A  representative  of Bank of New York will count the votes and act as
the inspector of election for the Annual Meeting.

WHAT IF ADDITIONAL MATTERS ARE PRESENTED TO THE ANNUAL MEETING?

         We do not know of any business to be considered at the Annual  Meeting
other  than the  proposals  described  in this  proxy  statement.  If any other
business is  presented  at the Annual  Meeting,  your  signed  proxy card gives
authority  to each of Timothy F.  Michno,  our General  Counsel  and  corporate
Secretary,  and to Tasha Cooper Coleman,  our Assistant General Counsel to vote
on such matters at his or her discretion.

WHERE CAN I FIND THE VOTING RESULTS FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING?

         We will announce  preliminary voting results at the Annual Meeting and
will publish final results in our quarterly  report on Form 10-Q for the second
quarter of fiscal 2008.

HOW CAN I OBTAIN INFORMATION ABOUT THE COMPANY?

         A copy  of our  fiscal  2007  Annual  Report  accompanies  this  proxy
statement and is available on our website at WWW.MOVADOGROUP.COM.  Shareholders
may also obtain a free copy of our Annual  Report on Form 10-K by visiting  our
website or by sending a request in writing to Suzanne Rosenberg, Vice President
of Corporate Communications at the Company's address set forth in the Notice of
Meeting.

WHEN ARE  SHAREHOLDER  PROPOSALS  DUE FOR  CONSIDERATION  AT NEXT YEAR'S ANNUAL
MEETING?

         Under the Securities and Exchange  Commission  rules,  for shareholder
proposals to be considered  for  inclusion in the proxy  statement for the 2008
Annual Meeting,  they must be submitted in writing to our corporate  Secretary,
Movado Group, Inc., 650 From Road,  Paramus,  NJ 07652 on or before January 26,
2008.  In addition,  our bylaws  provide that for  directors to be nominated or
other  proposals  to be  properly  presented  at the 2008  Annual  Meeting,  an
additional notice of any nomination or proposal must be received by us not less
than 60 nor more than 90 days before the Annual Meeting.  If less than 70 days'
notice of our 2008 Annual  Meeting is given,  then to be timely,  the notice by
the shareholder  must be received by us not later than the close of business on
the tenth day following the day on which the first public  announcement  of the
date of the 2008  Annual  Meeting  was made or the  notice of the  meeting  was
mailed, whichever occurs first.


                                       3


SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

         The following  table shows the number of shares of the Company's Class
A Common  Stock  and the  Common  Stock  beneficially  owned as of May 7,  2007
(except as otherwise noted in footnotes 3, 4 and 6) by (i) each shareholder who
is known by the  Company to  beneficially  own more than 5% of the  outstanding
shares  of either  the  Class A Common  Stock or the  Common  Stock,  (ii) each
director, (iii) each executive officer named in the Summary Compensation Table,
and (iv) all executive officers and directors as a group.



                                                                         PERCENT OF OUTSTANDING
                                                                        SHARES OF CAPITAL STOCK
                                                                        -----------------------
                                                 SHARES OF
                                                  CLASS A     SHARES OF
                                                  COMMON        COMMON                          PERCENT OF
                                                  STOCK         STOCK        CLASS A              TOTAL
                                               BENEFICIALLY  BENEFICIALLY    COMMON     COMMON    VOTING
                NAME OF BENEFICIAL OWNER           OWNED        OWNED         STOCK     STOCK     POWER (1)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                     
Margaret Hayes Adame (2)                                  -        19,000          -     *          *

AXA  Mutuelle (3)                                         -     1,128,260          -     5.9 %      1.3 %

Barclays (4)                                              -     1,057,922          -     5.5 %      1.2 %

Richard J. Cote (5)                                       -     1,141,097          -     5.9 %      1.3 %

Dimensional Fund Advisors LP (6)                          -     1,534,922          -     8.0 %      1.8 %

Alexander Grinberg (7)                            2,557,074        10,196     38.5 %     *          29.9 %

Efraim Grinberg(8)                                4,015,356     1,177,751     60.5 %     6.1 %      47.8 %

Gedalio Grinberg (9)                              1,537,730        21,450     23.2 %     *          18.0 %

Alan H. Howard (2)                                        -        17,124          -     *          *

Richard Isserman (2)                                      -         3,250          -          -          -

Eugene J. Karpovich (10)                                  -        48,493          -     *          *

Nathan Leventhal (2)                                      -         3,250          -          -          -

Timothy F. Michno                                         -         1,106          -     *          *

Donald Oresman (2)                                    3,920        15,250     *          *          *

Miriam Phalen (11)                                2,570,298             -     38.7 %          -     30.0 %

Leonard L. Silverstein (2) (12)                           -       107,896          -     *          *

All executive officers and directors as a
group (13 persons) (13)                           6,132,339     2,565,863     92.4 %     12.2 %     73.1 %

------
*   DENOTES LESS THAN ONE PERCENT

The address for Messrs. Cote, A. Grinberg,  G. Grinberg,  E. Grinberg,  Howard,
Isserman,  Karpovich,  Leventhal, Michno, Oresman and Silverstein and Ms. Hayes
Adame and Ms. Phalen is c/o Movado Group,  Inc.,  650 From Road,  Paramus,  New
Jersey 07652.

(1)      In calculating the percent of total voting power,  the voting power of
         shares of Common  Stock (one vote per share) and Class A Common  Stock
         (10 votes per share) has been aggregated.

                                       4


(2)      The total  number of shares of Common Stock  reported as  beneficially
         owned by each of Ms.  Hayes  Adame and  Messrs.  Howard,  Oresman  and
         Silverstein  includes  14,500  shares,  and  the  number  reported  as
         beneficially  owned by Mr.  Leventhal and by Mr.  Isserman  represents
         3,250 shares, each has the right to acquire by the exercise of options
         under the Company's 1996 Stock Incentive Plan.

(3)      On February  13,  2007,  in a joint  filing on Schedule  13G under the
         Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended  ("Exchange  Act") by AXA
         Financial,  Inc.;  AXA,  which  owns  AXA  Financial,  Inc.;  and  AXA
         Assurances  I.A.R.D.  Mutuelle,  AXA  Assurances  Vie Mutuelle and AXA
         Courtage Assurance Mutuelle  (collectively "AXA Mutuelle") which, as a
         group control AXA, AXA Mutuelle  reported  beneficial  ownership as of
         December 31, 2006 of  1,128,260  shares of Common  Stock.  It reported
         having sole  dispositive  power as to all and sole voting  power as to
         515,800 of such shares.  AXA and AXA  Financial,  Inc.  each filed the
         report in its capacity as a parent holding company with respect to the
         holdings, respectively, of AXA Konzern AG and AXA Rosenberg Investment
         Management LLC (both, subsidiaries of AXA) and Alliance Bernstein L.P.
         and AXA Equitable Life Insurance  Company (both,  subsidiaries  of AXA
         Financial,  Inc). The report stated that all such shares were acquired
         in the ordinary course of business and not for the purpose or with the
         effect of  changing  or  influencing  control  of the  Company,  or in
         connection  with any  transaction  having such purpose or effect.  The
         address of AXA Mutuelle is 26 rue Drouot, 75009 Paris, France.

(4)      On January 23,  2007,  in a filing on Schedule  13G under the Exchange
         Act,  Barclays  Global  Investors,  NA, Barclays Global Fund Advisors,
         Barclays Global Investors, Ltd., Barclays Global Investors Japan Trust
         and  Banking  Company  Limited and  Barclays  Global  Investors  Japan
         Limited (collectively  "Barclays") reported beneficial ownership as of
         December 31, 2006 of  1,057,922  shares of Common  Stock.  It reported
         having sole  dispositive  power as to all and sole voting  power as to
         950,352 of such shares.  Barclays  reported  that all of the shares of
         Common Stock that it  beneficially  owns were acquired in the ordinary
         course  of  business  and not for the  purpose  or with the  effect of
         changing or influencing  control of the Company, or in connection with
         any transaction having such purpose or effect. The address of Barclays
         Global  Investors,  NA and Barclays Global Fund Advisors is 45 Fremont
         Street,  San  Francisco,  CA 94105.  The  address of  Barclays  Global
         Investors,  Ltd. is Murray House, 1 Royal Mint Court, London, EC3N 4HH
         England.  The address of  Barclays  Global  Investors  Japan Trust and
         Banking Company Limited and Barclays Global Investors Japan Limited is
         Ebisu Prime Square Tower, 8th Floor,  1-1-39 Hiroo  Shibuya-Ku,  Tokyo
         150-8402, Japan.

(5)      The total  number of shares of Common Stock  reported as  beneficially
         owned by Mr. Cote  includes  722,266  shares which he has the right to
         acquire by the  exercise  of options  under the  Company's  1996 Stock
         Incentive Plan and 2,200 shares held by a trust for the benefit of his
         children as to which shares Mr. Cote has shared dispositive power with
         his spouse who is the trustee with sole voting power.

(6)      On February 9, 2007,  in a filing on Schedule  13G under the  Exchange
         Act,   Dimensional  Fund  Advisors  LP  ("DFA")  reported   beneficial
         ownership as of December 31, 2006 of 1,534,922  shares of Common Stock
         as to all of which it has sole voting and dispositive  power. DFA also
         reported  that all of the shares of Common Stock that it  beneficially
         owns were acquired in the ordinary  course of business and not for the
         purpose or with the effect of changing or  influencing  control of the
         Company,  or in connection with any transaction having such purpose or
         effect.  The address of DFA is 1299 Ocean  Avenue,  11th Floor,  Santa
         Monica, CA 90401.

(7)      The total number of shares of Class A Common Stock  beneficially owned
         by Mr.  A.  Grinberg  includes  2,225,924  shares  owned  by  Grinberg
         Partners  L.P.,  a  Delaware  limited  partnership,  of which  Mr.  A.
         Grinberg is a limited  partner,  and 80,774 shares owned by trusts for
         the benefit of Mr. A. Grinberg's niece and nephew,  of which trusts he
         is a  co-trustee  with Mr. Mark  Fishman.  Mr. A.  Grinberg has shared
         voting power with Grinberg Partners L.P.,  Grinberg Group Partners,  a
         Delaware general  partnership  (general  partner of Grinberg  Partners
         L.P.) and Miriam  Phalen over the  2,225,924  shares owned by Grinberg
         Partners L.P., and shared voting and investment power with Mr. Fishman
         over the 80,774 shares owned by the trusts.

(8)      The total number of shares of Class A Common Stock  beneficially owned
         by Mr. E.  Grinberg  includes an aggregate  of 563,306  shares held by
         several  trusts for the  benefit  of Mr. E.  Grinberg's  siblings  and
         himself.  Mr. E.  Grinberg is the sole trustee of those trusts and, as
         such, has sole  investment and voting power with respect to the shares
         held by such trusts.  In  addition,  included in the shares of Class A

                                       5


         Common Stock reported as beneficially  owned by Mr. E. Grinberg are an
         aggregate  of 862,940  shares of Class A Common  Stock held by several
         trusts for the benefit of Mr. E. Grinberg's siblings and himself.  Mr.
         E.  Grinberg is  co-trustee of those trusts with Mr. Andrew Regan and,
         as co-trustee,  has shared  investment and voting power with Mr. Regan
         with  respect  to the  shares  of  Class A Common  Stock  held by such
         trusts.   The  total   number  of  shares  of  Class  A  Common  Stock
         beneficially  owned by Mr. E. Grinberg also includes  2,225,924 shares
         owned by Grinberg  Partners L.P., a Delaware limited  partnership,  of
         which Grinberg Group Partners, a Delaware general partnership ("GGP"),
         is the  general  partner.  As the  managing  partner  of GGP,  Mr.  E.
         Grinberg has shared power to direct the voting and  disposition of the
         shares  owned by Grinberg  Partners  L.P.  Also  included in the total
         number of  shares of Class A Common  Stock  reported  as  beneficially
         owned by Mr.  E.  Grinberg  are  15,000  shares  owned  by the  Efraim
         Grinberg  Family  Foundation  and 100,191 shares owned by The Grinberg
         Family Foundation, each a non-profit corporation. Mr. E. Grinberg is a
         member  of  the  board  of  directors  of  each  of  those  non-profit
         corporations  and has shared  investment and voting control over those
         shares  together  with the other  members of those  boards.  The total
         number of shares of Common  Stock  owned by Mr. E.  Grinberg  includes
         54,032  shares of Common  Stock  held  under  the  Company's  Employee
         Savings  and  Investment  Plan  ("401(k)  Plan"),  as to which  Mr. E.
         Grinberg, as a co-trustee, has shared investment and voting power, and
         82,039  shares of Common  Stock held under the  Company's  Stock Bonus
         Plan, for which Mr. E. Grinberg is a co-trustee and as to which shares
         he has shared  investment and voting power. The total number of shares
         of Common Stock owned by Mr. E. Grinberg also includes  859,736 shares
         of Common  Stock which he has the right to acquire by the  exercise of
         options under the Company's 1996 Incentive Stock Plan. Mr. E. Grinberg
         disclaims  beneficial  ownership  as to the 954,218  shares of Class A
         Common  Stock held by the trusts for the  benefit of his  siblings  of
         which he is trustee or  co-trustee;  the 54,032 shares of Common Stock
         held  under the  Company's  401(k)  Plan  (except to the extent of his
         pecuniary interest in such shares);  the 82,039 shares of Common Stock
         held under the Company's  Stock Bonus Plan; and all the shares held by
         the  Efraim  Grinberg  Family   Foundation  and  The  Grinberg  Family
         Foundation.

(9)      The total number of shares of Class A Common stock  beneficially owned
         by Mr. G.  Grinberg  includes  100,191  shares  owned by The  Grinberg
         Family Foundation,  a non-profit corporation of which Mr. G. Grinberg,
         his wife and three  children are the  directors and officers and as to
         which shares they all have shared  investment  and voting power.  Also
         included  in the  total  number  of  shares  of Class A  Common  Stock
         beneficially owned by Mr. G. Grinberg are 38,000 shares owned by CAP I
         Partners  L.P., a limited  partnership  of which CAP I Partners LLC is
         the general partner. Mr. G. Grinberg,  as the managing member of CAP I
         Partners  LLC,  has the sole  power to vote and  dispose of the shares
         owned by CAP I  Partners  L.P.  The  total  number of shares of Common
         Stock  beneficially owned by Mr. G. Grinberg includes 10,000 shares of
         Common  Stock held by a  charitable  remainder  trust for which Mr. G.
         Grinberg  is a  co-trustee  together  with Mr.  Andrew  Weiss.  Mr. G.
         Grinberg  disclaims  beneficial  ownership as to the shares of class A
         Common  Stock owned by The  Grinberg  Family  Foundation  and by CAP I
         Partners L.P.

(10)     The total  number of shares of Common Stock  reported as  beneficially
         owned by Mr.  Karpovich  includes 36,225 shares which he has the right
         to acquire by the exercise of options under the  Company's  1996 Stock
         Incentive Plan.

(11)     The total number of shares of Class A Common Stock  beneficially owned
         by Ms.  Miriam  Phalen  includes  2,225,924  shares  owned by Grinberg
         Partners L.P., a Delaware limited partnership of which Ms. Phalen is a
         limited partner,  and 80,768 shares owned by trusts for the benefit of
         Ms. Phalen's children, of which trusts Ms. Phalen is the sole trustee.
         Ms.  Phalen  has shared  voting  power with  Grinberg  Partners  L.P.,
         Grinberg  Group  Partners,  a Delaware  general  partnership  (general
         partner of Grinberg  Partners L.P.) and A. Grinberg over the 2,225,924
         shares owned by Grinberg Partners L.P., and sole voting and investment
         power over the 80,768 shares owned by the trusts.

(12)     The total number of shares of Common Stock  beneficially  owned by Mr.
         Silverstein  includes  4,000  shares  owned by the  Leonard and Elaine
         Silverstein  Family  Foundation of which Mr.  Silverstein and his wife
         are the directors and officers and as to which shares they have shared
         investment  and voting  power,  and 88,646  shares  held by a trust of
         which Mr.  Silverstein  is trustee and as to which  shares he has sole
         investment  and voting power.  Mr.  Silverstein  disclaims  beneficial
         ownership of the shares of Common Stock held by the Leonard and Elaine
         Silverstein Family Foundation.

