SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

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

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

   Check the appropriate box:
   [ ] Preliminary Proxy Statement
   [ ] CONFIDENTIAL, FOR USE OF THE COMMISSION ONLY (AS PERMITTED
       BY RULE 14a-6(e)(2))
   [X] Definitive Proxy Statement
   [ ] Definitive Additional Materials
   [ ] Soliciting Material Pursuant to ss. 240.14a-12

                                 XL CAPITAL LTD
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                (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)
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    (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:

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(2)  Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

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(3)  Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction  computed  pursuant
     to Exchange  Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee is
     calculated and state how it was determined):

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(4)  Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

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(5)  Total fee paid:

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[ ] Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

[ ]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided  by  Exchange  Act
     Rule  0-11(a)(2)  and identify the filing for which the  offsetting fee was
     paid  previously.  Identify the previous filing by  registration  statement
     number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

   (1)   Amount Previously Paid:

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

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                                 XL CAPITAL LTD

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

                NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                           TO BE HELD ON MAY 10, 2002

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



                                                               Hamilton, Bermuda

April 5, 2002


TO THE CLASS A SHAREHOLDERS OF XL CAPITAL LTD:

     Notice  is  Hereby  Given  that  the  Annual  General  Meeting  of  Class A
Shareholders  ("Shareholders") of XL CAPITAL LTD (the "Company") will be held at
the Executive Offices of the Company, XL House, One Bermudiana Road, Hamilton HM
11, Bermuda,  on Friday,  May 10, 2002 at 8:30 a.m. local time for the following
purposes:

     1.   To elect six Class I Directors to hold office until 2005;

     2.   To appoint  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP, New York, New York, to act as
          the  independent  auditors  of the  Company for the fiscal year ending
          December 31, 2002;

     3.   To  approve  the  amendment  and  restatement  of the  Company's  1991
          Performance Incentive Program;

     4.   To approve the Company's Employee Share Purchase Plan; and

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

     Only  Shareholders of record, as shown by the transfer books of the Company
at the close of business  on March 25,  2002,  are  entitled to notice of and to
vote at the Annual General Meeting.


     PLEASE  DATE,  SIGN AND RETURN THE  ENCLOSED  PROXY IN THE RETURN  ENVELOPE
FURNISHED  FOR THAT PURPOSE AS PROMPTLY AS POSSIBLE,  WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO
ATTEND THE MEETING. IF YOU LATER DESIRE TO REVOKE YOUR PROXY FOR ANY REASON, YOU
MAY DO SO IN THE MANNER DESCRIBED IN THE ATTACHED PROXY STATEMENT.  A PROXY NEED
NOT BE A  SHAREHOLDER  OF THE  COMPANY.  YOUR  SHARES  WILL BE  VOTED  WITH  THE
INSTRUCTIONS CONTAINED IN THE PROXY STATEMENT.  IF NO INSTRUCTION IS GIVEN, YOUR
SHARES WILL BE VOTED "FOR" ITEMS 1 THROUGH 4 (INCLUSIVE) IN THE PROXY.

                                             By Order of The Board of Directors,



                                             Paul S. Giordano
                                             SECRETARY




                                 XL CAPITAL LTD
             XL HOUSE, ONE BERMUDIANA ROAD, HAMILTON HM 11, BERMUDA

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

                                 PROXY STATEMENT

                                       FOR

                   THE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

                           TO BE HELD ON MAY 10, 2002

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

                                                                   April 5, 2002

     The accompanying proxy is solicited by the Board of Directors of XL CAPITAL
LTD (the  "Company")  to be  voted  at the  Annual  General  Meeting  of Class A
Shareholders  ("Shareholders") of the Company to be held on May 10, 2002 and any
adjournments thereof.

     When such proxy is properly  executed  and  returned,  the Class A Ordinary
Shares,  par value U.S.$0.01 per share ("Ordinary  Shares" or "Shares"),  of the
Company it  represents  will be voted at the meeting on the  following:  (1) the
election of the six nominees for Class I Directors  identified  herein;  (2) the
appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP, New York, New York ("Auditors"),  to
act as the  independent  auditors  of the  Company  for the fiscal  year  ending
December 31, 2002; (3) to approve the amendment and restatement of the Company's
1991  Performance  Incentive  Plan; (4) to approve the Company's  Employee Share
Purchase  Plan;  and (5) such other  business  as may  properly  come before the
meeting or any adjournments thereof.

     Any  Shareholder  giving a proxy  has the  power to  revoke it prior to its
exercise by notice of revocation to the Secretary of the Company in writing,  by
voting in person at the Annual  General  Meeting or by execution of a subsequent
proxy,  provided  that such  action is taken in  sufficient  time to permit  the
necessary  examination  and  tabulation  of the  subsequent  proxy or revocation
before the vote is taken.

     Shareholders  of record as of the close of  business on March 25, 2002 will
be entitled to vote at the meeting. As of March 25, 2002, there were 135,524,453
outstanding  Ordinary  Shares  entitled to vote at the meeting,  with each Share
entitling  the  holder of record on such date to one vote  (subject  to  certain
limitations set forth in the Company's Articles of Association--see  "Beneficial
Ownership").

     This Proxy Statement, the attached Notice of Annual General Meeting and the
accompanying proxy card are first being mailed to Shareholders on or about April
5, 2002.

     Other than the approval of the minutes of the 2001 Annual General  Meeting,
the Company knows of no specific  matter to be brought before the Annual General
Meeting,  which is not referred to in this Notice of Meeting. If any such matter
comes before the meeting,  including any Shareholder proposal properly made, the
proxy holders will vote proxies in accordance with their judgment.

     Directors  will be elected at the Annual  General  Meeting by a majority of
the votes cast at the meeting by the holders of Shares  represented in person or
by proxy at the meeting, provided there is a quorum (consisting of holders of at
least fifty percent (50%) of the  outstanding  Shares being present in person or
by proxy).  Approval of the  appointment  of the Auditors and the other  matters
referred to in Items 1 through 4 above will be by similar vote.


                                        1




                              BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP

     The following table lists the beneficial  ownership of each person or group
who, as of a recent date,  owned,  to the  Company's  knowledge,  more than five
percent of the Company's  Ordinary Shares  outstanding.  The table is based upon
information contained in filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

                                                                 PERCENTAGE OF
                                                    NUMBER       OUTSTANDING
 NAME AND ADDRESS                                  OF SHARES     SHARES (1)
 ----------------                                  --------      -----------
 Capital Research & Management                     9,911,000        7.5%
 630 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10111-0121
 Janus Capital Corporation                         8,977,000        6.8%
 100 Fillmore Street, Denver, CO 80206-4923
 Jennison Associates LLC                           6,746,000        5.1%
 466 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY 10017-3151


---------

(1)  Each  Ordinary  Share has one vote,  except  that if,  and so long as,  the
     Controlled  Shares (as  hereinafter  defined) of any person  constitute ten
     percent (10%) or more of the issued Ordinary Shares, the voting rights with
     respect to the Controlled Shares owned by such person shall be limited,  in
     the  aggregate,  to a voting  power of  approximately  ten  percent  (10%),
     pursuant to a formula  specified in the Company's  Articles of Association.
     "Controlled  Shares" include,  among other things, all Ordinary Shares that
     such  person  is  deemed  to  beneficially  own  directly,   indirectly  or
     constructively  (within the meaning of Section  13(d)(3) of the  Securities
     Exchange Act of 1934).


                               BOARD OF DIRECTORS

     The Company's  Articles of Association  provide that the Board of Directors
(sometimes  referred  to as the  "Board")  shall be divided  into three  classes
designated  Class I, Class II and Class III, each class  consisting as nearly as
possible of one-third of the total number of Directors  constituting  the entire
Board of Directors.

     The term of  office  for each  Director  in Class I expires  at the  Annual
General  Meeting of the Company in 2002; the term of office for each Director in
Class II expires at the Annual  General  Meeting in 2003; and the term of office
for each  Director in Class III expires at the Annual  General  Meeting in 2004;
and at each Annual  General  Meeting the  successors  of the class of  Directors
whose term  expires at that  meeting  shall be elected to hold office for a term
expiring at the Annual  General  Meeting to be held in the third year  following
the year of their election.

     In fiscal  2001,  there were five  meetings of the Board and all  incumbent
Directors, other than Mr. Glauber, attended at least 75% of such meetings and of
the meetings  held by all  committees  of the Board of which they were a member.
Mr.  Glauber  attended  73% of the meetings of the Board and  committees  of the
Board of which he was a member.

     The Board of Directors has established four standing  committees:  an Audit
Committee,  a  Compensation  Committee,  a Nominating  and Corporate  Governance
Committee and a Finance Committee.

AUDIT COMMITTEE

     The Audit  Committee  of the Board of  Directors  meets with the  Company's
independent  auditors  to discuss  the scope and  results of their  audit and to
review the Company's financial  reporting,  accounting and control systems.  The
Audit Committee also reviews the Company's  reserving  methodology and reserves.
Each year the Audit  Committee  recommends to the Board an independent  auditing
firm  to  audit  the  financial  statements  of the  Company.  Messrs.  Thornton
(Chairman),  Jeanbart, Rance, Dr. Thrower and Sir Brian Corby comprise the Audit
Committee. The Audit Committee met five times during fiscal 2001.

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

     The  Compensation  Committee  reviews the performance  and  compensation of
senior corporate officers,  establishes overall employee  compensation  policies
and  recommends  to the Board of  Directors  major  compensation  programs.  The
Compensation  Committee also recommends to the Board restricted stock and option
awards  under the  Company's  stock  incentive  plans and  benefits  under other
compensation plans of the Company. No member of the Compensation  Committee is a
member of management or eligible for compensation from the Company other than as
a Director unless the Board of Directors  determines that such compensation will
not affect the independence of the Committee member.  Messrs. Weiser (Chairman),
Glauber,  Comey and Loudon  comprised the  Compensation  Committee in 2001.  The
Compensation Committee met five times during fiscal 2001.


                                        2




NOMINATING AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE

     The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee makes  recommendations to
the Board as to nominations for the Board (including qualifications and criteria
for Board and Committee  memberships)  and  compensation for Board and Committee
members,  as  well  as  structural,   governance  and  procedural  matters.  The
Nominating  and  Corporate   Governance   Committee  also  reviews   shareholder
proposals,  the performance of the Board,  tenure and retirement policies of the
Board  and the  Company's  succession  planning.  Messrs.  Esposito  (Chairman),
Clements, Loudon and O'Hara and Dr. Parker comprise the Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee. The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee met five
times during fiscal 2001.

FINANCE COMMITTEE

     The Finance Committee  establishes and recommends the financial policies of
the Company and reviews the Company's  capital  management  practices,  dividend
policy,   mergers,   acquisitions  and   divestitures,   significant   strategic
investments and new business  initiatives,  as well as overall investment policy
and  performance.  Messrs.  Loudon  (Chairman),   Bornhuetter,  Butt,  Esposito,
Glauber,  O'Hara, Dr. Parker,  Senter,  Thornton and Weiser comprise the Finance
Committee. The Finance Committee met five times during fiscal 2001.

DIRECTORS COMPENSATION

     During fiscal 2001, all Directors (except for the Chairman of the Board and
Directors  who are also  employees  of the  Company)  received  an annual fee of
$35,000, plus $3,000 per meeting,  including informational  meetings.  Committee
Chairmen  also  received an  additional  annual fee of $3,000 and all  Committee
members received an attendance fee of $1,500 per meeting. Prior to the beginning
of each  fiscal  year,  Directors  may  elect to defer  all or part of the Board
annual retainer in increments of $5,000.  Deferred  payments are credited in the
form of share units,  calculated by dividing 110 percent of the deferred payment
by the market value of the Company's Shares at the beginning of the fiscal year,
in accordance with the terms of the Company's  Directors Stock & Option Plan, as
amended. Alternatively, Directors may elect to receive their annual retainers in
the form of Shares having a value equal to their annual fees.