(13)     Excludes double counting of shares deemed to be beneficially  owned by
         more than one person.  Unless  otherwise  indicated,  the  individuals
         named have sole investment and voting power.

                                       6


PROPOSAL 1 - ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

         Directors  hold office until the next annual  meeting of  shareholders
and  until  the  election  and  qualification  of their  successors.  Under the
Company's  by-laws,  the Board of Directors  can change the number of directors
comprising  the entire Board so long as the number is not less than three.  The
Board currently consists of nine directors.  All of the nominees are members of
the present  Board of  Directors.  If any nominee for  election to the Board of
Directors  should be unable to accept  nomination  or  election  as a director,
which is not expected,  your proxy may be voted for a substitute or substitutes
designated  by the Board of Directors  or the number of directors  constituting
the Board may be reduced in accordance  with the Company's  by-laws.  Directors
will be elected by the holders of a plurality  of the voting  power  present in
person or  represented  by proxy and entitled to vote.  Abstentions  and broker
"non-votes" will not be counted for purposes of the election of directors.  THE
BOARD RECOMMENDS THAT SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR THE ELECTION OF THE NOMINEES LISTED
BELOW.

                                                DIRECTOR
                  NAME                  AGE      SINCE      POSITION

           Margaret Hayes Adame         67       1993       Director

           Richard J. Cote              52       2000       Executive Vice
                                                            President and
                                                            Chief Operating
                                                            Officer;
                                                            Director

           Efraim Grinberg              49       1988       President and
                                                            Chief Executive
                                                            Officer; Director

           Gedalio Grinberg             75       1967       Chairman of the
                                                            Board of Directors

           Alan H. Howard               47       1997       Director

           Richard Isserman             72       2005       Director

           Nathan Leventhal             64       2003       Director

           Donald Oresman               81       1981       Director

           Leonard L. Silverstein       85       1975       Director


         There  are no  family  relationships  between  any  of  the  Company's
directors, except for Efraim Grinberg who is the son of Gedalio Grinberg. There
are no arrangements between any director and any other person pursuant to which
any of them was elected a director.

         MS. HAYES ADAME is the President of Fashion Group International, Inc.,
a non-profit  organization working with the fashion industry,  which she joined
in March  1993.  From 1981 to March  1993,  Ms.  Hayes  Adame was a Senior Vice
President  and  general  merchandise  manager  at Saks  Fifth  Avenue,  a major
retailer.  She is also a member  of the  board of  directors  of  International
Flavors & Fragrances, Inc.

         MR.  COTE  joined  the  Company  in  January  2000 as  Executive  Vice
President - Finance and  Administration.  In May 2001 Mr. Cote was  promoted to
Executive  Vice  President  - Chief  Operating  Officer.  Prior to joining  the
Company,  Mr.  Cote worked for  Colgate-Palmolive,  a consumer  goods  company,
where, from 1998 to 2000, he was Vice President and Chief Financial Officer for
U.S.  operations,  and from  1993 to  1998,  he was Vice  President  and  Chief
Financial Officer for Asia/Pacific operations.

         MR. E.  GRINBERG  joined  the  Company  in June 1980 and served as the
Company's  Vice  President of Marketing  from February 1985 until July 1986, at
which  time  he was  elected  to the  position  of  Senior  Vice  President  of
Marketing.  From June 1990 to  October  1995,  Mr.  E.  Grinberg  served as the
Company's  President and Chief Operating  Officer and since October 1995 served
as the  Company's  President.  In May 2001,  Mr. E. Grinberg was elected to the
position of President and Chief Executive Officer.  Mr. E. Grinberg also serves
on the board of directors of Lincoln Center for the Performing  Arts, Inc., the
American Watch Association and the Jeweler's Fund for Children.

                                       7


         MR. G.  GRINBERG  founded the  Company's  predecessor  in 1961 and the
Company in 1967. He has been the Chairman of the Board of Directors since then.
Mr. G. Grinberg served as the Company's Chief Executive Officer until May 2001.

         MR. HOWARD has been a Managing  Director of  Greenbriar  Equity Group,
LLC, a private equity firm which focuses on transportation  and  transportation
related  investments  since July 2006.  Prior to July  2006,  Mr.  Howard was a
Managing Director of Credit Suisse First Boston LLC, an international  provider
of  financial  services.  He had been with CSFB and its  predecessor  companies
since 1986.

         MR. ISSERMAN was appointed to the Board in June 2005. In his nearly 40
year career with KPMG LLP, Mr.  Isserman  served as Audit Partner in KPMG's New
York office for 26 years.  He also led KPMG's real estate audit practice in New
York and was a member of the  firm's SEC  Reviewing  Partner's  Committee.  Mr.
Isserman  retired  from KPMG in June 1995.  A licensed  New York state CPA, Mr.
Isserman also serves as the chairman of the corporate  compliance committee and
a  member  of the  audit  committee  for  Federation  Employment  and  Guidance
Services, a social service agency in New York City.

         MR. LEVENTHAL  served as Chief of Staff to Mayor John Lindsay,  Deputy
Mayor to Mayor Ed Koch, and  Transition  Chairman for both Mayors David Dinkins
and Michael  Bloomberg.  He  currently  chairs Mayor  Bloomberg's  Committee on
Appointments and is a Commissioner on the New York City Planning Commission. In
the  not-for-profit  sector,  Mr. Leventhal served for 17 years as President of
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, where he is now President  Emeritus and
Chairman of the Avery Fisher Artist Program.  He currently serves on the boards
of a number of equity and fixed  income  mutual  funds  managed by the  Dreyfus
Corporation,  an investment  advisor.  Mr. Leventhal is a former partner of the
law firm Poletti Freidin Prashker Feldman & Gartner.

         MR.  ORESMAN was  Executive  Vice  President  and  General  Counsel of
Paramount  Communications,  Inc., a publishing and entertainment  company, from
December 1983 until his  retirement in March 1994.  Prior to December 1983, Mr.
Oresman  was engaged in the  practice of law as a partner of Simpson  Thacher &
Bartlett, where he is now Of Counsel.

         MR. SILVERSTEIN has been engaged in the practice of law at Silverstein
and Mullens,  a division of Buchanan  Ingersoll & Rooney, in Washington,  D.C.,
for over 40 years.  Mr.  Silverstein also serves as Vice President and Director
of Tax Management, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of BNA, Inc., and a director
of Chevy  Chase FSB.  He is a former  Vice  Chairman  and  currently  an active
honorary  trustee of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing  Arts,  Past
President  of the Alliance  Francaise of  Washington,  formerly  President  and
currently a director of the National Symphony Orchestra Association,  Treasurer
of  the   Madison   Council  of  the  Library  of   Congress   and   President,
French-American Cultural Foundation.


THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

         BOARD MEETINGS AND COMMITTEES

         In fiscal 2007, the Board of Directors held 11 meetings. All directors
attended  at least 75% of the  meetings of the Board and of the  committees  on
which they served.

         The Board of Directors  has  three  committees:
             o     Audit
             o     Compensation
             o     Nominating/Corporate Governance.

         The members of the  committees  and their  chairs are  selected by the
Nominating and Corporate  Governance  Committee and then appointed by the Board
annually.  Each  committee is comprised  entirely of  independent  directors in
accordance with NYSE listing standards. Each committee operates under a written
charter which is available at the Company's website at  WWW.MOVADOGROUP.COM  by
clicking on "Investor Center", "Corporate Governance",  "Committee Composition"
and then the name of the  respective  committee.  Committee  charters  are also
available in print upon the written request of any  shareholder.  A copy of the
charter of the Audit  Committee is attached to this proxy statement as Appendix
"A". The current committee membership is as follows:

                                       8




      AUDIT              COMPENSATION            NOMINATING/CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
    COMMITTEE              COMMITTEE                      COMMITTEE
 ----------------        ----------------------  -------------------------------
 Donald Oresman *        Alan H. Howard *             Nathan Leventhal *
 Alan H. Howard          Margaret Hayes Adame         Margaret Hayes Adame
 Richard Isserman        Leonard L. Silverstein       Leonard L. Silverstein
                         Donald Oresman
 * Committee Chair

         AUDIT COMMITTEE

         The  Board  of  Directors  believes  that  each  member  of the  Audit
Committee is an "audit committee  financial  expert" as defined under the rules
adopted  by the  SEC  and,  therefore,  has  accounting  or  related  financial
expertise in accordance  with the NYSE listing  standards.  The Audit Committee
held four meetings in fiscal 2007.

         The  principal  functions of the Audit  Committee  are to (i) appoint,
approve the  compensation  of,  terminate and oversee the work of the Company's
independent  auditors;  (ii)  approve  in  advance  all audit  and  permissible
non-audit  services  provided to the  Company by  independent  auditors;  (iii)
review, in consultation with the Company's independent auditors, management and
the Company's internal  auditors,  the Company's  financial  reporting process,
including its internal controls;  (iv) review with management and the Company's
independent  auditors,  the Company's annual and quarterly financial statements
before the same are publicly filed,  and (v) report regularly to the Board with
respect to any issues that arise concerning, among other things, the quality or
integrity  of  the  Company's  financial  statements,  the  performance  of the
internal audit function,  the Company's  compliance with legal requirements and
the performance and independence of the Company's independent auditors.

         COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

         The  Compensation  Committee  held seven  meetings in fiscal 2007. The
principal functions of the Compensation Committee are to (i) review and approve
corporate goals and objectives relevant to CEO compensation, evaluate the CEO's
performance  in  light  of  those  goals  and  objectives  and  set  the  CEO's
compensation   level  based  on  that  evaluation;   (ii)  review  and  approve
compensation  levels for  executive  non-CEO  officers and key employees of the
Company;  (iii) review significant employee benefit programs and (iv) establish
and administer executive  compensation  programs,  including bonus plans, stock
option and other  equity-based  programs,  deferred  compensation plans and any
other cash or stock incentive programs.

         For   additional   information   concerning   the   operation  of  the
Compensation Committee,  including the role of outside compensation consultants
and management in the process of  determining  the amount and form of executive
compensation, see "Compensation Discussion and Analysis" below.

         COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

         The  Company's  Compensation  Committee was at all times during fiscal
year 2007  comprised  entirely  of  independent  directors  who at no time were
executive officers or employees of the Company.  Mr.  Silverstein,  a member of
the  Committee,  is a  partner  at the law firm of  Silverstein  &  Mullens,  a
division of Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney, P.C. That firm rendered legal services
to the Company  during fiscal 2007 for which it was paid $19,417.  The Board of
Directors  determined  that such  relationship  was  immaterial.  No  executive
officer of the Company has ever served as a member of the board of directors or
compensation committee of any company whose executive officers include a member
of the Board of Directors or the Compensation Committee.

         NOMINATING/ CORPORATE GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE

         The  Nominating/Corporate  Governance  Committee  held two meetings in
fiscal 2007.  The principal  functions of the  Nominating/Corporate  Governance
Committee  are to (i)  identify  individuals  qualified  to  become  directors,
consistent  with  criteria  approved  by  the  Board,  and  recommend  director
candidates  to the Board of  Directors;  (ii) develop and  recommend  corporate
governance principles to the Board of Directors;  (iii) oversee the adoption of
a code of ethics for  directors,  officers  and  employees  of the  Company and
assure that  procedures are in place for disclosure of any waivers of that code

                                       9


for directors or executive  officers;  and (iv) facilitate an annual assessment
of the performance of the Board and each of its committees.

         IDENTIFYING AND EVALUATING CANDIDATES FOR THE BOARD

         In considering possible candidates to serve on the Board of Directors,
the  Nominating/Corporate  Governance  Committee  will  take into  account  all
appropriate qualifications,  qualities and skills in the context of the current
make-up  of the  Board  and will  consider  the  entirety  of each  candidate's
credentials.  In addition, the  Nominating/Corporate  Governance Committee will
evaluate each nominee according to the following criteria:  personal character,
accomplishments, integrity, and reputation in the business community; knowledge
of the industry in which the Company does business;  sound  business  judgment;
leadership  ability and capacity for  strategic  thinking;  experience  working
constructively  with  others;  sufficient  time to  devote  to  Board  matters;
diversity  of  viewpoints  and  backgrounds  and the absence of any conflict of
interest that might interfere with performance as a director.

         Shareholders may recommend  director  candidates for  consideration by
the  Nominating/Corporate  Governance Committee. To have a candidate considered
by the Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee, a shareholder must submit the
recommendation in writing and must include the following information:

         o        The name of the shareholder and evidence of the shareholder's
                  ownership of Company stock, including the number and class of
                  shares owned and the length of time of ownership; and

         o        The  name  of the  candidate,  the  candidate's  resume  or a
                  listing of his or her  qualifications to be a director of the
                  Company and the person's consent to be named as a director if
                  nominated by the Board of Directors.

         Each such  recommendation must be sent to the Secretary of the Company
at Movado Group,  Inc.,  650 From Road,  Paramus,  New Jersey 07652 and must be
received  within the time indicted above on page 3 under "WHEN ARE  SHAREHOLDER
PROPOSALS  DUE  FOR  CONSIDERATION  AT  NEXT  YEAR'S  ANNUAL   MEETING?".   The
Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee will evaluate shareholder recommended
director  candidates  in the same manner as it  evaluates  director  candidates
identified by other means.

         CORPORATE GOVERNANCE GUIDELINES

         The Company's Corporate Governance Guidelines and its Code of Business
Conduct   and   Ethics   are   available   on   the   Company's    website   at
WWW.MOVADOGROUP.COM  by  clicking  on  "Investor  Center"  and then  "Corporate
Governance".  The  Corporate  Governance  Guidelines  and the Code of  Business
Conduct and Ethics are also available in print upon the written  request of any
shareholder.

         DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE

         The listing standards of the NYSE require that a majority of the Board
of Directors be independent.  No director  qualifies as independent  unless the
Board of Directors  affirmatively  determines that the director has no material
relationship with the Company (directly or as a partner, shareholder or officer
of an  organization  that has a  relationship  with the Company).  The Board of
Directors broadly  considers all relevant facts and  circumstances  relative to
independence  and  considers  the issue not merely from the  standpoint  of the
director,  but also from the viewpoint of persons or  organizations  with which
the director has an affiliation. Material relationships can include commercial,
industrial,  banking,  consulting,  legal, accounting,  charitable and familial
relationships  (among others).  In accordance with the NYSE listing  standards,
the Board has  adopted  categorical  standards  of director  independence  that
provide that none of the following  relationships will be considered a material
relationship that would impair a director's independence:

         o        A director  who is a  director,  an  executive  officer or an
                  employee,  or whose immediate family member is a director, an
                  executive  officer or an  employee,  of a company  that makes
                  payments to, or receives payments from, the Company for goods
                  or services in an amount which, in any single fiscal year, is
                  less than the  greater  of  $1,000,000  and 2% of such  other
                  company's consolidated gross revenues; or

         o        A director  who  serves,  or whose  immediate  family  member
                  serves,  as  an  executive,  officer,  director,  trustee  or
                  employee  of a  charitable  organization  and  the  Company's

                                      10


                  discretionary  charitable  contributions  to the organization
                  are  less  than  the  greater  of  $1,000,000  and 2% of that
                  organization's consolidated gross revenues.

         The Board of Directors has  determined  that all of the members of the
Board of Directors, with the exception of those three members who are employees
of the  Company  (namely  Messrs.  E.  Grinberg,  G.  Grinberg  and  R.  Cote),
representing  a majority of the entire Board,  are  independent  under the NYSE
listing  standards  and satisfy the Company's  categorical  standards set forth
above.

         In addition, in accordance with the NYSE listing standards,  the Board
of   Directors   has   determined   that   the   Compensation   Committee   and
Nominating/Corporate  Governance Committee are composed entirely of independent
directors.  The Board of Directors has also  determined that each member of the
Audit Committee is independent  under the applicable rules of the SEC and under
the NYSE listing standards.

         EXECUTIVE SESSIONS OF NON-MANAGEMENT DIRECTORS

         The  non-management  directors hold regular executive sessions without
management at least once each quarter. The chairman of the Nominating/Corporate
Governance  Committee is designated to chair these executive sessions under the
Company's Corporate Governance Guidelines.