     The following  Directors  elected to defer all or a portion of their annual
retainer for fiscal 2001:

                                                              SHARE
                                           AMOUNT             UNITS
         DIRECTORS                        DEFERRED          CREDITED
         --------                         --------          --------
         Ronald L. Bornhuetter ........    $35,000             440
         Michael A. Butt ..............    $35,000             440
         Robert Clements ..............    $35,000             440
         Ian Heap .....................    $25,000             314
         John Loudon ..................    $15,000             189
         Daniel McNamara ..............    $35,000             440
         Robert S. Parker .............    $35,000             440
         John Thornton ................    $35,000             440
         Ellen E. Thrower .............    $20,000             251
         John W. Weiser ...............    $35,000             440

     On March 9, 2001,  all  non-employee  Directors  were granted 5,000 options
exercisable  at  $80.00  per  share  (the fair  market  value on March 9,  2001)
pursuant to the terms of the 1991 Performance  Incentive Program, as amended and
restated.  In  addition,  a  Retirement  Plan for  Non-Employee  Directors  (the
"Retirement  Plan")  was  implemented  effective  July 1, 1994,  to provide  the
Directors with a pension on the termination of service for a period equal to the
time served as a Director.  The amount to be paid to each  Director was to equal
the annual  retainer at the date of  termination  of service  multiplied  by the
number of years served on the Board. Except in the case of one Director for whom
the plan  continues,  the Retirement  Plan was terminated in 1997 and, under the
Company's Stock Plan for Non-employee  Directors (the "Stock Plan"), the present
value of the accrued  benefits of each Director  under the  Retirement  Plan was
converted  into  an  equivalent  amount  of  Ordinary  Share  units  (each  unit
corresponding to one Ordinary Share).  In addition,  under the Stock Plan, as of
December 1 of each year,  Ordinary  Share  units are  credited to the account of
each  non-employee  Director  (other than the  Directors  who continue to accrue
benefits under the Retirement Plan). The number of Ordinary Share units credited
each year is equal to the annual  retainer  fee divided by the fair market value
of an Ordinary  Share on each December 1. Benefits  under the Stock Plan will be
distributed  in  the  form  of  Ordinary  Shares  following   termination  of  a
non-employee Director's service on the Board.


                                        3



     Michael P.  Esposito,  Jr.'s annual  compensation  as Chairman of the Board
with  respect  to  fiscal  2001   comprised  a  salary  of   $425,000,   pension
contributions  of $42,500,  bonus of $750,000,  a grant of 37,500  options at an
exercise  price of $80 per share,  24,867 reload options at an exercise price of
$76.90 per share and a restricted stock award of 6,500 shares.

CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

     Certain  Shareholders and their  affiliates,  including the employers of or
entities  otherwise  associated  with certain of the  Directors,  have purchased
insurance,  reinsurance or other services from the Company's  subsidiaries.  The
Company  and its  affiliates  in the  ordinary  course of  business  enter  into
insurance,  reinsurance  and  other  transactions  with  companies  in which the
Company has a direct or indirect equity interest.

     As  of  December  31,  2001  (i) a  subsidiary  of  the  Company  owned  an
approximately 26.7% interest in Measurisk LLC ("Measurisk"),  a New York limited
liability company, of which Mr. Glauber is an officer,  director and shareholder
of one of Measurisk's members, and (ii) the Company owned approximately 12.9% of
the shares of Annuity and Life Re  (Holdings)  Ltd ("AL Re"),  of which  Messrs.
Esposito and O'Hara are directors.

     The Company had a consulting  agreement with Michael A. Butt, a Director of
the Company,  for a one-year period from December 31, 1998. Mr. Butt's agreement
was extended for an additional two years  effective  January 1, 2000 and expired
on January 1, 2002. The consulting  agreement  provided that the duties and time
commitments  shall be as mutually agreed by the Company and Mr. Butt.  Under the
consulting  agreement,  Mr.  Butt was  entitled to an annual  consulting  fee of
$535,000 and certain other benefits.  Pursuant to this consulting agreement, Mr.
Butt remains subject to non-competition covenants for a period of 24 months from
termination.  The  Company  and Mr.  Butt have agreed to extend the term of this
consulting agreement to January 1, 2003.

     In connection with the acquisition in 1999 of NAC Re Corporation ("NAC Re")
by the  Company,  NAC Re entered into a  settlement  agreement  and a consulting
agreement  with Ronald L.  Bornhuetter,  who had been  Chairman of the Board and
Chief  Executive  Officer of NAC Re and who became a  Director  of the  Company.
Under  the  terms  of the  settlement  agreement,  NAC Re  agreed  to pay to Mr.
Bornhuetter,  as a supplemental  pension,  $162,892 per year beginning in August
1999 for his lifetime  and,  upon his death,  50% of that amount per year to his
surviving  spouse  for her  lifetime.  In  addition,  the  settlement  agreement
provides that Mr. Bornhuetter is entitled to the continuance of certain employee
benefits. Under the consulting agreement, the duties of Mr. Bornhuetter included
rendering advice relating to the integration of NAC Re and the Company,  and NAC
Re paid to Mr.  Bornhuetter a fee of $250,000 per year,  plus  reimbursement  of
expenses and an office  allowance.  The consulting  agreement expired on July 1,
2001.

     The Company has provided to Mr.  O'Hara,  a Director and the  President and
Chief  Executive  Officer of the Company,  a facility to borrow up to $1 million
from the  Company.  This  facility  does not bear  interest  unless  Mr.  O'Hara
terminates his employment  with the Company,  at which time the interest will be
the  applicable  United States  Federal rate for long-term  loans  determined in
accordance with Section  1274(d) of the United States  Internal  Revenue Code of
1986, as amended. The facility requires repayment of amounts drawn in ten annual
installments.  In calendar year 2001, the largest amount  outstanding under this
facility was $540,000.

     In December 2001,  Mr. O'Hara  received an advance of $1.2 million from the
Company in connection with certain tax payments  falling due when Mr. O'Hara was
precluded by Company policy from buying or selling  shares of the Company.  This
advance did not carry  interest,  and Mr.  O'Hara  repaid this amount in full on
February 26, 2002.

     In  2001,  a  limited   partnership,   XL  Capital  Partners  I  L.P.  (the
"Partnership"),  was formed.  The general  partner of the Partnership is a newly
formed wholly owned  subsidiary of the Company (the "General  Partner").  All of
the limited partners of the Partnership are current or former senior officers or
Directors of the Company or its subsidiaries (the "Limited Partners").

     The stated  purpose of the  Partnership  is to  achieve  long-term  capital
appreciation  for its investors  through a portfolio of  investments,  including
without limitation,  private equity, venture capital and hedge funds; equity and
equity-related   securities  of  all  types;  investments  in  debt  securities,
preferred  shares and other  financial  instruments;  and  securities  issued by
companies providing financial  guarantee,  insurance and reinsurance  contracts.
Generally,  the Partnership is expected to co-invest in investments  made by the
Company or its  subsidiaries,  substantially  on the same  terms as the  similar
investments made by the Company.


                                        4



     The aggregate  capital  commitment of the  Partnership is  $49,075,000,  of
which $8,654,343 was invested as at December 31, 2001. The capital commitment of
the General  Partner is $39,260,000  and the capital  commitments of the Limited
Partners, in the aggregate, is $9,815,000. To date, 50% of the Limited Partners'
aggregate capital commitments have been called. Organizational expenses relating
to the Partnership are paid by the General Partner.

     Distributions  will  generally  be  made as  follows  (after  each  Partner
receives an amount  equal to 40% of the  allocations  of taxable  income made to
such Partner):  (i) first,  100% to the General Partner until it has received an
amount equal to its capital contribution plus an amount equal to 10% (per annum)
of the General  Partner's  capital  contribution;  (ii)  second,  to the Limited
Partners  until they have received an amount equal to their  respective  capital
contributions;  and (iii)  third,  90% to the  Limited  Partners  and 10% to the
General Partner.

     Each Limited Partner's  interest in profits from the Partnership (in excess
of that  portion  based solely on his or her capital  commitment)  is subject to
vesting 25% a year with the first such portion vesting in 2002. Unless waived by
the General  Partner,  vesting is conditioned on continued  employment  with the
Company or its subsidiaries.  However,  if employment is terminated due to death
or  disability,  such  Limited  Partner's  interest  will  fully  vest,  and  if
employment of a Limited Partner is terminated for cause, no additional  interest
will vest.

     As of December 31, 2001, the following  executive officers and directors of
the Company made the limited partner commitments indicated parenthetically after
their  respective  names: Mr. O'Hara  ($500,000);  Mr. Lusardi  ($400,000);  Mr.
Greetham ($300,000); Mr. Bruce Connell ($400,000); Mr. Paul Giordano ($200,000);
Mr.  Henry  Keeling  ($400,000);  Ms.  Fiona Luck  ($400,000);  Mr.  Bornhuetter
($200,000);  Mr.  Butt  ($200,000);  Mr.  Clements  ($200,000);  Sir Brian Corby
($200,000);  Mr.  Esposito  ($500,000);  Mr.  Jeanbart  ($200,000);  Mr.  Loudon
($200,000);  Dr. Parker ($50,000);  Mr. Rance ($50,000);  Mr. Senter ($200,000);
Mr. Thornton ($200,000); and Dr. Thrower ($50,000).

     As of December  31, 2001,  the  Partnership  has made,  among  others,  the
following investments: (i) $1.5 million of Mutual Risk Management Ltd.'s ("MRM")
9 3/8% convertible  exchangeable  debentures due 2006 (the "MRM Debentures") and
(ii) $5,000,000 in Highfields Capital II LP Fund, a hedge fund ("Highfields").

     The  Company  has  invested  $51.0  million  principal  amount  in the  MRM
Debentures.  The Company also received  warrants to purchase up to 1,632,043 MRM
common  shares at an initial  exercise  price of $7.00 per share.  During fiscal
2001,  certain of the  Company's  executive  officers  and  Directors  have been
members of the Board of  Directors  of MRM. In  addition,  the  Company  holds a
minority  stake  in the  hedge  fund  manager  of  Highfields  and had  invested
approximately  $176.5 million in funds managed by this management  company as of
December 31, 2001. In March 2002,  the  Partnership  invested in 90,000 Series A
convertible  voting  preferred  shares of Primus Guaranty Ltd.  ("Primus") for a
purchase  price of $2,250,000.  The Company also invested in 2,910,000  Series A
Convertible  voting  preferred  shares of Primus for a purchase  price of $72.75
million.  In  addition,  the Company  received  warrants to purchase  11,317,972
common  shares of Primus at an  exercise  price of  $0.6481  per  common  share.
Michael  P.  Esposito,  Jr.  is  Chairman  of the Board of  Directors  of Primus
Guaranty  and Robert R.  Lusardi is also a member of the Board of  Directors  of
Primus  Guaranty.  Mr.  Lusardi  is also a member of the Board of  Directors  of
Primus  Financial  Products,  Inc. and Primus Re, Ltd., both of which are wholly
owned subsidiaries of Primus Guaranty.

SECTION 16(A) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

     Section  16(a) of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  as amended  (the
"Exchange  Act"),  requires the Company's  directors and executive  officers and
persons  who own more than 10% of a  registered  class of the  Company's  equity
securities to file with the Securities and Exchange  Commission  (the "SEC") and
the NYSE  reports on Forms 3, 4 and 5 concerning  their  ownership of the common
stock and other equity securities of the Company.

     The Company  believes  that all of its  officers  and  directors  and those
greater-than-10%  Shareholders that filed any reports, filed all of such reports
on a timely basis during the year ended December 31, 2001, with the exception of
one Form 4 filing for each of Brian  O'Hara and  Michael A. Butt that were filed
after their dates due.


                                        5

                            I. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     At the Annual General  Meeting,  six Class I Directors are to be elected to
hold office until the 2005 Annual General  Meeting of  Shareholders.  All of the
nominees are  currently  serving as Directors  and were  appointed or elected in
accordance  with the  Company's  Articles of  Association.  The Directors of the
Company will continue to serve in accordance with their previously  appointed or
elected terms.

     Unless  authority is withheld by the  Shareholders,  it is the intention of
the persons named in the enclosed  proxy to vote for the nominees  listed below.
All of the  nominees  have  consented  to serve if  elected,  but if any becomes
unavailable to serve, the persons named as proxies may exercise their discretion
to vote for a  substitute  nominee.  The name,  principal  occupation  and other
information concerning each Director is set forth below.

     YOUR BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR THE NOMINEES.