         COMMUNICATIONS WITH THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

         Shareholders   may  communicate   directly  with  the  full  Board  of
Directors,  the Audit  Committee of the Board of  Directors  or any  individual
director  by sending  such  communication  in writing to the  attention  of the
General  Counsel  of the  Company,  650 From  Road,  Paramus,  NJ  07652.  Such
communications  should  indicate to whom they are intended to be directed.  All
communications received that relate to accounting, internal accounting controls
or auditing  matters  will be referred to the  chairman of the Audit  Committee
unless the  communication  is  otherwise  addressed.  Parties  may  communicate
anonymously and/or  confidentially if they desire. All communications  received
will be forwarded to the appropriate director or directors.

         DIRECTOR ATTENDANCE AT ANNUAL MEETING

         The  Company  encourages  all of the  directors  to attend each annual
meeting of  shareholders.  To the extent  reasonably  practicable,  the Company
regularly  schedules a meeting of the Board of Directors on the same day as the
Annual Meeting of Shareholders.  All members of the Board of Directors attended
the 2006 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.


DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

         No  executive   officer  of  the  Company   receives  any   additional
compensation  for serving on the Board of  Directors.  In fiscal 2007,  we paid
each  director  who was not an employee  of the  Company an annual  retainer of
$30,000. In addition,  in fiscal 2007, we paid the Chair of the Audit Committee
an  annual  fee  of   $10,000,   and  the  Chairs  of  the   Compensation   and
Nominating/Corporate  Governance Committees an annual fee of $5,000 for service
in these  capacities.  Each  committee  member  was also paid  $1,500  for each
committee meeting attended, and we reimbursed reasonable out-of-pocket expenses
incurred by directors in  connection  with  attending  meetings and  performing
other  Board-related  services  for the  Company  in  accordance  with the same
policies applicable to our employees generally.

         Also in fiscal  2007,  we granted each  non-employee  director a stock
option to  purchase  1,500  shares of  Common  Stock and a stock  award for 750
shares of Common  Stock  under the  Company's  1996 Stock  Incentive  Plan,  as
amended.  The  stock  option  and the  stock  award  each  vest on the one year
anniversary of the grant date (May 31, 2006). The exercise price of each option
is the fair market value of our Common  Stock on the date of grant.  The option
expires ten years from the grant date.

         The  following  chart  shows the cash  amounts  and the value of other
compensation  paid to each  non-employee  director for their  service in fiscal
2007:

                                      11


        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 FEES EARNED OR     STOCK      OPTION
                                  PAID IN CASH     AWARDS(1)    AWARDS(2)  TOTAL
        NAME                          ($)            ($)         ($)        ($)
        ----                       ---------       -----         ---       -----
        (a)                           (b)           (c)          (d)        (h)
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Margaret Hayes Adame        42,000         3,115        7,724     52,839

        Alan H. Howard              51,500         3,115        7,724     62,339

        Richard Isserman            36,000         3,115        7,724     46,839

        Nathan Leventhal            36,500         3,115        7,724     47,339

        Donald Oresman              56,500         3,115        7,724     67,339

        Leonard  L. Silverstein     42,000         3,115        7,724     52,839
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------

(1)   Amounts  shown  do not  reflect  compensation  actually  received  by the
      director.  Instead,  the dollar value of these awards is the compensation
      cost recognized for financial statement reporting purposes for the fiscal
      year  ended  January  31,  2007 in  accordance  with  the  provisions  of
      Statement  of  Financial  Accounting  Standards  No.  123R,  "Share-based
      Payments,"  ("FAS 123(R)").  Each  non-employee  director was granted one
      stock award in fiscal 2007 for 750 shares of the Company's  Common Stock,
      the grant  date fair  value of which,  computed  in  accordance  with FAS
      123(R), disregarding the effect of forfeitures, is $9,795. At January 31,
      2007 each  non-employee  director  held no other stock awards except this
      one, unvested stock award.

(2)   Amounts  shown  do not  reflect  compensation  actually  received  by the
      director.  Instead,  the dollar value of these awards is the compensation
      cost recognized for financial statement reporting purposes for the fiscal
      year ended  January 31, 2007 in  accordance  with the  provisions  of FAS
      123(R) for grants made in fiscal 2006 and fiscal 2007.  A  discussion  of
      the relevant  assumptions  made in the valuations may be found in Notes 1
      and 13 to the financial statements in the Company's Annual Report on Form
      10-K for the fiscal  year  ended  January  31,  2007.  Each  non-employee
      director  was awarded one stock  option in fiscal 2007 to purchase  1,500
      shares of the Company's Common Stock, the grant date fair value of which,
      calculated  in  accordance  with FAS 123(R),  disregarding  the effect of
      forfeitures,  is $14,018. At January 31, 2007, the non-employee directors
      held unexercised options to purchase Company Common Stock, whether or not
      vested,  in the  following  amounts:  Ms. Hayes Adame and Mssrs.  Howard,
      Oresman and  Silverstein:  15,000  shares each;  and Mssrs.  Isserman and
      Leventhal 3,000 shares each.


EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

         For detailed information concerning Richard Cote, Gedalio Grinberg and
Efraim  Grinberg,  see the  listing  for each under the  heading  "Election  of
Directors" above. The names of the other executive officers of the Company (and
their  respective  ages as of the  filing  date of this  report)  are set forth
below, together with the positions held by each during the past five years.

                 NAME                  AGE               POSITION
                 ----                  ---               --------
         Eugene J. Karpovich           61        Senior Vice President and Chief
                                                 Financial Officer

         Timothy F. Michno             50        Secretary and General Counsel

         MR.  KARPOVICH  joined the Company in 1998 as Chief Financial  Officer
for the  Movado  brand.  From  2000 to 2001 he was  Vice  President,  Financial
Planning for the Company.  He was promoted to Senior Vice  President  and Chief
Financial  Officer in October 2001.  Before joining the Company,  Mr. Karpovich
had  been  the  Chief  Financial   Officer  of  the  watch  company   Wittnauer
International,  Inc., a subsidiary of Westinghouse Electric Corporation,  Inc.,
where he was employed for 23 years.

         MR.  MICHNO joined the Company in April 1992 and since then has served
as its  Secretary and General  Counsel.  He has been engaged in the practice of
law since 1983. Immediately prior to joining the Company and since 1986, he was

                                      12


an associate at the New York firm of  Chadbourne & Parke.  From 1988 to 1991 he
served as a resident outside counsel to Fortune Brands, Inc. (formerly known as
American Brands, Inc.), a consumer products company.


EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

                      COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

ROLE OF THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

         The Compensation  Committee of the Board of Directors (for purposes of
this analysis,  the  "Committee")  is  responsible  for reviewing and approving
annually  corporate  goals relative to the  compensation of the Company's Chief
Executive Officer ("CEO"),  evaluating the performance of the CEO against those
goals and  determining  the CEO's  compensation  based on that  evaluation.  In
addition,  the Committee  also reviews and approves the structure and levels of
compensation for the Company's other executive  officers and senior management;
reviews and approves significant  compensation programs generally;  and reviews
and  administers  the Company's 1996 Stock Incentive Plan which, as amended and
restated,  was  approved by the  shareholders  in 2004.  Throughout  this proxy
statement,  the  individuals who served as the Company's CEO or Chief Financial
Officer  during fiscal 2007, as well as the other  individuals  included in the
Summary  Compensation Table on page 20, are referred to as the "named executive
officers".

COMPENSATION PHILOSOPHY AND OBJECTIVES

         The  compensation  philosophy  of the  Company,  as  reflected  in its
compensation programs in effect during fiscal year 2007, is to attract, retain,
motivate and appropriately  reward a group of highly qualified  individuals who
are expected to contribute to the Company's  continued  success.  The Committee
believes  that the most  effective  executive  compensation  programs are those
designed to reward the achievement of specific  annual and long-term  strategic
goals set by the Company.  These programs  closely link  executives'  interests
with those of the Company's  shareholders by rewarding  performance  meeting or
exceeding  the  established  goals,  with the  ultimate  objective of enhancing
shareholder value.

SETTING EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

         Based on the foregoing  objectives,  the Committee has  structured the
Company's   incentive-based   annual  cash  compensation  and   incentive-based
long-term equity  compensation to motivate the named executive officers and the
Company's other management level employees to achieve the business goals set by
the Company and to  appropriately  reward  those  executives  and  managers for
achieving  such goals.  To assist it in evaluating the  competitiveness  of the
Company's  executive  compensation  programs  and in setting  compensation  for
fiscal 2007, the Committee  engaged Frederic W. Cook & Co., Inc. ("FW Cook"), a
nationally  recognized  executive  compensation  consulting  firm, to conduct a
review of the Company's  compensation  programs for the CEO and the other named
executive  officers and to analyze the  Company's  long-term  equity  incentive
plans generally.  FW Cook did not receive professional fees from the Company in
fiscal 2007 other than in  connection  with advising the Committee on executive
compensation matters.

         FW Cook compared base salary levels, annual cash bonuses and long-term
incentive  awards  paid to the CEO and the other  named  executive  officers in
fiscal  2005 and 2006 to data  available  from a peer group of  publicly-traded
consumer  products  companies  of similar  size in terms of revenue  and market
capitalization (collectively,  the "COMPENSATION PEER GROUP"). The Compensation
Peer Group is  periodically  reviewed and updated by the Committee and consists
of companies  against  which the  Committee  believes the Company  competes for
talent. The companies currently comprising the Compensation Peer Group are:

         o   Finlay Enterprises    o   Kenneth Cole     o   Steven Madden
         o   Fossil                o   K-Swiss          o   Tandy Brands
         o   Guess?                o   Oakley               Accessories
         o   Hartmax               o   Perry Ellis

         Recognizing  that the  Company  competes  with  these and many  other,
larger   companies  for  top   executive-level   talent,   the  Committee  sets
compensation for the CEO, the other named executive  officers and the Company's
executive  management  team  generally  no lower  than the 50th  percentile  of
compensation paid to similarly situated executives of the companies  comprising
the Compensation Peer Group. Variations to this objective may occur as dictated

                                      13


by Company performance,  the experience level and performance of the individual
and market factors.  For example,  for certain  positions that are particularly
important  for the  Company's  ability to achieve its  strategic  goals and for
which  the  competition  for  experienced,   highly  successful  executives  is
especially  acute,  the  Committee  targets  compensation  as high as the  75th
percentile.

         In  accordance   with  the  Company's   compensation   philosophy,   a
significant percentage of total compensation is allocated to incentives.  There
is no  pre-established  policy or target for the allocation between either cash
and non-cash or short-term and long-term  incentive  compensation.  Rather, the
Committee reviews all available  information including that provided by FW Cook
and other third party data gathered by the Company's Human Resources department
to determine the appropriate level and mix of incentive compensation.

         The  Committee  makes all  compensation  decisions  in  respect of the
compensation  awarded to the CEO. The CEO annually  reviews the  performance of
the  Chief  Operating   Officer  ("COO")  who  in  turn  annually  reviews  the
performance  of each other named  executive  officer (with the exception of the
Chairman  of the  Board).  The  CEO  and  COO  present  their  conclusions  and
recommendations  based on these  reviews,  including  with  respect  to  salary
adjustments and annual award amounts, to the Committee. The Committee considers
these  recommendations  with  respect to the  compensation  of the other  named
executive  officers and other senior  executives and, subject to any applicable
plan  limitations,  can exercise its  discretion in modifying  any  recommended
adjustments  or  awards  to  executives.   The  Committee  also  reviews  total
compensation  earned by and  awarded  to such  individual  for the prior  three
years.


FISCAL 2007 EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION COMPONENTS

         For the fiscal year ended January 31, 2007, the principal components of
compensation for the named executive officers were:

         o        base salary;

         o        performance-based annual cash compensation;

         o        long-term equity incentive compensation;

         o        retirement and other post-employment benefits; and

         o        perquisites and other benefits

         BASE SALARY

         The Company provides named executive officers and other employees with
base salary to compensate  them for services  rendered  during the fiscal year.
Base salaries for named executive  officers are determined by the Committee for
each individual in light of the Committee's  assessment of the responsibilities
relative to the  position  under  consideration,  as well as each  individual's
background,   training,   experience  and  by  reference  to  the   competitive
marketplace for comparable  talent.  Annual increases in base salary levels, if
warranted,  are reviewed with reference to the  individual's  performance,  the
performance  of the Company as a whole and the  prevailing  rate of increase in
base salary levels  generally in the  competitive  marketplace  with respect to
similar executive positions. During its review of base salaries for executives,
the Committee primarily considers:

         o        market data provided by FW Cook and obtained from other third
                  party sources;

         o        internal  review  of  the  executive's   compensation,   both
                  individually and relative to other executive officers; and

         o        individual performance of the executive.

         At  its  meeting  on  March  27,  2007,   the  Committee   approved  a
recommendation  by management not to increase the base salaries of the CEO, COO
or  the  Chairman  for  fiscal  2008,   and  to  increase  by  4.0%  and  9.1%,
respectively, the base salary levels for Mr. Michno and Mr. Karpovich.

                                      14


         PERFORMANCE-BASED ANNUAL CASH COMPENSATION

         The Company has two plans under which it provides its named  executive
officers,   other   executives  and  key  management   level  employees  annual
performance-based  opportunities  for cash  bonuses:  the  Movado  Group,  Inc.
Executive  Performance  Plan  (the  "EPP") in which  only the  named  executive
officers  participate  (with  the  exception  of the  Chairman,  who  does  not
participate in any cash incentive plan), and the Annual Incentive  Compensation
Plan,  in which  the  remaining  bonus-eligible  employees  (except  the  named
executive officers)  participate.  Both plans are designed to tie a significant
portion of  participants'  annual cash  compensation  to the  Company's  annual
financial performance.

         Under the EPP and consistent  with the  requirements of Section 162(m)
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended ("Section 162(m)"),  within 90
days after the beginning of each fiscal year the Committee  establishes  target
and maximum cash  incentive  levels for the named  executive  officers that are
expressed as a percentage of their  respective base salaries.  At the same time
it sets cash incentive targets,  the Committee also establishes an earnings per
share objective that must be met before any cash incentive payments can be made
under the EPP to any of the named executive officers.

         For fiscal 2007, the Committee set the target cash incentive  payments
for each of the CEO and COO at 75% of their  respective  base  salaries and set
the target  payments  for Mr.  Karpovich  and for Mr.  Michno at 50% and 30% of
their  respective  base salaries.  In addition,  the Committee  established the
maximum cash  incentives  payable  under the EPP to any of the named  executive
officers at 150% of their target cash incentive amounts.  The EPP provides that
total cash incentives payable thereunder to all the named executive officers in
any year may not  exceed $5  million.  Please  see the  "Grants  of  Plan-Based
Awards"  table for the  threshold,  target and maximum  cash  incentive  awards
payable to each of the named executive officers in respect of fiscal 2007.

         No cash  incentives  are paid to any of the named  executive  officers
under the EPP unless the threshold  earnings per share  objective for the year,
as  determined by the  Committee in or before each April,  is achieved.  If the
Company  achieves the earnings  per share goal set by the  Committee  under the
EPP, the Committee then assesses the Company's  overall  financial  performance
and the named  executive  officers'  individual  performance  in exercising its
discretion to determine the cash  incentive  actually paid to any of them under
the EPP,  which may not, in any event,  exceed the maximum set at the beginning
of the year.

         To assess  corporate  performance  for the fiscal year,  the Committee
considers  the extent to which the  Company  met the  criteria  for funding the
bonus pool under the Annual Incentive  Compensation Plan and the other criteria
for measuring  corporate  performance that are established as financial targets
under the Annual  Incentive  Compensation  Plan as part of the annual budgeting
process and approved by the Committee at the beginning of each fiscal year.

         In fiscal 2007, the Annual  Incentive  Compensation  Plan provided for
100% funding of the bonus pool if the Company achieved  specified  earnings per
share ("EPS") and return on capital employed ("ROCE") goals for the year. These
two funding criteria,  weighted 75% for EPS and 25% for ROCE, were aligned with
the Company's  financial  objectives for the fiscal year and were set at levels
that the Committee believed were reachable if strong results were achieved.  If
the EPS goal and the ROCE goal are both met, the bonus pool is 100% funded.  If
either goal is  exceeded,  bonus pool  funding is  increased up to a maximum of
150% of target funding, as illustrated in the following table.