                     NOMINEES FOR WHOM PROXIES WILL BE VOTED

NOMINEES FOR CLASS I DIRECTORS FOR TERMS TO EXPIRE IN 2005:

     Ronald L.  Bornhuetter,  age 69, has been a Director of the  Company  since
June 1999. Mr. Bornhuetter acted as a Consultant to NAC Re from 1999 to 2001 and
served as Chairman of Denham Syndicate Management Limited from 1997 to 2001. Mr.
Bornhuetter  served as Chairman  of NAC Re from 1993 until 1999 and  Chairman of
the Board of NAC Reinsurance  Corporation  (now known as  XLReinsurance  America
Inc.) from 1990 until 1999,  having served as a director of both companies since
August 1985.  From November 1996 through  December 1998, he also served as Chief
Executive  Officer of NAC Re.  From  August 1985  through  October  1996 he also
served as President of NAC Re. Prior to joining NAC Re, Mr. Bornhuetter was Vice
President-Finance  of  General Re  Corporation  and Senior  Vice  President  and
Comptroller of its subsidiary, General Reinsurance Corporation, having served as
Chief  Financial  Officer of the Group from 1966 to 1985. Mr.  Bornhuetter  also
served as director of Frontier  Inc.  until May 2001.  He is a Fellow and former
President of the Casualty  Actuarial  Society;  a member and former President of
the American  Academy of Actuaries  and also served as Chairman of the Actuarial
Standards Board. He is also a member of the International Actuarial Association,
and a  former  Vice  President  and head of the U.S.  delegation  to its  Ruling
Council.  He is also a member of ASTIN and AFIR.  He served as  Chairman  of The
Reinsurance  Association  of  America  from 1993 to 1994.  He is a  director  of
Cybersettle.com  Inc.  ("Cybersettle")  and was a Director  of Denham  Syndicate
Management  Limited  from  1997-2001  and  was a  director  of  NAC  Reinsurance
International  Limited  from 1994 to 2000.  He is  presently  a  Trustee  of The
College of  Wooster,  Wooster,  Ohio,  a director of the  Underwriter  Insurance
Company Ltd. and R.K.  Carvill  Ltd. and a volunteer  director of  International
Executive Service Corporation.

     Michael P. Esposito, Jr., age 62, has been Chairman of the Board since 1995
and a Director of the Company  since  1986.  Mr.  Esposito  was  Co-Chairman  of
Inter-Atlantic Capital Partners,  Inc. from 1998 to 2000. Mr. Esposito served as
Chief  Corporate  Compliance,  Control and  Administration  Officer of The Chase
Manhattan  Corporation from 1991 to 1995,  having previously served as Executive
Vice  President  and Chief  Financial  Officer from 1987 to 1991.  Mr.  Esposito
served as a director of Mid Ocean Limited from 1995 to 1998 and currently serves
as a  director  of  Annuity  and  Life Re  (Holdings),  Ltd.,  and  Forest  City
Enterprises.

     Robert R. Glauber,  age 62, has been a Director of the Company since August
1998.  Mr.  Glauber  served as a director of Mid Ocean  Limited and has been the
President and Chief Executive Officer of the National  Association of Securities
Dealers,  Inc. since  November,  2000. Mr. Glauber was a Lecturer at the John F.
Kennedy School of Government,  Harvard University, in Cambridge,  Massachusetts,
from 1992 until November 2000. Mr. Glauber  formerly was the Under  Secretary at
the U.S. Treasury  Department,  Washington,  D.C., a Director of various Dreyfus
Corp.  investment funds and the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and was Professor
of Business  Administration  at the Harvard  Business  School.  Mr. Glauber is a
director of Moody's  Corporation,  Inc., the National  Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc., and an officer and director of Measurisk LLC.

     Paul  Jeanbart,  age 62, has been a Director  of the Company  since  August
1998.  Mr.  Jeanbart  has been the Chief  Executive  Officer of Rolaco  Group of
Companies  since 1977. Mr. Jeanbart also serves as a director of Rolaco Holdings
S.A., Club Mediterranee S.A., Semiramis Hotel Co., Delta International Bank S.A.
and SODEXHO  Alliance S.A. and as President of Hotels  Intercontinental  Geneva,
S.A. Mr. Jeanbart served as a director of Mid Ocean Limited from 1994 to 1998.


                                        6



     Cyril  Rance,  age 67, has been a Director of the Company  since 1990.  Mr.
Rance  served as  President  and Chief  Executive  Officer of the Bermuda Fire &
Marine  Insurance Co. Ltd. from 1985 to 1990.  Mr. Rance has also had a long and
varied  career in civic and  government  service.  Mr.  Rance  also  serves as a
director of several  investment,  real estate and insurance companies located in
Bermuda.  He is currently  the chairman of the advisory  board of The  Salvation
Army in Bermuda.

     Ellen E. Thrower, age 55, has been a Director of the Company since December
1995.  Dr. Thrower was President and Chief  Executive  Officer of The College of
Insurance  since 1988 until 2001.  In 2002 The College of Insurance  merged with
St.  John's  University  and changed its name to The School of Risk  Management,
Insurance  and  Actuarial  Science.  Dr.  Thrower is Executive  Director of this
school.  Dr.  Thrower  also serves as a director  on the Boards of  Pennsylvania
National, SCOR U.S. Corporation and United Educators Risk Retention Group, Inc.


          DIRECTORS WHOSE TERMS OF OFFICE DO NOT EXPIRE AT THIS MEETING

CLASS II DIRECTORS WHOSE TERMS EXPIRE IN 2003:

     Dale R. Comey,  age 60, has been a Director of the Company  since  November
2001. He was Executive Vice President at the corporate  headquarters  of the ITT
Corporation  from  1990 to 1996,  where he was  responsible  for  directing  the
operations  of several  ITT  business  units,  including  ITT  Hartford  and ITT
Financial  Corporation.  Mr.  Comey also served as  President  of Hartford  Fire
Insurance  Company from 1988 to 1990.  Before that, Mr. Comey, a graduate of the
University of  Connecticut,  was President  and Chief  Operating  Officer of ITT
Hartford Fire Insurance  Company.  He joined ITT as an actuarial trainee in 1965
after serving in the United States Army.

     Sir Brian  Corby,  age 72, has been a Director of the Company  since August
1998. Sir Brian served as Chief Executive Officer of Prudential  Corporation plc
from 1982 to 1990 and as Chairman  of  Prudential  Corporation  plc from 1990 to
1995.  Among other positions he has held are President of the  Confederation  of
British Industry, President of the Geneva Association and a director of the Bank
of England.  Sir Brian  served as a director of Mid Ocean  Limited  from 1995 to
1998.  Sir Brian served as the  Chairman of XL Brockbank  Group plc from 1997 to
1999  and is  also  Chairman  of  East  of  England  Inward  Investment  Agency,
Cambridge, England and a director of Pan Holding SA, Luxembourg.

     Brian M. O'Hara,  age 53, has been President and Chief Executive Officer of
the  Company  since  1994 and a  Director  of the  Company  since  1986,  having
previously served as Vice Chairman of the Company from 1987 to 1994. He has also
served as Chairman of XL Insurance  (Bermuda) Ltd since  December  1995,  having
served as  Chairman,  President  and  Chief  Executive  Officer  from  1994,  as
President  and Chief  Executive  Officer from 1992,  and as President  and Chief
Operating  Officer  from 1986.  Mr.  O'Hara  served as a  director  of Mid Ocean
Limited and  currently  serves as a director of Annuity and Life Re  (Holdings),
Ltd. and Bermuda Commercial Bank Limited  and as a Trustee of The School of Risk
Management,  Insurance and Actuarial Science.

     John T.  Thornton,  age 64, has been a Director of the Company  since 1988.
Mr. Thornton has served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial  Officer
of Wells Fargo & Company  (formerly  Norwest  Corporation) from 1987 to November
1998. Mr. Thornton served as Executive Vice President and Financial Executive of
Wells Fargo & Co. from December 1998 until November 1999. Mr.  Thornton has been
engaged  in real  estate  development  and  investments  from  December  1999 to
present.

     John W. Weiser,  age 70, has been a Director of the Company since 1986. Mr.
Weiser served as Senior Vice President and director of Bechtel Group,  Inc. from
1980 to 1998. Mr. Weiser also served as President of Bechtel  Enterprises,  Inc.
from 1988 to 1992 and as General  Counsel of Bechtel  Group,  Inc.  from 1980 to
1988 and from 1992 to 1994 and has been a director  of Fremont  Group Inc.  from
1986 and is  currently  a Director  of GRX  Technologies  Inc.  He is  currently
Chairman of the Board of The Graduate Theological Union.

NOMINEES FOR CLASS III DIRECTORS FOR TERMS TO EXPIRE IN 2004:

     Michael A. Butt,  age 59, has been a Director of the Company  since  August
1998.  Mr. Butt was formerly a director and the  President  and Chief  Executive
Officer of Mid Ocean  Limited from June 1993 until its merger with the Company's
predecessor  company in August of 1998. Mr. Butt has served as a director of the
Instituto Nazionale di Assicurazioni,  Rome from November 1993 to December 1997,
and the Bank of N.T. Butterfield & Son, Ltd. from October 1996 to December 2001.
From 1992 to April 1993,  Mr.  Butt  served as a director of Phoenix  Securities
Limited, a private  investment banking firm based in London.  From 1987 to 1992,
he was a director of BAT Industries and Chairman


                                        7



and Chief Executive  Officer of Eagle Star Holdings Plc and Eagle Star Insurance
Company.  From 1982 to 1986, Mr. Butt was Chairman of Sedgwick  Limited and Vice
Chairman of Sedgwick Group Plc.

     John  Loudon,  age 66, has been a Director of the Company  since 1992.  Mr.
Loudon has been  Chairman of  Caneminster  Ltd., a British  investment  company,
since 1991 and previously  served as Chairman of Warrior  International  Limited
from 1988 to 1991. Mr. Loudon also serves as a director of Heineken N.V.,  Derby
Trust plc, Exel plc, XL London Market Group plc (formerly  known as XL Brockbank
Group plc), and Simon Murray & Company Limited.

     Robert S.  Parker,  age 64, has been a Director of the Company  since 1991.
Dr. Parker is currently Dean Emeritus and the Robert S. Parker Chaired Professor
of the McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University.  He served as Dean
of the School of Business  Administration from 1986 to 1998. Previously he was a
partner at  McKinsey & Company,  Inc.  Dr.  Parker  also serves as a director of
Middlesex Mutual Assurance Company.

     Alan Z. Senter,  age 60, has been a Director of the Company since 1986. Mr.
Senter is presently  Chairman of AZ Senter Consulting LLC, a financial  advisory
firm he  founded  in  1993,  managed  from  1993 to 1994,  and from  1996 to the
present.  Mr. Senter  served as Executive  Vice  President  and Chief  Financial
Officer of Nynex  Corporation from 1994 to 1997. Mr. Senter served as a director
and  Executive  Vice  President  and Chief  Financial  Officer of  International
Specialty  Products and GAF Corporation from 1992 to 1993. Mr. Senter previously
served as the Vice President and Senior Financial  Officer of Xerox  Corporation
from 1990 to 1992.  Mr.  Senter  also serves as a director of Genysys SA, The US
Army Science Board and the Theater Development Fund.


                                       8



          EQUITY SECURITIES OWNED BENEFICIALLY AS OF FEBRUARY 28, 2002

     The following table summarizes the beneficial  ownership as of February 28,
2002 of the Shares of the Company by each Director and executive  officer of the
Company  for the year  ended  December  31,  2001,  and all such  Directors  and
executive officers of the Company as a group.