                         GOAL
                      ACHIEVED (%)         POOL FUNDING (%)
                      ------------         ----------------
                           125                      150
                           110                      120
                           105                      110
                           100                      100

Unless the applicable  funding goal is met, the Annual  Incentive  Compensation
Plan provides that any funding of the bonus pool based on that goal is entirely
within the discretion of the Committee.

         If the bonus pool is funded,  the Committee  also considers the extent
to which the other corporate objectives under the Annual Incentive Compensation
Plan have been met in determining final cash incentive amounts,  if any, to pay
to each named executive officer under the EPP. The Committee has the discretion
to decrease or  eliminate,  but not to  increase,  the maximum  cash  incentive
payable to each named  executive  officer  under the EPP. In fiscal  2007,  the

                                      15


Committee  approved the following  corporate  performance  objectives under the
Annual Incentive Compensation Plan.

         o        Net sales;

         o        Operating expenses;

         o        Gross margin (%);

         o        Net income;

         o        Operating cash flow; and

         o        Inventory and accounts receivable.

         The Committee  approved these measures and the level at which each was
set to ensure an appropriate focus on growth and profitability  consistent with
the  Company's  strategic  plan.  Each  measure  was set at a level  reflecting
significant  improvement over the corresponding financial results for the prior
year and  required  the  successful  execution  of a number of  initiatives  to
increase  efficiency,  reduce costs and continue to grow sales in the Company's
brands and  business  units.  The degree of  improvement  varied by  individual
financial target. Certain targets were set at levels from 11% to 14 % above the
prior  year's  results.  The  performance  target for  inventory  and  accounts
receivable was set at a level flat with the prior year's achievement.

         In fiscal 2007 the Company  exceeded the earnings per share  objective
under the EPP and met both the EPS and ROCE goals for bonus pool funding  under
the Annual Incentive  Compensation Plan. Therefore the bonus pool was funded at
100% of target. In addition,  the Company met or exceeded  substantially all of
the other financial  metrics under the Annual Incentive  Compensation  Plan for
measuring  corporate  performance  for the year. The named  executive  officers
substantially achieved their individual performance  objectives.  Therefore the
Committee  approved the following bonus payments which are also shown in column
(g) of the Summary Compensation Table on page 20.

         ----------------------------------------------------------------------
                              TARGET AS     ACTUAL BONUS    % OF      AMOUNT
                              % OF BASE     AS % OF BASE   TARGET     EARNED ($)
         NAME                   SALARY         SALARY
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------
         Efraim Grinberg         75           71.25          95      675,000
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------
         Richard Cote            75           71.25          95      410,000
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------
         Eugene Karpovich        50           47.50          95      131,000
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------
         Timothy Michno          30           30.00        100         90,000
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------

         In March 2007, the Committee approved the earnings per share objective
and the cash  incentive  targets  under the EPP, and the EPS and ROCE goals for
bonus  pool  funding  and the  other  performance  criteria  under  the  Annual
Incentive  Compensation  Plan for fiscal 2008. The Committee  retained the same
75%/25%  weighting  of the  EPS and  ROCE  goals  and  substantially  the  same
additional  measures of corporate  performance  because it believes  that those
objectives  and the  relative  significance  given to each of them are the most
effective way to focus the executive officers and key management of the Company
to achieve  specific  financial  results  linked most closely  with  increasing
shareholder  value. The target levels at which the corporate  performance goals
were set for fiscal 2008 again reflect  significant  improvement in both growth
and  profitability,  with certain  targets  representing an improvement of from
approximately 7.0 % to 13.5 % compared to actual performance for fiscal 2007.

         LONG-TERM EQUITY INCENTIVE COMPENSATION

         STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN

         Stock  ownership  is a  key  element  of  the  Company's  compensation
program.  Under the Company's  1996 Stock  Incentive  Plan,  which was amended,
restated and approved by the  shareholders  in 2004 (the "SIP"),  the Committee
generally  makes long term equity  grants to executive  officers and senior and
mid-level  management  employees at its regularly scheduled meeting each March.
Beginning in fiscal 2008,  the Committee has determined to make all such grants
at its first regular  meeting held  approximately  30 days after the release of
the Company's fourth quarter and year-end earnings.

         Under the SIP,  the  Committee  may grant  participants  shares of the
Company's Common Stock,  restricted stock,  share units,  stock options,  stock
appreciation rights,  performance units and/or performance bonuses. In granting

                                      16


these awards,  the Committee may establish any  conditions or  restrictions  it
deems appropriate.  Most grants under the SIP were in the form of stock options
until March 2003.  At that time,  the  Committee  decided to utilize  primarily
stock awards for most grants and to use stock  options  primarily for grants to
certain newly hired and/or newly promoted employees and to the CEO and the COO.
The  Committee  believes  that  for the CEO and the COO  stock  options  are an
effective means to closely tie individual  performance  directly to that of the
Company's  stock price since the options  (unlike  stock awards which will have
some value upon vesting even if the price of the  Company's  stock has declined
since the date of grant) will have no value  unless the  Company's  share price
has  increased  from the date of grant.  Option  grants to the CEO and COO last
year are reflected on the Summary  Compensation table on page 20 and the Grants
of Plan Based Awards table on page 22. Newly hired and promoted  employees  who
receive  options  are  granted  them  by the  Committee  either  prospectively,
effective on the specified  date of their hire or the date of their  promotion,
or after their hiring or promotion on the next regularly scheduled meeting date
of the Committee.

         The  Committee  grants stock awards and stock  options based on market
data obtained by FW Cook and the Company's  Human Resources  department.  Award
levels vary among  participants and generally  reflect the position held by the
grantee,  contributions  made by the person in the prior fiscal year as well as
expectations of future  contributions.  For certain newly hired employees,  the
Committee  may  also  take  into  account  any  equity  compensation  that  the
individual is forfeiting from his or her former position in determining  equity
grant  amounts.  Both option and stock grants are designed to retain  executive
officers and management level employees by generally vesting either entirely on
the  third  anniversary  of the  grant  date (in the case of stock  awards)  or
incrementally  over three  years from the grant date (in the case of  options).
Options  and stock  awards  also  encourage  recipients  to focus on  enhancing
shareholder  value  over the  long  term by  directly  aligning  the  grantee's
financial  interests  with the  interests of the  Company's  shareholders.  All
options  granted under the SIP have an exercise  price equal to or greater than
the fair market value of the Company's common stock on the grant date.

         Last year,  as part of its  engagement  by the Committee to review and
make  recommendations  with respect to the Company's  long-term incentive grant
practices, FW Cook supported management's  recommendation to replace the use of
time-vesting   restricted  stock  for  the  Company's  senior  executives  with
performance  awards.  Accordingly,  the  Committee  limited the grant of annual
stock  awards  at its  regular  March  2006  meeting  to the  Company's  middle
management and did not make any equity grants to executives at that time. After
consideration of the issue and the  recommendations  made by FW Cook and review
of a proposed  long-term  incentive  plan, the Committee  adopted in May 2006 a
long-term equity incentive program under the SIP.


         LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN

         Under the Executive  Long-Term  Incentive Plan (the "LTIP") adopted by
the  Committee  on May  31,  2006,  key  employees  of the  Company  (currently
approximately 40 executives  worldwide) were granted  "Performance Share Units"
by the Committee for the three-year performance period ending January 31, 2009.
Each  Performance  Share Unit represents the right to receive a share of Common
Stock if the  predetermined  performance  goal is satisfied  in the  applicable
three-year  period ("Award  Period").  Under the LTIP,  Performance Share Units
vest based upon the  Company's  achievement  of a  specified  operating  margin
(calculated  as operating  profit / net sales) for the final fiscal year in the
Award Period (the  "Performance  Goal").  The Committee  established  operating
margin as the  performance  goal to support  the  Company's  strategic  plan of
increasing  profitability.  At its  meeting on April 30,  2007,  the  Committee
granted  Performance  Share Units to the named  executive  officers and certain
other key employees and established  the Performance  Goal for the Award Period
ending January 31, 2010.

         The objectives of the LTIP are to:

         o        Link  compensation  directly to the  achievement  of specific
                  corporate goals, namely improvement of operating margin;

         o        Utilize best competitive practices in executive  compensation
                  to attract, retain and motivate key employees; and

         o        Enhance  the  connection  between  the  Company's   operating
                  performance,  creation  of  shareholder  value and  long-term
                  executive compensation.

                                      17


         The actual number of shares of Common Stock earned by a participant is
based  on the  Company's  actual  performance  at the end of the  Award  Period
relative  to the  Performance  Goal and can range from 0% to 150% of the target
award.  No  participant  receives any  Performance  Share Units unless at least
89.5% of the Performance Goal (threshold performance) is achieved. Depending on
the extent to which the Performance  Goal is achieved,  up to 50% of the shares
of Common  Stock equal to the target Award will be  distributed  within 75 days
after the completion of the Award Period and the remainder of the earned shares
will be  distributed  on the second  anniversary of the completion of the Award
Period.  Participants must be employed at the completion of the Award Period to
receive any shares. The amount deferred to the second anniversary is subject to
forfeiture  only in the event of the  participant's  voluntary  resignation  or
termination of the  participant's  employment for cause. A pro-rata payout will
be made for  "retirement"  (as defined in the LTIP),  permanent  disability (as
determined by the Committee) or death  occurring  during the Award Period based
on actual performance at the end of the Award Period.

         For  further   discussion  of  dividend  rights  and  vesting  of  the
Performance Share Units in the event of a change in control, see the discussion
following the Grants of Plan-Based Awards table below. LTIP grants to the named
executive  officers in fiscal 2007 are  reflected  in the Summary  Compensation
table on page 20 and the Grants of Plan-Based Awards table on page 22.


         RETIREMENT AND POST EMPLOYMENT BENEFITS

         401(K) PLAN

         All  employees  in the United  States  including  the named  executive
officers are eligible to  participate  in the  Company's  Employee  Savings and
Investment Plan ("401(k) Plan"). In addition,  the named executive  officers as
well as certain  other  executives  selected by the  Committee  are eligible to
participate in the Deferred Compensation Plan for Executives.

         DEFERRED COMPENSATION PLAN

         The Company's  Deferred  Compensation Plan for Executives  ("DCP") was
originally  adopted  effective  June 1, 1995, and was approved by the Company's
shareholders  on June 14,  1996.  It was  amended  most  recently at the annual
shareholders meeting in 2004 to extend its term through June 17, 2014. The plan
is  designed to offer  retirement  benefits  to the named  executive  officers,
senior  management and key employees,  consistent with overall market practices
to  attract  and  retain  the  talent  needed  in the  Company.  Under the DCP,
participants  may defer up to 10% of their base salary annually and the Company
will credit to the account of each  participant a matching  contribution  in an
amount  equal to one  hundred  percent of the salary  deferral  up to a maximum
match  equal to either 10% (for "group I"  participants)  or 5% (for "group II"
participants) of the participant's base salary. Twenty percent of the Company's
matching  contribution is in the form of rights to Common Stock vesting ratably
in annual installments over five years.  Participants may direct the investment
of  amounts  in their  accounts  (other  than  rights  to Common  Stock)  among
investment  funds that are made  available to them under the plan.  Those funds
and  their  returns  for  calendar  year  2006  are  shown  on  page  25  under
NONQUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION.

         Further information regarding the participation by the named executive
officers  in  the  DCP  is  discussed  in  further  detail  under  the  heading
NONQUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION on page 24.

         SEVERANCE AGREEMENTS

         The Company has severance  agreements with Mr. Cote, Mr. Karpovich and
Mr. Michno.  Under the agreement with Mr. Cote, he will continue to be paid his
then current base salary for 24 months after the  termination of his employment
following a change in control unless  termination  was by the Company for cause
(or as a result  of his  death or  disability)  or was  voluntary  by Mr.  Cote
without good reason. Under their agreements,  Mr. Karpovich and Mr. Michno will
each  continue to be paid their then  current  base salary plus costs for COBRA
coverage for up to 12 months if the Company terminates their employment without
cause.  For a detailed  description of the  agreements  between the Company and
each of Mr. Cote, Mr. Karpovich and Mr. Michno,  please refer to the discussion
under the heading "Severance Agreements" on page 26.

         PERQUISITES AND OTHER BENEFITS

         As part of providing a competitive executive compensation program, the
Company  provides  the  CEO,  COO  and  Chairman  of  the  Board  with  certain
perquisites  that the Company and the  Committee  believe  are  reasonable  and
consistent  with  its  overall  compensation  program.  The  Committee  reviews
annually the levels of perquisites provided to these named executive officers.

                                      18


         The Company  reimburses the CEO and COO for certain automobile related
expenses  incurred by them in connection  with their commuting to the Company's
offices and pays  directly for similar  commuting  expenses for the Chairman of
the Board, including the cost of a driver on an as-needed basis.

         The Company has purchased  life insurance  policies  insuring both the
CEO and the  Chairman of the Board and pays the  premiums  for that  insurance.
Under this  arrangement,  the named insureds are entitled to the cash surrender
value  in  respect  of these  life  insurance  policies  and  their  respective
beneficiaries are entitled to the applicable death benefits without,  in either
event, reimbursement to the Company.

         Under a Death  and  Disability  Benefit  Plan  agreement  with Mr.  G.
Grinberg,  dated September 23, 1994, in the event of Mr. G. Grinberg's death or
disability  while employed by the Company,  the Company will pay to his spouse,
if she is then living,  an annual benefit equal, as of fiscal 2007, to $380,474
(increased October 1 each year by an amount equal to two percent of the benefit
that would have been payable in the prior  year).  Benefits are payable for the
lesser of 10 years or the life of Mr. G.  Grinberg's  spouse,  and are  payable
only from the general  assets of the Company.  Neither Mr. G.  Grinberg nor his
spouse may assign the agreement or any of the benefits  payable  thereunder and
none of the  benefits  are payable to the estates or any of the heirs of Mr. G.
Grinberg or his spouse. The agreement provides that it automatically terminates
in the  event of the  termination  of Mr.  G.  Grinberg's  employment  with the
Company for any reason other than his death or disability.  For purposes of the
agreement  "disability"  means the  inability of Mr. G. Grinberg to perform the
duties pertaining to his job because of accident,  sickness or other illness as
determined by a majority of disinterested directors.

         Attributed  costs of the  perquisites  described  above  for the named
executive  officers for the fiscal year ended January 31, 2007, are included in
column (i) of the Summary Compensation Table on page 20.


TAX AND ACCOUNTING IMPLICATIONS

         DEDUCTIBILITY OF EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

         As  part  of  its  role,  the  Committee  reviews  and  considers  the
deductibility  of executive  compensation  under Section 162(m) of the Internal
Revenue Code,  which provides that the Company may not deduct  compensation  of
more than $1,000,000 that is paid to certain individuals.  The Company believes
that compensation paid under the management incentive plans are generally fully
deductible for federal income tax purposes. However, in certain situations, the
Committee  may approve  compensation  that may not meet these  requirements  in
order to ensure  competitive  levels of total  compensation  for its  executive
officers.

         NONQUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION

         On October 22, 2004, the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 was signed
into  law,   changing  the  tax  rules  applicable  to  nonqualified   deferred
compensation  arrangements.   While  the  final  regulations  have  not  become
effective  yet, the Company  believes it is operating in good faith  compliance
with the statutory provisions which were effective January 1, 2005.

         ACCOUNTING FOR STOCK-BASED COMPENSATION

         Beginning  on  January 1,  2006,  the  Company  began  accounting  for
stock-based  payments in accordance  with the  requirements  of FASB  Statement
123(R).  The  Committee  considers  the  expense  implications  of  the  equity
compensation awards in determining the aggregate annual award levels.

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT

         The  Compensation  Committee of the Company has reviewed and discussed
the Compensation  Discussion and Analysis required by Item 402(b) of Regulation
S-K with management and, based on such review and discussions, the Compensation
Committee  recommended  to the  Board  that  the  Compensation  Discussion  and
Analysis be included in this Proxy Statement and the Company's Annual Report on
Form 10-K for the year ended January 31, 2007.

THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
Alan H. Howard, Chairman           Donald Oresman
Margaret Hayes Adame               Leonard L. Silverstein

                                      19


SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

         The following Summary  Compensation Table sets forth information about
the compensation  paid in respect of fiscal 2007 by the Company to the CEO, the
Chief Financial Officer (the "CFO") and the three other most highly compensated
executive officers of the Company (the "named executive officers").



----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        (a)                  (b)     (c)       (d)      (e)       (f)        (g)           (h)             (i)               (j)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        CHANGE IN
                                                                                       PENSION VALUE
                                                                          NON-EQUITY   AND NONQUALI-
                                                                           INCENTIVE   FIED DEFERRED
                                    SALARY             STOCK    OPTION      PLAN      COMPENSATION      ALL OTHER
    NAME AND                        ($)(1)   BONUS    AWARDS    AWARDS  COMPENSATION    EARNINGS       COMPENSATION        TOTAL
PRINCIPAL POSITION          YEAR              ($)     ($)(2)    ($)(2)      ($)(3)          ($)            ($)              ($)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                             
Efraim Grinberg,            2007   941,346     -      97,013   342,989     675,000          -           148,588 (4)     2,204,936
 President and Chief
 Executive Officer

Eugene J. Karpovich         2007   270,674     -                19,530     131,000          -           22,500 (5)        509,558
 Senior Vice President,                               65,854
 Chief Financial Officer

Gedalio Grinberg ,          2007   650,000     -           0         0           0          -           492,625 (6)     1,142,625
 Chairman of the Board

Richard Cote, Executive     2007   566,346     -     231,893   178,750     410,000          -            70,501 (7)     1,457,490
 Vice President, Chief
 Operating Officer

Timothy F. Michno           2007   295,672     -      23,435    26,040      90,000          -            23,150 (8)       458,297
 Secretary and General
 Counsel
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(1)  Salary amounts include  amounts  deferred at the election of the executive
     under the Company's DCP and under the 401(k) plan. Amounts deferred to the
     DCP are also shown in the Nonqualified Deferred Compensation table.

(2)  Amounts shown do not reflect  compensation  actually received by the named
     executive  officers.  Instead  the  dollar  value of these  awards  is the
     compensation cost recognized for financial  statement  reporting  purposes
     for the  fiscal  year  ended  January  31,  2007 in  accordance  with  the
     provisions of FAS 123(R), but excluding any estimate of future forfeitures
     and reflecting the effect of any actual  forfeitures.  These  compensation
     costs reflect  equity awards granted in and prior to fiscal year 2007. See
     Notes 1 and 13 of the consolidated  financial  statements in the Company's
     Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal  year ended  January  31,  2007
     regarding the assumptions underlying the valuation of equity awards.

(3)  Annual incentive  payments for the named executive  officers under the EPP
     based on the  Company's  performance  in fiscal  2007.  See  "Compensation
     Discussion and Analysis -  Performance-Based  Annual Cash Compensation" on
     page 15.

(4)  Includes a taxable car allowance and automobile insurance reimbursement of
     $22,129 and  reimbursement  of automobile fuel expenses.  Includes $30,454
     for premiums paid in respect of certain life insurance  policies purchased
     for Mr.  E.  Grinberg  by the  Company.  Under  his  arrangement  with the
     Company,  Mr. E.  Grinberg  is  entitled  to the cash  surrender  value in
     respect of certain of these life insurance  policies and his beneficiaries
     are  entitled  to  the  applicable  benefit  without,   in  either  event,
     reimbursement  to the Company of any  premiums  paid by the Company  under
     such policies.  Also includes a $3,400 matching  contribution  made by the
     Company for the account of Mr. E. Grinberg under the Company's 401(k) Plan
     and a matching cash contribution of $72,000 and a non-cash contribution of
     723 phantom stock units valued at $18,000  (based on the closing prices of
     the  Company's  Common  Stock on the grant  dates) for fiscal  2007 to his
     account  under the DCP.  These  matching  contributions  under the DCP are
     included in the Nonqualified Deferred Compensation table, below.

                                      20


(5)  Includes  a taxable  car  allowance  of  $6,600.  Also  includes  a $3,400
     matching contribution made by the Company for the account of Mr. Karpovich
     under the  Company's  401(k)  Plan and a  matching  cash  contribution  of
     $10,000 and a non-cash  contribution  of 100.57 phantom stock units valued
     at $2,458 (based on the closing  prices of the  Company's  Common Stock on
     the grant  dates)  for fiscal  2007 to his  account  under the DCP.  These
     matching  contributions  under the DCP are  included  in the  Nonqualified
     Deferred Compensation table, below.

(6)  Includes $73,510 in payments made by the Company for the lease,  garaging,
     insurance and  maintenance of an automobile  and charges for a driver.  Of
     that amount, $63,933 was taxable to Mr. G. Grinberg in calendar year 2006.
     Also  includes  $200,715  in  premiums  paid in respect  of  certain  life
     insurance  policies and one travel  accident  policy  purchased for Mr. G.
     Grinberg by the Company.  Under his arrangement  with the Company,  Mr. G.
     Grinberg is entitled to the cash surrender  value under these policies and
     his beneficiary is entitled to the applicable  benefit without,  in either
     event,  reimbursement  to the Company of any premiums  paid by the Company
     under such policies.  Also includes a $3,400 matching contribution made by
     the Company for the account of Mr. G. Grinberg under the Company's  401(k)
     Plan  and  a  matching  cash   contribution  of  $52,000  and  a  non-cash
     contribution  of 521.190  phantom stock units valued at $13,000  (based on
     the closing prices of the Company's  Common Stock on the grant dates) made
     by the Company for fiscal 2007 to Mr. G.  Grinberg's  account  pursuant to
     the DCP.  These matching  contributions  under the DCP are included in the
     Nonqualified  Deferred  Compensation  table, below. Also includes $150,000
     accrued by the Company in respect of a Death and  Disability  Benefit Plan
     agreement with Mr. G.  Grinberg.  See "Certain  Relationships  and Related
     Transactions" below.

(7)  Includes a taxable car allowance and automobile insurance reimbursement of
     $12,787 and  reimbursement  of automobile  fuel expenses.  Also includes a
     $3,400  matching  contribution  made by the Company for the account of Mr.
     Cote under the Company's  401(k) Plan and a matching cash  contribution of
     $42,000 and a non-cash  contribution  of 422.33 phantom stock units valued
     at $10,500 (based on the closing  prices of the Company's  Common Stock on
     the grant  dates)  for fiscal  2007 to his  account  under the DCP.  These
     matching  contributions  under the DCP are  included  in the  Nonqualified
     Deferred Compensation table, below.

(8)  Includes  a taxable  car  allowance  of  $6,000.  Also  includes  a $3,400
     matching  contribution  made by the Company for the account of Mr.  Michno
     under the  Company's  401(k)  Plan and a  matching  cash  contribution  of
     $11,000 and a non-cash  contribution  of 107.68 phantom stock units valued
     at $2750 (based on the closing prices of the Company's Common Stock on the
     grant dates) for fiscal 2007 to his account under the DCP.  These matching
     contributions  under the DCP are  included  in the  Nonqualified  Deferred
     Compensation table, below.



                                      21




GRANTS OF PLAN-BASED AWARDS IN FISCAL 2007

---------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                      ALL OTHER
                                                                                       OPTION     EXERCISE               GRANT
                                                                                       AWARDS:    OR BASE    CLOSING   DATE FAIR
                                                                                      NUMBER OF    PRICE      MARKET   VALUE OF
                                                                                      SECURITIES     OF      PRICE ON  STOCK AND
                         ESTIMATED POSSIBLE PAYOUTS            ESTIMATE FUTURE        UNDERLYING   OPTION     DATE OF  OPTION
             GRANT            UNDER NON-EQUITY               PAYOUTS UNDER EQUITY      OPTIONS     AWARDS      GRANT   AWARDS
    NAME     DATE          INCENTIVE PLAN AWARDS             INCENTIVE PLAN AWARDS      ( #)       ($/SH)     ($/SH)     ($)
                                                                                                                (3)
---------- ----------- -------------------------------- ------------------------------ --------  ---------  ---------  ---------
     (a)      (b)      (c)          (d)           (e)        (f)        (g)     ( h)     (j)        (k)                  (l)
---------- ----------- -------------------------------- ------------------------------ --------  ---------  ---------  ---------
                       THRESHOLD    TARGET      MAXIMUM   THRESHOLD  TARGET    MAXIMUM
                        ($)(1)      ($)(1)      ($)(1)     ($)(2)    ($)(2)    ($)(2)
---------- ----------- -------------------------------- ------------------------------ --------  ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                       
Efraim                   0         712,500    1,068,750
Grinberg    05/31/06                                       15,000    30,000     45,000                                  545,700
            05/31/06                                                                    50,000      18.41     18.69     326,500

Eugene                   0         137,500      206,250
Karpovich   05/31/06                                        3,000     6,000      9,000                                  109,140

Gedalio            -     -               -            -         -       -            -       -          -         -           -
Grinberg(4)

Richard                  0         431,250      646,875
Cote        05/31/06                                       11,250    22,500     33,750                                  409,275
            05/31/06                                                                    30,000      18.41     18.69     195,900

Timothy                   0         90,000      120,000
Michno      05/31/06                                        1,000     2,000      3,000                                   36,380
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   (1)   Includes annual cash incentive  opportunities  for the named executive
         officers in fiscal 2007 under the  Company's  EPP.  See  "Compensation
         Discussion   and  Analysis  -  Fiscal  2007   Executive   Compensation
         Components - Performance Based Annual Cash Compensation" on page 15.

   (2)   Reflects  Performance  Share Units, each of which represents the right
         to receive a share of Common  Stock if the  predetermined  performance
         goal  under  the  Company's  LTIP is met in fiscal  2009.  The LTIP is
         discussed  on page 17 under  "Compensation  Discussion  and Analysis -
         Fiscal 2007  Executive  Compensation  Components  -  Long-Term  Equity
         Incentive Compensation".  See also the discussion following this table
         for more information regarding the Performance Share Units

   (3)   All stock  options  granted  under the  Company's SIP have an exercise
         price equal to or greater than the fair market value of the  Company's
         Common  Stock on the grant date.  Prior to  December 5, 2006,  the SIP
         defined  "fair  market  value"  on any  date as the mean  between  the
         highest  and  lowest  sale  prices of the  Company's  Common  Stock as
         reported on the NYSE on the last  business  day  immediately  prior to
         that date. The Board of Directors  amended this definition on December
         5, 2006 so that "fair market value" now means the closing price of the
         Company's  Common Stock on the grant date. The options  granted to Mr.
         E.  Grinberg  and to Mr. Cote in fiscal 2006 vest in equal  increments
         over three years beginning on the first  anniversary of the grant date
         and expire on the tenth anniversary of the grant date.

   (4)   Mr.  G.  Grinberg  was  not a  participant  in any  of  the  Company's
         incentive plans in fiscal 2007.

         Each Performance Share Unit,  reflected in columns (f), (g) and (h) in
the  Grants of  Plan-Based  Awards  table  above,  is  credited  with  dividend
equivalents equal to the dividends paid on one share of Common Stock during the
three-year Award Period and the subsequent  two-year mandatory deferral period.
Dividend  equivalents  are in the form of phantom  stock units,  with each unit
representing  one share of Common  Stock.  The number of shares of Common Stock
underlying  the phantom stock units will be distributed at the same time as the
distribution of earned shares in respect of the Performance Share Units.

         Upon the  occurrence of a "Change in Control" (as defined in the SIP),
all or a portion of the Performance  Share Units awarded will be converted on a
one-for-one basis to time-based phantom stock units without pro-ration based on
the chart below,  vesting at the end of the Award  Period.  Upon  vesting,  one
share of Common  Stock  will be  distributed  for each  phantom  stock unit not

                                      22


previously forfeited.  The number of Performance Share Units that are converted
into time-based  phantom stock units depends on the time during an Award Period
when the Change in Control occurs as follows:

             TIME OF THE CHANGE IN CONTROL        SHARES CONVERTED BASED ON:
             -----------------------------        --------------------------

             Months 1 through 12                  Threshold performance (89.5%)

             Months 13 through 24                 Target performance (100%)

             Months 25 through 36                 Actual performance to date

If a  participant's  employment  is  terminated  without cause within 24 months
after the Change in  Control,  any  unvested  phantom  stock  units will become
immediately vested and payable.  Any Performance Share Units not converted will
be forfeited.



OUTSTANDING EQUITY AWARDS AT FISCAL 2007 YEAR-END

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        OPTION AWARDS                                                STOCK AWARDS
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      (a)          (b)          (c)          (d)           (e)          (f)        (g)           (h)             (i)            (j)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                                            EQUITY
                                                                                                                           INCENTIVE
                                                                                                                            PLAN
                                                                                                           EQUITY           AWARDS:
                                            EQUITY                                                        INCENTIVE        MARKET OR
                                           INCENTIVE                                                        PLAN             PAYOUT
                                             PLAN                                                          AWARDS:          VALUE OF
                                            AWARDS:                                         MARKET        NUMBER OF        UNEARNED
                            NUMBER OF      NUMBER OF                          NUMBER OF    VALUE OF       UNEARNED          SHARES,
              NUMBER OF    SECURITIES     SECURITIES                          SHARES OR    SHARES OR    SHARES, UNITS      UNITS OR
             SECURITIES    UNDERLYING     UNDERLYING                          UNITS OF     UNITS OF       OR OTHER          OTHER
             UNDERLYING    UNEXERCISED    UNEXERCISED   OPTION               STOCK THAT     STOCK        RIGHTS THAT        RIGHTS
             UNEXERCISED   OPTIONS (#)     UNEARNED    EXERCISE    OPTION     HAVE NOT       THAT          HAVE NOT       THAT HAVE
             OPTIONS (#)  UNEXERCISABLE    OPTIONS      PRICE    EXPIRATION    VESTED      HAVE NOT         VESTED        NOT VESTED
NAME         EXERCISABLE        (1)          (#)         ($)        DATE       (2)(#)       VESTED($)       (3)(#)           ($)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                
Efraim          100,000                        -         14.87    5/19/08           -            -          15,000         430,500
Grinberg        100,000                                  12.00    3/30/09
                303,898                                  15.02    3/16/11
                 94,962                                  15.57    3/16/11
                177,542                                  18.48    3/16/11
                 33,334        66,666                    18.34    3/22/15
                               50,000                    18.41    5/31/16
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eugene           14,000                        -          9.73    3/11/12       7,500      215,250           3,000          86,100
Karpovich        15,000                                  12.50    3/11/12
                  1,312                                  11.92    3/16/11
                  1,974                                  14.36    3/16/11
                  3,233                                  18.48    3/16/11
                    706                                  18.48    3/16/11
                               15,000                    14.05    8/27/14
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Richard         400,000                        -         10.50    1/06/10      30,000      861,000          11,250         322,875
Cote             60,000                                   4.25    5/17/10
                173,882        33,333                    15.57    3/16/11
                 16,667        30,000                    18.34    3/22/15
                                                         18.41    5/31/16
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gedalio               -             -          -             -          -           -            -               -               -
Grinberg
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Timothy               0        20,000          -         14.05    8/27/14       2,780       79,786           1,000          28,700
Michno
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(1)  Mr. E. Grinberg's  remaining  unvested option to purchase 66,666 shares of
     Common  Stock will become  exercisable  with  respect to 33,333  shares on
     March 22, 2007 and 33,333 shares on March 22, 2008. His unvested option to
     purchase 50,000 shares of Common Stock becomes exercisable with respect to
     16,667 shares on May 31, 2007;  16,667 shares on May 31, 2008,  and 16,666
     shares on May 31, 2009. Mr. Karpovich's unvested option to purchase 15,000
     shares of Common Stock becomes exercisable with respect to 5,000 shares on
     each  August 27 in 2007,  2008 and 2009.  Mr.  Cote's  remaining  unvested
     option to purchase 33,333 shares of Common Stock becomes  exercisable with
     respect to 16,667  shares on March 22, 2007 and 16,666 on March 22,  2008.
     Mr.  Michno's  unvested  option to purchase  20,000 shares of Common Stock

                                      23


     becomes exercisable with respect to 6,667 shares on August 27, 2007, 6,667
     shares on August 27, 2008 and 6,666 shares on August 27 2009.

(2)  Represents  unvested  stock  awards  granted  under  the  Company's  Stock
     Incentive  Plan  which  is  discussed  on  page  16  under   "Compensation
     Discussion and Analysis - Fiscal 2007 Executive Compensation  Components -
     Long-Term Equity Incentive Compensation". The awards vest on April 8, 2007
     and April 8, 2008 as follows:

                 NAME                 APRIL 8, 2007       APRIL 8, 2008
                 ----                 -------------       -------------
                 Mr. Karpovich         4,000 shares         3,500 shares

                 Mr. Cote             20,000 shares        10,000 shares

                 Mr. Michno            1,580 shares         1,200 shares

(3)  Reflects  Performance  Share Units,  each of which represents the right to
     receive  a share of Common  Stock if the  predetermined  performance  goal
     under the Company's  Long-Term  Incentive  Plan is met in fiscal 2009. The
     Long-Term  Incentive  Plan is  discussed  on page 17  under  "Compensation
     Discussion and Analysis - Fiscal 2007 Executive Compensation  Components -
     Long-Term Equity Incentive Compensation".  If the performance goal is met,
     shares of Common  Stock  equal to  one-half  of the number of  Performance
     Share Units earned will be issued  within 75 days after  January 31, 2009;
     and shares of Common Stock equal to the  remaining  number of  Performance
     Share Units earned will be issued on January 31, 2011 unless,  before that
     date, the award recipient has  voluntarily  resigned or his employment has
     been terminated for cause.



OPTION EXERCISES AND STOCK VESTED DURING FISCAL 2007

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------------------
                                                  OPTION AWARDS                           STOCK AWARDS
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------------------
           (a)                        (b)                   (c)                    (d)                 (e)
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------------------
                               NUMBER OF SHARES        VALUE REALIZED       NUMBER OF SHARES      VALUE REALIZED
                             ACQUIRED ON EXERCISE       ON EXERCISE       ACQUIRED ON VESTING       ON VESTING
           NAME                       (#)                 ($)(1)                 (#)                  ($)(2)
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------------------
                                                                                           
 Efraim Grinberg                   75,000                1,246,500                    0                      0
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------------------
 Eugene Karpovich                  14,000                  177,000                7,000                137,690
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------------------
 Gedalio Grinberg                       0                        0                    0                      0
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------------------
 Richard Cote                           0                        0                    0                      0
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------------------
 Timothy Michno                         0                        0                2,400                 47,208
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------------------

(1)  For Mr. E.  Grinberg this amount  represents  the  difference  between the
     market  price of the Common  Stock on the date of option  exercise and the
     exercise price of the option. For Mr. Karpovich who sold the 14,000 shares
     immediately  upon  acquiring  them this amount  represents  the difference
     between  the  sale  price  of the  shares  and the  exercise  price of the
     options.

(2)  Values represent the mathematical  product  resulting from multiplying the
     number of shares  vesting by the market price of the shares on the vesting
     date.


NONQUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION

         Under the  Company's  DCP,  participants  may defer up to 10% of their
base  salary  annually  and the  Company  will  credit to the  account  of each
participant a matching  contribution in an amount equal to the salary deferral,
up to a maximum  match of either  10% or 5% of the  participant's  base  salary
(depending on whether the  participant  is included in group I or group II). Of
the named executive officers, Mr. E. Grinberg, Mr. G. Grinberg and Mr. Cote are
in group I and Mr. Karpovich and Mr. Michno are in group II. Deferral elections
must be made no later than December 31 of the year before the year in which the

                                      24


salary will be deferred.  Twenty percent of the Company's matching contribution
is made in the form of rights to the Company's  Common Stock  representing  the
number  of shares  (including  fractional  shares)  of  Common  Stock  that the
matching  contribution  could purchase based upon the New York Stock Exchange's
closing price of the stock on the date when the matching  contribution is made.
Matching  contributions  are made on the  last  business  day of each  calendar
quarter.  Participants  may direct the  investment of amounts in their accounts
(other  than  rights to Common  Stock)  among  investment  funds  that are made
available  to them under the plan.  The table below  shows the funds  available
under the DCP and their annual rate of return for calendar  2006 as reported by
the plan administrator.

           ---------------------------------------------------------------
                    NAME OF FUND RATE OF RETURN
                                                                    (%)
           ---------------------------------------------------------------
           Fidelity Advisor Treasury                                4.37
           ---------------------------------------------------------------
           Evergreen Adjustable Rate A                              4.45
           ---------------------------------------------------------------
           Pioneer High Yield A                                    10.60
           ---------------------------------------------------------------
           Oppenheimer Balanced N                                   9.82
           ---------------------------------------------------------------
           Fidelity Advisor Equity Income T                        16.83
           ---------------------------------------------------------------
           Oppenheimer Main Street N                               14.56
           ---------------------------------------------------------------
           American Funds Growth Fund of America R3                10.62
           ---------------------------------------------------------------
           Fidelity Advisor Value Strategies T                     15.62
           ---------------------------------------------------------------
           Baron Small Cap                                         11.83
           ---------------------------------------------------------------
           First Eagle Overseas A                                  22.29
           ---------------------------------------------------------------
           Oppenheimer Global Opportunities                        10.65
           ---------------------------------------------------------------

         A participant's  salary  deferrals and any earnings on those deferrals
are immediately  vested.  Company matching  contributions and any discretionary
contributions  vest  at the  rate of 20%  per  year as long as the  participant
remains  employed by the Company.  A  participant  who attains the age of 65 or
whose employment  terminates due to death or disability  automatically vests in
all amounts in such  participant's  account.  A  participant  whose  employment
terminates for other reasons forfeits unvested  amounts.  If there is a "change
in control" (as defined in the DCP) of the Company, all amounts attributable to
matching  contributions (but not discretionary  Company  contributions)  become
fully vested on the date of such change in control.

         Distributions   from  the  DCP  commence  in  the  January   following
termination of the participant's  employment,  unless such termination was less
than six months before January 1, in which case distributions commence the next
following  January 1. Benefits,  including  shares of Company Common Stock, are
paid in 10 annual  installments  unless (i) the Company  determines  to pay the
benefits in a lump sum or (ii) a participant who is a former employee  provides
services to a competitor within two years following  termination of employment,
in which case all remaining  benefits will be paid to the participant in a lump
sum.  Rights to Common  Stock are  distributed  by the  Company  issuing to the
participant or to his or her  beneficiary  the number of shares of Common Stock
equal to the number of full shares then credited in such participant's account.
Any credited dividend amounts and any fractional shares are paid in cash.

         The following  table shows the deferrals  made by the named  executive
officers  and the  contributions  made by the  Company  under the DCP in fiscal
2007.



NONQUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION IN FISCAL 2007

     ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            (a)                      (b)               (c)               (d)               (e)                (f)
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 EXECUTIVE          REGISTRANT         AGGREGATE        AGGREGATE         AGGREGATE
                                CONTRIBUTIONS      CONTRIBUTIONS      EARNINGS IN     WITHDRAWALS/        BALANCE AT
          NAME                 IN LAST FY ($)(1)  IN LAST FY ($)(2)   LAST FY ($)     DISTRIBUTIONS ($)   LAST FY ($)
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                          
     Efraim Grinberg               90,000             90,000           364,009                0          2,680,922
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Eugene Karpovich              12,500             12,500            26,073                0            227,274
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Gedalio Grinberg              65,000             65,000           487,893                0          3,250,975
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Richard Cote                  52,500             52,500           332,735                0          2,645,937
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Timothy Michno                13,750             13,750            45,521                0            347,602
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                      25


(1)  The amounts  reported in this column are also reported as  compensation to
     the named  executive  officer  in column (i) of the  Summary  Compensation
     table on page 20.

(2)  The  Company's  matching  contribution  to each  named  executive  officer
     consisted of cash and phantom stock units,  each representing the right to
     one share of Common  Stock,  in the amounts  and values as follows.  Share
     values are based on the  closing  prices of the Common  Stock on the grant
     dates.

                                      CASH           NON-CASH         VALUE OF
                                  CONTRIBUTION     CONTRIBUTION      SHARE UNITS
          NAME                         ($)        (# SHARE UNITS)        ($)
          ----                    -------------   ---------------    -----------
          Efraim Grinberg             72,000             723.00        18,000
          Eugene Karpovich            10,000             100.57         2,500
          Gedalio Grinberg            52,000             521.19        13,000
          Richard Cote                42,000             422.33        10,500
          Timothy Michno              11,000             107.68         2,750


POTENTIAL PAYMENTS ON TERMINATION OR CHANGE IN CONTROL

         None of the named executive officers have employment  agreements.  The
Company has entered into severance  agreements with Mr. Cote, Mr. Karpovich and
Mr. Michno which are described below. In addition,  the DCP and the SIP provide
for accelerated vesting, respectively, of Company matching contributions and of
equity  compensation  (stock options and stock awards) in the event of a change
in control.  The SIP also provides for accelerated  vesting of equity awards in
the event of a participant's death, disability or retirement.

         SEVERANCE AGREEMENTS

         Mr. Cote's agreement provides for the continuation of his then
applicable annual base salary, paid bi-weekly for 24 months following the
termination of his employment within two years after a change in control.
(defined as the acquisition by a person or group of more than 50% of the
combined aggregate voting power represented by the Company's then outstanding
shares; or certain mergers and asset sales; or a liquidation or dissolution),
except that nothing is due if his termination is because of his death or
disability, or is by the Company for cause or is by Mr. Cote other than because
of an "adverse change" in the conditions of his employment. Mr. Cote's agreement
defines such an adverse change as any of the following by the Company:

         o        altering his duties or  responsibilities so that his position
                  becomes  one of  substantially  less  importance,  dignity or
                  scope;

         o        reducing his base salary;

         o        discontinuing   his  participation  in  any  compensation  or
                  benefit  plan in which (and on at least as  favorable a basis
                  as) he was  participating  before  the  change in  control or
                  barring him from  participating in any other plan that may be
                  adopted  in  which  other  key   employees  are  entitled  to
                  participate;

         o        requiring  that he be  based  more  than 50  miles  from  the
                  principal  office  location where he worked before the change
                  in control.

"Cause" is defined as gross negligence or willful  misconduct that has resulted
in or is likely  to result in  material  economic  damage to the  Company.  The
agreement  also  obligates  Mr.  Cote to keep  confidential  and to not use any
confidential  information  pertaining  to the  Company  obtained  by him in the
course of his employment.

         If there had been a change in  control of the  Company on January  31,
2007 and Mr. Cote's  employment had been terminated  immediately  thereafter by
the Company without cause then he would have been entitled to the  continuation
of  his  then  current  annual  base  salary  of  $575,000  paid  in  bi-weekly
installments through January 31, 2009.

         Mr. Karpovich and Mr. Michno each have a severance  agreement with the
Company providing that,  although each is employed at will, he will be entitled
to  receive  severance  payments  in  the  form  of  salary  continuation  upon
termination of his employment by the Company  without cause.  For this purpose,
"cause"  is defined as  conviction  of a felony,  the  knowing  violation  of a
material Company policy, the failure to perform any material obligation owed to
the Company or the gross  negligence in the  performance of duties or breach of
fiduciary  duty as determined  by the CEO. The severance  payments will be paid
for 12 months after termination,  in bi-weekly installments.  The employee will
also be entitled to  post-termination  medical  benefit  coverage  continuation

                                      26


under COBRA for the 12 month  severance  period or, if shorter,  until becoming
eligible for  Medicare or accepting  employment  with  another  employer  which
provides medical benefits. The agreements also contain a non-competition clause
which  proscribes  employment  in the watch or jewelry  industry for six months
after   termination   of   employment   with  the   Company,   a  twelve  month
non-solicitation  clause and a  confidentiality  provision.  If the Company had
terminated  the  employment of Mr.  Karpovich  and Mr, Michno  without cause on
January 31, 2007 then they would have been  entitled to receive,  respectively,
$275,000  and  $300,000 in severance  paid in  bi-weekly  installments  through
January 31, 2008.  Each of them also would have been  entitled to maximum COBRA
benefits  valued at $14,282,  representing  total  maximum  COBRA  payments the
Company would be obligated to make for each of them through January 31, 2008.

         CHANGE IN CONTROL

         In the event of a change in control of the Company, all unvested
matching contributions under the DCP and all unvested options and time-vesting
stock awards then outstanding under the SIP immediately vest. Both plans have
similar definitions for what is considered a "change in control" including:

         o        (under both plans) dissolution or liquidation of the Company;

         o        (under both plans) sale of substantially all of the Company's
                  assets;

         o        a change in the  composition  of the Board of Directors  such
                  that:  (under the SIP)  individuals  who were on the Board of
                  Directors  on April o 8, 2004 (or their  successors  who were
                  approved by at least  two-thirds of the directors then on the
                  Board)  cease to  constitute  a majority;  or (under the DCP)
                  individuals  who were on the  Board on July 1, 2002 (or their
                  successors  who were  approved by at least  two-thirds of the
                  directors  then on the Board)  cease to  constitute  at least
                  two-thirds of the members of the Board;

         o        a merger, consolidation or reorganization unless:

                  o    shareholders in the Company  immediately before any such
                       transaction  control at least 50% (under the SIP) or 70%
                       (under  the  DCP)  of  the  total  voting  power  in the
                       resulting   corporation   immediately   after  any  such
                       transaction; and

                  o    no person (meaning an individual, entity or group acting
                       in concert) acquires (under the SIP) at least 20% of the
                       voting  power or  (under  the  DCP) at least  30% of the
                       voting power in the resulting corporation (unless, under
                       the DCP, such person had 20% or more of the voting power
                       before the transaction); and

                  o    a majority (under the SIP) or at least two-thirds (under
                       the  DCP)  of  the   members  of  the  Board  after  the
                       transaction were members of the Board immediately before
                       the transaction; and

         o        the  acquisition  by any person (with certain  exceptions) of
                  20% or more of the  combined  voting  power of the  Company's
                  outstanding   voting  securities  (or,  under  the  DCP,  the
                  commencement of a tender offer for such securities).

         Under the Company's Long-Term Incentive Plan ,which was adopted by the
Compensation  Committee  under  the SIP  and is  discussed  at  page  17  under
"Compensation  Discussion  and  Analysis - Fiscal 2007  Executive  Compensation
Components - Long-Term Equity Incentive  Compensation" and at page 22 following
the Grants of Plan-Based  Awards table,  Performance  Share Units do not become
immediately  vested upon a change in control but, instead,  convert one for one
into  time-vesting  phantom stock units (without  pro-ration) which vest at the
end of the applicable Award Period. Upon vesting,  one share of Common Stock is
distributed for each phantom stock unit not previously forfeited.

         The following  table shows the value of  accelerated  vesting of stock
options and stock awards under the SIP and of Company  contributions  under the
DCP that would have been provided to the named executive  officers in the event
that a change in control of the  Company  had  occurred  immediately  after the
close of business on January 31, 2007.

                                      27



    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                         VESTING UPON CHANGE IN CONTROL
                   WITH OR WITHOUT TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            EARLY VESTING OF    EARLY VESTING
                                DEFERRED              OF          EARLY VESTING
                             COMPENSATION       STOCK OPTIONS       OF  STOCK
             NAME               PLAN ($)           ($)(1)         AWARDS ($)(2)
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Efraim Grinberg            226,759            1,205,160                  0
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Eugene Karpovich            30,722              219,750           215,250
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Gedalio Grinberg                0                     0                  0
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Richard Cote               131,645              654,030           861,000
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Timothy Michno              31,571              293,000             79,786
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (1)   The value of early  vesting of stock  options was  determined  as the
          amount by which  $28.70/share  (which  was the  closing  price of the
          Company's  Common  Stock as reported on the NYSE on January 31, 2007)
          exceeded the exercise price of such options.

    (2)   The value of early vesting of stock awards was determined  based on a
          value of  $28.70/share  (which was the closing price of the Company's
          Common Stock as reported on the NYSE on January 31, 2007).