                                      NUMBER OF     NUMBER OF
                                       SHARES       OPTIONS (1)     TOTAL (2)
                                     ----------     ----------      ---------
Ronald L. Bornhuetter (3) .........      88,860       264,709        353,569
Nicholas M. Brown, Jr. ............      26,537       217,807        244,344
Michael A. Butt ...................     187,294        81,355        268,649
Robert Clements (4) ...............      58,619        26,993         85,612
Dale Comey ........................          --         5,000          5,000
Brian Corby .......................       5,624        11,000         16,624
Jerry de St. Paer .................      13,000        10,000         23,000
Michael P. Esposito, Jr. (5) ......     131,196       183,763        314,959
Robert R. Glauber .................      12,553        16,000         28,553
Christopher V. Greetham (6) .......      21,000       115,001        136,001
Paul Jeanbart (7) .................     128,651        19,066        147,717
John Loudon .......................       6,128        26,000         32,128
Robert R. Lusardi (8) .............      16,600       247,168        263,768
Brian M. O'Hara ...................     342,099       740,146      1,082,245
Robert S. Parker ..................       7,002        26,000         33,002
Cyril Rance .......................       8,347        26,000         34,347
Alan Z. Senter ....................       9,570        22,893         32,463
John T. Thornton ..................      21,547        19,661         41,208
Ellen E. Thrower ..................       4,320        24,000         28,320
John W. Weiser (9) ................      36,303        26,000         62,303

                                      1,125,250     2,108,562      3,233,812


-----------
(1)  Includes Shares issuable upon exercise of outstanding  options  exercisable
     within 60 days.
(2)  To  the  Company's  knowledge,  no  Director  or  executive  officer  had a
     beneficial  ownership  interest in excess of one percent of the outstanding
     Shares as of February 28, 2002.  As a group,  all  Directors  and executive
     officers   of  the  Company  had  a   beneficial   ownership   interest  in
     approximately  3% of the  outstanding  Shares on the basis of the number of
     outstanding Shares as of February 28, 2002.
(3)  Includes 22,372 Shares that Mr. Bornhuetter owns indirectly.
(4)  Includes 12,258 Shares that Mr. Clements owns indirectly.
(5)  Includes 8,779 Shares that Mr.  Esposito owns indirectly and 48,000 options
     assigned to members of his family.
(6)  Includes 2,000 Shares that Mr. Greetham owns indirectly.
(7)  Includes 125,644 Shares owned by Oryx Finance Limited in which Mr. Jeanbart
     has an indirect interest.
(8)  Includes as options  40,500 Shares  issuable upon the exercise of a warrant
     dated as of December 1, 1997 purchased by Mr. Lusardi from the Company. The
     warrant  may be  exercised  in  whole  or in part  from  time to time at an
     exercise  price  equal to $61.50 per share  until the close of  business on
     November 30, 2007.
(9)  Includes 7,000 options assigned to a family  partnership.  Does not include
     7,000 shares held by a  charitable  foundation  as to which Mr.  Weiser has
     voting  and/or  investment  power and as to which he  disclaims  beneficial
     ownership.

                                       9



                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

     The  following  table  shows  the  compensation  of the  five  most  highly
compensated  executive officers of the Company for services paid for or rendered
with  respect to the  Company and its  subsidiaries  in all  capacities  for the
Company's last three fiscal years:



                                                                                    LONG-TERM COMPENSATION
                                                                    ------------------------------------------------------
                                ANNUAL COMPENSATION                           AWARDS                    PAYOUTS
                            --------------------------              -----------------------   ----------------------------
                                                            OTHER     RESTRICTED  SECURITIES   LONG-TERM
                                                           ANNUAL        STOCK    UNDERLYING   INCENTIVE     ALL OTHER
NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION  YEAR   SALARY      BONUS   COMPENSATION(1)   AWARD      OPTIONS     PAYOUTS   COMPENSATION(2)
--------------------------- -----   -------   --------  --------------- ---------  --------   ----------  -----------------
                                                                                        
Brian M. O'Hara (3)         2001 $1,000,000 $1,000,000    $140,004      $988,910     75,000          --       $100,000
   President and Chief      2000   $900,000   $950,000    $148,826            --         --          --        $90,000
   Executive Officer of     1999   $750,000 $1,750,000    $132,924            --    150,000          --        $75,000
   the Company

Nicholas M. Brown, Jr. (4)  2001   $650,000   $450,000     $39,032      $380,350     50,000          --        $55,232
   Executive Vice President 2000   $645,833   $450,000          --            --         --          --        $25,703
   of the Company and       1999   $625,000   $210,000          --    $1,000,000    101,000    $294,000     $1,054,568
   Chief Executive of
   Insurance Operations

Robert R. Lusardi           2001   $550,000   $450,000    $150,500      $760,700     60,000          --        $55,000
   Executive Vice
     President of           2000   $500,000   $450,000    $183,355            --         --          --        $50,000
   the Company and Chief    1999   $400,000   $750,000    $171,342            --     85,000          --        $40,000
   Executive of Financial
   Products and Services
   Operations

Christopher V. Greetham     2001   $345,000   $630,000     $94,593      $304,280     40,000          --        $34,500
   Executive Vice President 2000   $315,000   $462,000    $114,664            --         --          --        $31,500
   and Chief Investment     1999   $300,000   $625,000     $78,188      $100,000     40,000          --        $30,000
   Officer of the Company

Jerry de St. Paer (5)       2001   $344,102   $850,000    $141,571    $1,014,000     30,000          --        $60,000
   Executive Vice
   President, Chief
   Financial Officer and
   Treasurer of the Company



--------

(1)  Mr. O'Hara  received  $96,000 for housing  expenses in each of fiscal years
     2001, 2000 and 1999. Mr. Lusardi received  $144,000 for housing expenses in
     each of fiscal years 2001, 2000 and 1999. Mr. Greetham received $66,000 for
     housing  expenses in each of fiscal years 2001,  2000 and 1999.  Mr. de St.
     Paer received $132,000 for housing expenses in fiscal year 2001.
(2)  All other  compensation  relates to contributions to the Company's  Pension
     Plans  except,  with respect to Mr.  Brown,  it also  includes a $1,000,000
     sign-on bonus upon the completion of the Company's  merger with NAC Re, and
     Mr. de St. Paer, who received a relocation allowance of $20,000.
(3)  See "Board of Directors--Certain Transactions."
(4)  Includes compensation for the period prior to the merger with NAC Re.
(5)  Mr. de St. Paer commenced employment with the Company on February 20, 2001.
     Mr. de St. Paer's bonus includes a signing bonus of $400,000.