         DEATH OR DISABILITY; RETIREMENT

         If any of the named executive  officers had died,  become  permanently
disabled or retired on January 31, 2007, their unvested stock options and stock
awards would have immediately vested on that date. Under the SIP, retirement as
a trigger to immediate  vesting may occur  either when an employee  reaches the
age of 65 or upon reaching the age of 55 provided,  in that case,  the employee
has been  employed  continuously  by the  Company for at least 10 years and the
Compensation  Committee  approves.  As part of its approval,  the  Compensation
Committee may impose any conditions as it deems to be appropriate which are not
inconsistent  with the express terms of the SIP,  including  covenants  dealing
with non-competition, non-disparagement,  non-solicitation and confidentiality.
The values of such early vesting are shown in the table above under the columns
"Early Vesting of Stock Options" and "Early Vesting of Stock Awards".

         Under the Long Term  Incentive  Plan, in the event of a  participant's
death,  permanent  disability or retirement during any Award Period, his or her
award is only  determined  at the end of that  Award  Period  based  on  actual
performance  and will be prorated  based on the time employed  during the Award
Period.  After the prorated award is determined,  it will be paid out within 75
days after the end of the Award Period.  The definition of retirement under the
Long Term Incentive Plan is the same as the definition under the SIP.


CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

         The Company has a Death and Disability Benefit Plan Agreement with Mr.
G. Grinberg,  dated September 23, 1994.  Under that agreement,  in the event of
Mr. G.  Grinberg's  death or  disability  while  employed by the  Company,  the
Company will pay to his spouse, if she is then living, an annual benefit equal,
as of fiscal  2007,  to  $380,474  (increased  October 1 each year by an amount
equal to two percent of the benefit  that would have been  payable in the prior
year).  Benefits  are  payable for the lesser of 10 years or the life of Mr. G.
Grinberg's spouse, and are payable only from the general assets of the Company.
Neither Mr. G.  Grinberg nor his spouse may assign the  agreement or any of the
benefits payable thereunder and none of the benefits are payable to the estates
or any of the  heirs of Mr. G.  Grinberg  or his  spouse.  The  agreement  also
provides that it  automatically  terminates in the event of the  termination of
Mr. G.  Grinberg's  employment  with the Company for any reason  other than his
death or  disability  and further  provides  that it is not to be  considered a
contract of employment.  For purposes of the agreement,  "disability" means the

                                      28


inability  of Mr. G.  Grinberg  to  perform  the duties  pertaining  to his job
because of accident,  sickness or other  illness as determined by a majority of
disinterested directors.

         In fiscal 1996,  the Company  entered  into an agreement  with a trust
which,  at that time,  owned an insurance  policy issued on the lives of Mr. G.
Grinberg and his spouse.  The insurance  policy provides for a death benefit of
$27  million.  The  trustees  of the  trust are the  three  children  of Mr. G.
Grinberg and his spouse, namely, Efraim Grinberg, Alexander Grinberg and Miriam
Phalen.  Under the agreement,  the trust  assigned the insurance  policy to the
Company as collateral to secure repayment by the trust of  interest-free  loans
made by the  Company  to the  trust in  amounts  equal to the  premiums  on the
insurance policy (approximately $740,000 per annum). The agreement required the
trust to repay the loans from the death  benefit  proceeds  of the  policy.  At
January  31,  2003 the  Company  had  loaned  the trust  $5,186,860  under this
agreement. On April 4, 2003, the agreement was amended and restated to transfer
the policy (which at that time had a cash surrender  value of $4,595,591)  from
the trust to the  Company in partial  repayment  of the then  outstanding  loan
balance  which,  as of that date,  was  reduced to  $591,269.  If the policy is
terminated prior to the death of the insureds, the trust must repay the Company
the amount of the  accumulated  premiums  which the Company  would also recover
from the death benefit in the event it is paid.

         Mr. Alex Grinberg, a beneficial owner of more than five percent of the
Company's  Class A Common  Stock and the  brother  of Efraim  Grinberg,  is the
President  of the  Company's  Concord  brand in the  United  States  and earned
$320,809 in salary and annual cash  incentive  compensation  in fiscal 2007. In
addition,  as a participant in the Company's Long Term Incentive Plan, Mr. Alex
Grinberg received an award of 2,000 Performance Share Units last year,  subject
to the same terms and conditions applicable to similar awards made to the other
participants in that plan.

         Mr. David Phalen is the spouse of Miriam Phalen, a beneficial owner of
more  than  five  percent  of the  Company's  Class  A  Common  Stock,  and the
brother-in-law  of Efraim  Grinberg.  Mr. Phalen is President of Movado Company
Stores  and earned  $496,058  in salary and  annual  bonus in fiscal  2007.  In
addition,  as a participant  in the Company's  Long Term  Incentive  Plan,  Mr.
Phalen received an award of 6,000 Performance Share Units last year, subject to
the same terms and  conditions  applicable to similar  awards made to the other
participants in that plan.

         The Board of  Directors  has  adopted a code of  business  conduct and
ethics which provides for the review, approval and ratification of transactions
with the Company (or any of its  subsidiaries) in which any officer or employee
of the Company or any of its  subsidiaries  or any  director  has any direct or
indirect material interest.  Such transactions  involving any executive officer
of the  Company or any member of the Board of  Directors  are  referred  to the
Nominating/Corporate  Governance Committee.  Other transactions are referred to
the Company's  General  Counsel.  In each case, the standard  applied under the
Company's code is whether the  transaction,  when  considered in the context of
all the relevant facts and circumstances,  including the person's position with
the  Company,  the nature of the  transaction  and the amount  involved,  could
reasonably appear to present a conflict of interest.

         See "COMPENSATION  COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION" for
information  regarding certain business  relationships  between the Company and
Mr. Silverstein's law firm.


                                      29


EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION

         The table  below  sets  forth  information  with  respect to shares of
Common Stock that may be issued under the Company's equity  compensation  plans
as of January 31, 2007.



                                   Number of Securities to be         Weighted-Average          Number of securities
                                     Issued Upon Exercise Of         Exercise Price of        Remaining Available For
                                 Outstanding Options, Warrants       Outstanding Options,     Future Issuance Under Equity
                                           and Rights                Warrants and Rights      Compensation Plans (Excluding
PLAN CATEGORY                                                                               securities Reflected in Column (a))
-------------                    -----------------------------       --------------------   -----------------------------------
                                              (a)                             (b)                          (c)
                                                                                             
Equity compensation plans
   approved by security
   holders (1) ...............            3,405,228  (2)                   $ 13.91   (3)              1,938,112 (4)

Equity compensation plans
   not approved by
   security holders (5).......               82,176                      Not applicable                       0 (5)
                                          ---------                      --------------               ---------

Total ........................            3,487,404                        $ 13.91                    1,938,112
--------------------

(1)  Includes the SIP and the DCP.
(2)  Includes  3,317,285  shares of common stock  issuable upon the exercise of
     options and the vesting of stock awards  outstanding  under SIP and 87,943
     phantom  stock units  issuable as 87,943  shares of Common Stock under the
     DCP.
(3)  Weighted average exercise price of options outstanding under the SIP.
(4)  Number of shares  available  for issuance  under the SIP as options and as
     other  share  based  awards.  The DCP does not  provide for a limit on the
     number of phantom stock units available for issuance.
(5)  Includes  the  Stock  Bonus  Plan  described  in Note 14 to the  Company's
     consolidated  financial statements included in the Company's Annual Report
     on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended  January 31, 2007.  The Company has
     determined not to make any further grants under this plan.


REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

         Notwithstanding  anything  to the  contrary  set  forth  in any of the
Company's  previous or future  filings under the  Securities Act of 1933 or the
Exchange Act, the following  report of the Audit  Committee shall not be deemed
to be incorporated by reference into any such filing and shall not otherwise be
deemed filed under such acts.

         The Audit  Committee  has reviewed and  discussed  with the  Company's
management and with  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP management's assessment of the
effectiveness of the Company's internal control over financial  reporting,  the
evaluation by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP of the Company's internal control over
financial reporting and the audited financial statements of the Company for the
fiscal year ended January 31, 2007.  The Audit  Committee  has  discussed  with
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP the matters required to be discussed by Statement on
Auditing Standards No. 61, as amended (Communications with Audit Committees) by
the  Auditing  Standards  Board of the American  Institute of Certified  Public
Accountants.

         The Audit Committee has also received the written  disclosures and the
letter from  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP required by the Independence Standards
Board Standard No. 1 (Independence  Discussion  with Audit  Committees) and the
Audit Committee has discussed the  independence of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP
with that firm.

         Based on the Audit Committee's review and discussions noted above, the
Committee  recommended  to the Board of Directors  that the  Company's  audited
financial  statements be included in the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended January 31, 2007 for filing with the SEC.

                                      30


         The  Committee  and  the  Board  also  have  recommended,  subject  to
shareholder  approval,  the  selection  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  as the
Company's independent auditors for fiscal 2008.

Members of the Audit Committee:
Donald Oresman (chairman)
Alan H. Howard
Richard Isserman


FISCAL 2007 AND 2006 AUDIT FIRM FEE SUMMARY

         The  following   table   presents  the   aggregate   fees  billed  for
professional   services  rendered  by  the  Company's   independent   auditors,
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP, in the "audit fees",  "audit - related fees", "tax
fees", and "all other fees" categories,  in each case as such terms are defined
by the SEC, for the fiscal years ended January 31, 2007 and 2006.



------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   YEAR        AUDIT ($)    AUDIT RELATED ($)     TAX ($)    ALL OTHERS ($)    TOTALS ($)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                
   2006      1,312,200            61,000          51,050        2,320          1,426,570
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   2007      1,345,371           111,435          28,818        4,674          1,490,298
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


         Audit fees  include  fees for audit or review  services in  accordance
with generally accepted auditing standards and fees for services that generally
only the Company's  auditors  provide,  such as statutory  audits and review of
documents filed with the SEC.

         Audit  related fees include fees for  assurance  and related  services
that are  traditionally  performed  by the  Company's  auditors.  The  services
include audits of employee  benefit plans and  consultation  in connection with
financial and accounting standards.

         Tax fees include fees for services that are performed by  professional
tax staff other than in  connection  with the audit.  The services  include tax
compliance, tax advice and tax planning services.

         All other fees are  subscription  fees for the use of the  independent
auditors'  database of  authoritative  literature  and accounting and financial
guidance.

         The Audit  Committee  reviews  and  approves  all audit and  non-audit
services to be rendered in every instance by the Company's independent auditors
before such  auditors are engaged to render any such  services.  Therefore  the
Audit  Committee  has not adopted a  pre-approval  policy with  respect to such
services.


PROPOSAL 2 - RATIFICATION OF APPOINTMENT OF ACCOUNTANTS

         The Audit Committee has appointed PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP to be the
Company's independent accountants for the year ending January 31, 2008, subject
to   ratification   of  such   appointment   by  the  Company's   shareholders.
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP has served as the Company's independent accountants
since fiscal year 1977 and is considered  by the Audit  Committee and the Board
to  be  well  qualified.  Representatives  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  are
expected to be present at the Annual Meeting.  Such  representatives  will have
the  opportunity  to make a  statement  if  they  desire  to do so and  will be
available to respond to appropriate  questions.  THE BOARD  RECOMMENDS THAT THE
SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR SUCH RATIFICATION. PROXIES SOLICITED BY THE BOARD WILL BE
SO VOTED UNLESS SHAREHOLDERS SPECIFY IN THEIR PROXIES A CONTRARY CHOICE.


SECTION 16(A) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

         Section  16(a) of the Exchange Act  requires the  Company's  executive
officers, directors, and persons who own more than 10% of a registered class of
the Company's  equity  securities (the "10%  Stockholders")  to file reports of
ownership  and changes of ownership  with the SEC. As a practical  matter,  the
Company  assists  its  directors,  officers  and certain  10%  Stockholders  by
completing  and  filing  Section  16 reports  on their  behalf.  The  Company's
executive  officers,  directors and 10%  Stockholders  timely complied with all
such filing  requirements  applicable to them with respect to their  beneficial
ownership of the Company's  securities,  except that one Form 4 ("Statement  of

                                      31


Changes  in  Beneficial  Ownership")  reporting  a share  distribution  made by
Grinberg  Partners  L.P.,  which  should have been filed on or before March 10,
2006,  was  inadvertently  filed late on March 22,  2006 by each of the limited
partners in Grinberg Partners L.P., namely: Efraim Grinberg,  Gedalio Grinberg,
Alexander Grinberg, Grinberg Group Partners and Miriam Phalen. In addition, Ms.
Phalen  inadvertently  omitted to timely  file one Form 5  reporting a year-end
gift to each of two trusts for her children  for which she is the trustee.  The
Form 5, which was due on March 17, 2006 was filed on June 23, 2006.


OTHER MATTERS

         The Board of Directors,  at the time of the  preparation of this Proxy
Statement,  knows of no business to come before the Annual  Meeting  other than
that referred to herein.  If any other  business  should come before the Annual
Meeting,  the  persons  named in the  enclosed  proxy  will have  discretionary
authority  to  vote  all  proxies  received  and  not  theretofore  revoked  in
accordance with their best judgment.

         Upon the written  request of any record holder or beneficial  owner of
Common  Stock or Class A Common Stock  entitled to vote at the Annual  Meeting,
the Company,  without charge,  will provide a copy of its Annual Report on Form
10-K for the  fiscal  year  ended  January  31,  2007,  as filed  with the SEC.
Requests  should be  directed to Suzanne  Michalek,  Vice  President  Corporate
Communications, Movado Group, Inc., 650 From Road, Paramus, New Jersey 07652.

May 24, 2007

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


                                      32


                                                                     APPENDIX A

                             AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER


MEMBERSHIP

1.    The Audit  Committee (the  "Committee")  of the Board of Directors  shall
      consist of at least three  directors  who shall be appointed  annually by
      the Board of Directors.  New members of the Committee will be proposed by
      the Company's  Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee for approval
      and appointment by the Board.  Each member of the Committee shall, in the
      Board's  judgment,   satisfy  the  financial  literacy  and  independence
      requirements  under the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act (the  "Act") and  applicable
      rules of the New York Stock  Exchange  ("NYSE")  and the  Securities  and
      Exchange Commission ("SEC"). At least one member of the Committee must be
      an "audit  committee  financial  expert" and have  "accounting or related
      financial management expertise" under the requirements of the Act and the
      applicable  rules of the NYSE and SEC.  Unless a Chair is  elected by the
      full Board of Directors,  the Committee  shall  designate one by majority
      vote of the full  Committee  membership.  No member of the  Committee may
      serve on the audit  committees  of more than two other public  companies,
      unless the Board of Directors  determines that such simultaneous  service
      will not impair the  ability of such member to  effectively  serve on the
      Committee.

2.    No  member of the  Committee  shall  receive  any  compensation  from the
      Company other than compensation for service as a director of the Company,
      compensation  for  serving  on the  Committee  and  compensation  under a
      retirement plan for prior services with the Company (if such compensation
      is not contingent on continued service with the Company).


PURPOSE

1.    The Committee will assist the Board in its general oversight regarding:

a.    The quality and integrity of the Company's financial statements;

b.    The independent auditor's qualifications and independence;

c.    The performance of the Company's  internal audit function and independent
      auditors; and

d.    The Company's compliance with legal and regulatory requirements.

2.    The Committee  will prepare the Audit  Committee  Report  required by the
      rules of the SEC to be included in the Company's annual proxy statement.


MEETINGS AND PROCEDURES

1.    The Committee  shall meet at least four times each year and at such other
      times as it deems necessary to carry out its responsibilities.  The Chair
      of  the  Committee  or any  two  Committee  meeting  members  may  call a
      Committee meeting whenever deemed necessary.

2.    In the  performance  of its  duties and  responsibilities,  it is not the
      Committee's  duty  to plan or  conduct  audits,  to  determine  that  the
      Company's financial statements are complete, accurate and in

                                      A-1

Audit Committee Charter - As Amended April 8, 2004


      accordance  with generally  accepted  accounting  principles or to assure
      compliance with laws.  These are the  responsibilities  of management and
      the internal audit department. The independent auditor is responsible for
      the audit of the Company's  financial  statements in accordance  with the
      standards of the profession.


RESPONSIBILITIES

      The Committee shall:

      1.    Have the sole authority to appoint,  retain,  compensate,  oversee,
            evaluate and, where appropriate, replace the independent auditor.

      2.    Annually  review and  approve  the  proposed  scope of each  fiscal
            year's  internal  and outside  audit at the  beginning  of each new
            fiscal year.

      3.    Inform each registered  public  accounting  firm performing  audit,
            review or attest work for the Company  that such firm shall  report
            directly to the Committee.

      4.    Directly oversee the work of any registered  public accounting firm
            employed  by  the  Company,   including   the   resolution  of  any
            disagreement between management and the auditor regarding financial
            reporting, for the purpose of preparing or issuing an audit opinion
            or related work.

      5.    Review and  approve in advance  any audit and  permitted  non-audit
            services  and  fees to be  provided  by the  Company's  independent
            auditor.  The  Committee  has the  sole  authority  to  make  these
            approvals.

      6.    At, or shortly  after the end of each fiscal year,  review with the
            independent  auditor,  the internal auditor and Company management,
            the audited  financial  statements and related opinion and costs of
            the audit of that year.

      7.    Annually  obtain  and  review a report by the  independent  auditor
            describing:  the audit firm's internal quality-control  procedures;
            any   material   issues   raised  by  the  most   recent   internal
            quality-control  review,  or peer  review  of the  firm,  or by any
            inquiry  or   investigation   by   governmental   or   professional
            authorities  within the preceding five years  regarding one or more
            independent  audits carried out by the firm, and any steps taken to
            deal  with  any  such   issues;   and,  to  assess  the   auditor's
            independence, all relationships between the independent auditor and
            the Company.

      8.    Review with the chief executive officer and chief financial officer
            and independent auditors, periodically, the following:

            (a)   The Company's  administrative  and  operational  controls and
                  internal  controls  over  financial  reporting  and  evaluate
                  whether  the  Company is  operating  in  accordance  with its
                  prescribed policies, procedures and code of conduct.

            (b)   All  significant  deficiencies  in the design or operation of
                  internal  controls which could adversely affect the Company's
                  ability to record, process,  summarize,  and report financial
                  data,  including any material  weakness in internal  controls
                  identified by the Company's independent auditors and internal
                  auditors.

                                      A-2


Audit Committee Charter - As Amended April 8, 2004


            (c)   Any fraud, whether or not material,  that involves management
                  or  other  employees  who  have  a  significant  role  in the
                  Company's internal controls.

            (d)   Any  significant  changes in  internal  controls  or in other
                  factors that could  significantly  affect internal  controls,
                  including any  corrective  actions with regard to significant
                  deficiencies and material weaknesses.

      9.    Provide any recommendations, certifications and reports that may be
            required  by the  NYSE  or the  SEC  including  the  report  of the
            Committee  that must be  included  in the  Company's  annual  proxy
            statement.

      10.   Review and discuss with management and the independent  auditor the
            Company's interim financial results to be included in the Company's
            quarterly  reports to be filed with the SEC  including a review and
            discussion  with  management  of the  Company's  disclosures  under
            "Management's  Discussion  and Analysis of Financial  Condition and
            Results  of  Operations",  and a  discussion  with the  independent
            auditor of the matters  required to be  discussed  by  Statement on
            Auditing Standards No. 61  (Communications  with Audit Committees),
            as it may be modified or supplemented.

      11.   Review with  management and the  independent  auditor the financial
            statements  to be included in the  Company's  Annual Report on Form
            10-K,  including a review and  discussion  with  management  of the
            Company's  disclosures under "Management's  Discussion and Analysis
            of Financial  Condition and Results of Operations",  as well as the
            auditor's judgment about the quality,  not just  acceptability,  of
            the  Company's  accounting  principles  as applied to its financial
            reporting.  The  review  shall  also  include a  discussion  of the
            reasonableness  of judgments and estimates made in the  preparation
            of the financial statements that may be viewed as critical, as well
            as the clarity of financial statement disclosure.  In addition, the
            Committee  shall  discuss the  results of the annual  audit and any
            other matters  required to be  communicated to the Committee by the
            independent  auditor under generally  accepted auditing  standards,
            including  the matters  required to be  discussed  by  Statement on
            Auditing Standards No. 61 (Communications with Committees)),  as it
            may  be  modified  or   supplemented.   Based  on  its  review  and
            discussions,   the  Committee  shall  recommend  to  the  Board  of
            Directors  whether the financial  statements  should be included in
            the Annual Report on Form 10-K.

      12.   Discuss  with  management  the  type of  presentation  and  type of
            information to be included in the Company's earnings press releases
            and the financial  information  and earnings  guidance  provided to
            analysts and rating agencies.

      13.   Have the authority to engage independent counsel and other advisers
            as it  determines  necessary  to carry out its duties.  The Company
            shall  provide  for  appropriate  funding,  as  determined  by  the
            Committee,  in  its  capacity  as  a  committee  of  the  Board  of
            Directors,  for payment of compensation to any advisers employed by
            the  Committee  and  to the  independent  auditor  employed  by the
            Company for the purpose of  rendering or issuing an audit report or
            performing  other  audit,  review or attest  services  and ordinary
            administrative  expenses of the audit  committee that are necessary
            or appropriate in carrying out its duties.

      14.   Ensure  the  rotation  of  the  audit  partners  of  the  Company's
            independent  auditor as defined in and as  required  by the Act and
            the rules of the SEC.

      15.   Discuss with management and the  independent  auditor the Company's
            policies with respect to risk assessment and risk management.

                                      A-3

Audit Committee Charter - As Amended April 8, 2004


      16.   Meet  separately,  periodically,  with  management,  with  internal
            auditors and with the independent auditor.

      17.   In consultation  with the independent  auditor,  management and the
            internal auditors,  review the integrity of the Company's financial
            reporting process.

      18.   Review  periodically major issues regarding  accounting  principles
            and financial  statement  presentations,  including any significant
            changes in the  Company's  selection or  application  of accounting
            principles,  and major issues as to the  adequacy of the  Company's
            internal  controls and any special  audit steps adopted in light of
            material  control  deficiencies;  analyses  prepared by  management
            and/or the independent auditor setting forth significant  financial
            reporting   issues  and  judgments  made  in  connection  with  the
            preparation of the financial statements,  including analyses of the
            effects of  alternative  GAAP methods on the financial  statements;
            and the effect of regulatory and accounting initiatives, as well as
            off-balance  sheet structures,  on the financial  statements of the
            Company.

      19.   Review with the  independent  auditor  any audit  problems or other
            difficulties  encountered by the auditor in the course of the audit
            process, including any restrictions on the scope of the independent
            auditor's activities or on access to requested information, and any
            significant   disagreements   with   management  and   management's
            responses to such matters. In addition,  the Committee shall timely
            receive  (and,  in any event,  prior to the  filing of any  audited
            financial  statements  with the SEC) a report from the  independent
            auditor on (a) all critical accounting policies and practices;  (b)
            all  alternative   treatments  of  financial   information   within
            generally accepted  accounting  principles that have been discussed
            with  management,  including  ramifications  of  the  use  of  such
            alternative disclosures and treatments, and the treatment preferred
            by the registered  public  accounting  firm; and (c) other material
            written  communications  between the registered  public  accounting
            firm and  Company  management,  such as any  management  letter  or
            schedule of unadjusted differences.

      20.   Regularly review the  responsibilities,  budget and staffing of the
            internal  audit  function of the  Company,  including  the proposed
            audit programs for the coming year and review summaries of findings
            from  completed  internal  audits  and a  progress  report  on  the
            proposed audit plan with  explanations  for any deviations from the
            original plan.

      21.   Ensure that the chief executive  officer,  chief financial officer,
            chief accounting officer,  controller,  or any other person serving
            in an  equivalent  position  was not,  within one year prior to the
            initiation of the audit, an employee of the independent auditor who
            participated in any capacity in the Company's audit.

      22.   Report  regularly  to the Board of  Directors.  Such  report to the
            Board of Directors may take the form of an oral report by the Chair
            or any other member of the Committee designated by the Committee to
            make such report.

      23.   Meet with the Company's General Counsel, as appropriate,  to review
            legal and regulatory matters, including any matters that may have a
            material impact on the financial statements of the Company.

      24.   Maintain  procedures,  as set  forth  in  Annex A  hereto,  for the
            receipt,  retention  and  treatment of  complaints  received by the
            Company  regarding  financial  statement  disclosures,  accounting,
            internal accounting controls or auditing matters, and the

                                      A-4


Audit Committee Charter - As Amended April 8, 2004


            confidential,  anonymous  submission by employees of the Company of
            concerns regarding  financial  statement  disclosures,  accounting,
            internal accounting controls or auditing matters.

      25.   Perform  a  review  and  evaluation,  at  least  annually,  of  the
            performance  of the  Committee.  In addition,  the Committee  shall
            review  and  reassess,  at least  annually,  the  adequacy  of this
            Charter and recommend to the Board of Directors any improvements to
            this Charter that the  Committee  considers  necessary or valuable.
            The Committee  shall conduct such  evaluations  and reviews in such
            manner as it deems appropriate.


      26.   Perform  such  additional  activities,   and  consider  such  other
            matters, within the scope of its responsibilities, as the Committee
            or the Board deems  necessary or  appropriate.  In carrying out its
            responsibilities,  the policies  and  procedures  of the  Committee
            should remain  flexible in order in order that it can best react to
            changing  conditions and assure the directors and shareholders that
            the corporate accounting and reporting practices of the Company are
            in accordance with all requirements and are of the highest quality.



                                       A-5


Audit Committee Charter - As Amended April 8, 2004


                                     ANNEX A
             PROCEDURES FOR THE SUBMISSION OF COMPLAINTS OR CONCERNS
             REGARDING FINANCIAL STATEMENT DISCLOSURES, ACCOUNTING,
                INTERNAL ACCOUNTING CONTROLS OR AUDITING MATTERS


1.       The  Company  shall  forward  to the Audit  Committee  of the Board of
Directors any complaints  that it has received  regarding  financial  statement
disclosures, accounting, internal accounting controls or auditing matters.

2.       Any employee of the Company may submit,  on a confidential,  anonymous
basis if the employee so desires,  any concerns regarding  financial  statement
disclosures,  accounting,  internal  accounting controls or auditing matters by
setting forth such concerns in writing and forwarding them in a sealed envelope
to the Chair of the Audit Committee,  in care of the Company's  General Counsel
at: Movado Group,  Inc., Legal Department,  650 From Road,  Paramus,  NJ 07652,
such  envelope to be labeled  with a legend such as: "To be opened by the Audit
Committee  only".  If any  employee  would like to discuss  any matter with the
Audit  Committee,  the employee  should  indicate  this in the  submission  and
include a telephone  number at which he or she might be  contacted if the Audit
Committee  deems it appropriate.  Any such envelopes  received by the Company's
General  Counsel  shall  be  forwarded  promptly  to the  Chair  of  the  Audit
Committee.

3.       At each of its meetings, including special meeting called by the Chair
of the Audit  Committee  following the receipt of any  information  pursuant to
this Annex,  the Audit  Committee shall review and consider any such complaints
or concerns that it has received and take any action that it deems  appropriate
in order to respond thereto.

4.       The Audit Committee shall retain any such complaints or concerns for a
period of no less than 7 years.

5.       Neither the Company nor any of its  employees may  discharge,  demote,
suspend,  threaten,  harass or in any manner discriminate  against any employee
who: (a) lawfully provides  information  regarding any conduct encouraged to be
reported under this policy which the employee  reasonably believes has occurred
to a  regulatory  or law  enforcement  agency,  to any member or  committee  of
Congress,  or to any person with supervisory authority over the employee or the
authority to investigate  such  misconduct;  (b)  participates  in or otherwise
assists with a proceeding  relating to conduct  encouraged  to be reported this
policy;  or (c) submits a  complaint  pursuant  to this  policy  regarding  any
conduct  encouraged  to be reported  this policy which the employee  reasonably
believes has occurred,  even if after investigation the Company determines that
there has not been a violation;  provided, however, that the foregoing shall in
no event be construed  as in any way  limiting  the Company  from  discharging,
demoting, suspending or taking any other disciplinary measures in respect of an
employee for legitimate reasons . Disciplinary action will be taken against any
supervisor who retaliates,  directly or indirectly,  or encourages  other to do
so, against an employee who takes any of the above-mentioned actions.

6.       This  Annex A shall  appear on the  Company's  website as part of this
Charter.



                                      A-6


Audit Committee Charter - As Amended April 8, 2004


MOVADO GROUP, INC.                      NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF
                                        SHAREHOLDERS TO BE HELD JUNE 14, 2007

Dear Shareholder:

The Annual Meeting of Shareholders of Movado Group,  Inc. will be held at 10:00
a.m. on Thursday, June 14, 2007, at the Company's New York office and showrooms
located  at 25 West  39th  Street,  15th  Floor,  New York,  NY 10018,  for the
following purposes:

        1. To elect nine directors to the Board of Directors.

        2. To ratify selection of independent public accountants.

Only holders of Common Stock and Class A Common Stock of Movado Group,  Inc. of
record at the close of business on May 18, 2007 will be entitled to vote at the
meeting or any adjournment thereof.

To be sure that  your vote is  counted,  we urge you to  complete  and sign the
proxy/voting  instruction card below,  detach it from this letter and return it
in the postage paid envelope enclosed in this package. The giving of such proxy
does not affect  your right to vote in person if you  attend the  meeting.  The
prompt return of your signed proxy will aid the Company in reducing the expense
of additional proxy solicitation.

                                        BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

May 24, 2007                            TIMOTHY F. MICHNO
                                        General Counsel and Secretary



                            DETACH PROXY CARD HERE
................................................................................


Please Sign, Date and      [X]
Return the Proxy
Promptly Using the         Votes MUST be indicated
Enclosed Envelope.         (x) in Black or Blue ink.


1. Election of Directors
                                                                           
   FOR all nominees  [_]  WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote    [_]    *EXCEPTIONS   [_]    In  their   discretion   the   proxies  are
   listed below           for all nominees listed below                             authorized  to vote upon such other matters
                                                                                    as may properly  come before the meeting or
                                                                                    any adjournment or postponement thereof.

Nominees:  Gedalio Grinberg,  Efraim Grinberg,  Margaret  Hayes-Adame, Richard Cote,
           Alan H. Howard, Richard Isserman,  Nathan Leventhal,  Donald Oresman and
           Leonard L. Silverstein

*Exceptions ____________________________________

INSTRUCTIONS: To withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee, mark the
"Exceptions" box and write that nominee's name in the space provided.


2.  To  ratify   and   approve   the     FOR   AGAINST   ABSTAIN            To change your address, please mark this box.  [_]
    selection by the Audit Committee     [_]     [_]       [_]
    of the  Board  of  Directors  of                                        If you plan to attend the meeting, please
    PricewaterhouseCoopers   LLP  as                                        mark this box.                                 [_]
    independent  public  accountants
    for the  Company  for the fiscal
    year ending January 31, 2008.


                                                                            -------------------------------------------------
                                                                              S C A N  L I N E
                                                                            -------------------------------------------------

                                                                            The  signature  on this Proxy  should  correspond
                                                                            exactly with stockholder's name as printed to the
                                                                            left.   In   the   case   of   joint   tenancies,
                                                                            co-executors,  or co-trustees,  both should sign.
                                                                            Persons    signing   as    Attorney,    Executor,
                                                                            Administrator,  Trustee or  Guardian  should give
                                                                            their full title.

                                                                  _______________________________     _______________________
                                                                     Date   Share Owner sign here     Co-Owner sign here









................................................................................

MOVADO GROUP, INC.                PROXY/VOTING INSTRUCTION CARD
_______________________________________________________________

   This proxy is solicited on behalf of the Board of Directors of MOVADO GROUP,
               INC. for the Annual Meeting on June 14, 2007

   The undersigned appoints each of Timothy F. Michno and Tasha Cooper Coleman,
with full power of substitution,  the proxies of the undersigned,  to represent
the  undersigned  and  vote  all  shares  of  Movado  Group,  Inc.,  which  the
undersigned may be entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders to be
held on June 14, 2007,  and at any  adjournment  or  postponement  thereof,  as
indicated on the reverse side.

   This proxy,  when properly  executed,  will be voted in the manner  directed
herein by the  undersigned  shareholder.  If no direction is given,  this proxy
will be voted FOR proposals 1 and 2.

                                                MOVADO GROUP, INC.
                                                P.O. BOX 11346
                                                NEW YORK, N.Y. 10203-0346



           (Continued, and to be signed and dated on reverse side.)