                                       10


                       OPTIONS GRANTED IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

     The  following  table shows the options  granted in the last fiscal year to
the five most highly compensated executive officers of the Company together with
the potential realizable value at assumed rates of return:





                                                                                               POTENTIAL REALIZABLE
                                                                                                  VALUE AT ASSUMED
                                                                                                  ANNUAL RATIO OF
                                                                                                    STOCK PRICE
                                                                                                 APPRECIATION FOR
                                                                                                 INDIVIDUAL GRANTS

                                                    INDIVIDUAL GRANTS                               OPTION TERM
                              -------------------------------------------------------------    ----------------------
                                NUMBER OF       % OF
                               SECURITIES   TOTAL OPTIONS
                               UNDERLYING    GRANTED TO       EXERCISE
                                 OPTIONS    EMPLOYEES IN    OR BASE PRICE
NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION    GRANTED(1) LAST FISCAL YEAR (PER SHARE)(2)   EXPIRATION DATE         5%          10%
---------------------------   ----------- ----------------- -------------   ---------------     ----------  ----------
                                                                                           
Brian M. O'Hara                  73,750             0.2%         $80.00      March 3, 2011      $3,710,478  $9,403,081
   President and Chief            1,250(3)                                   March 3, 2011         $62,889    $159,374
   Executive Officer of
   the Company

Nicholas M. Brown, Jr            50,000             0.2%         $80.00      March 3, 2011      $2,515,579  $6,374,970
   Executive Vice
   President of the
   Company and Chief
   Executive Officer of
   Insurance Operations

Robert R. Lusardi                58,750             0.2%         $80.00      March 3, 2011      $2,955,805  $7,490,590
   Executive Vice                 1,250(3)                                   March 3, 2011         $62,889    $159,374
   President of the
   Company and Chief
   Executive Officer of
   Financial Products
   and Services Operations

Christopher C.V. Greetham        40,000             0.1%         $80.00      March 3, 2011      $2,012,463  $5,099,996
   Executive Vice
   President of the
   Company and Chief
   Investment Officer of
   the Company

Jerry de St. Paer                30,000             0.1%         $80.00      March 3, 2011      $1,509,347  $3,824,982
   Executive Vice
   President, Chief
   Company and Chief
   Financial Officer and
   Treasurer of
   the Company


----------

(1)  All options were granted under the  Company's  1991  Performance  Incentive
     Program.

(2)  Market price at date of grant.

(3)  Incentive stock options were granted under the 1991  Performance  Incentive
     Program.

                                       11




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

     The following table shows the options exercised during the last fiscal year
by the five most highly  compensated  executive officers of the Company together
with the number and value of unexercised options at December 31, 2001:





                                                                                           VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                                 NUMBER OF SECURITIES             IN THE
                                      SHARES                     UNDERLYING OPTIONS AT         MONEY OPTIONS
                                     ACQUIRED     IMPLIED VALUE    DECEMBER 31, 2001       AT DECEMBER 31, 2001
NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION         ON EXERCISE     REALIZED   EXERCISABLE/UNEXERCISABLE EXERCISABLE/UNEXERCISABLE
--------------------------          -----------   ------------ ------------------------  ------------------------
                                                                             
Brian M. O'Hara                       70,610       $2,426,744       715,175/206,758        $31,964,850/$6,398,600
   President and Chief
   Executive Officer of
   the Company

Nicholas M. Brown, Jr.               103,750       $4,979,466       201,140/148,517         $8,529,918/$4,492,996
   Executive Vice
   President of the
   Company and Chief
   Executive Officer of
   Insurance Operations

Robert R. Lusardi                         --               --        227,167/88,333         $7,089,877/$1,853,453
   Executive Vice
   President of the
   Company and Chief
   Executive Officer of
   Financial Products
   and Services Operations

Christopher C.V. Greetham                --                --        101,667/53,333         $3,886,197/$1,005,853
   Executive Vice
   President and Chief
   Investment Officer of
   the Company

Jerry de St. Paer                         --               --             --/30,000                  $--/$400,000
   Executive Vice
   President, Chief
   Financial Officer and Treasurer
   of the Company



---------

* No options have adjustable exercise prices.

                                       12



                             RESTRICTED STOCK GRANTS

     The following table shows the restricted stock grants held by the five most
highly compensated executive officers of the Company as at December 31, 2001:



                                                                   NO. OF RESTRICTED        VALUE OF RESTRICTED
                                                                    STOCK GRANTS AT           STOCK GRANTS AT
                                                                   DECEMBER 31, 2001         DECEMBER 31, 2001
NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION                                         VESTED/UNVESTED           VESTED/UNVESTED
--------------------------                                        ------------------     ------------------------
                                                                                     
Brian M. O'Hara                                                      212,800/20,000        $19,441,408/$1,827,200
   President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company

Nicholas M. Brown, Jr.                                                33,300/10,000         $3,042,288/$913,600
   Executive Vice President of the Company and Chief
   Executive Officer of Insurance Operations

Robert R. Lusardi                                                     21,400/16,600         $1,955,104/$1,516,576
   Executive Vice President of the Company and Chief
   Executive Officer of Financial Products
   and Services Operations

Christopher C.V. Greetham                                              12,600/6,400           $1,151,136/$584,704
   Executive Vice President and Chief Investment
   Officer of the Company

Jerry de St. Paer                                                         --/13,000                $--/$1,187,680
   Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and
   Treasurer of the Company


RETIREMENT PLAN

     The Company,  through a subsidiary,  has a non-contributory defined benefit
pension plan covering all employees of certain of its  subsidiaries  in the U.S.
Benefits are computed on the basis of a specified percentage of the individual's
average total  compensation,  which includes  salary and annual bonus awards for
the thirty-six months of highest total  compensation  during the employee's last
ten years of service. Benefits are computed on the basis of a "life and ten-year
certain"  annuity.  The  Company  also  maintains a Benefits  Equalization  Plan
authorizing  payment  from the general  funds of any benefits  calculated  under
provisions  of the  Retirement  Plan that are  otherwise  above the  limitations
provided  by the  Internal  Revenue  Code.  As of January 1, 2002 these  defined
benefit  plans were  frozen,  with no  additional  benefit  accruals  other than
increases for cost of living adjustments.

     The following table shows the estimated annual benefits payable upon normal
retirement  for  specified  average  total  compensation  and years of  credited
service under the Retirement Plan and the Benefits  Equalization  Plan.  Amounts
disclosed  are not subject to  deduction  for Social  Security  or other  offset
amounts.


                               PENSION PLAN TABLE



                                                                  YEARS OF CREDITED SERVICE
                                        ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
AVERAGE TOTAL
COMPENSATION                                    15            20             25             30            35
--------------                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                          
$200,000 .................................     45,338         60,450        72,563         84,675         84,675
$400,000 .................................     93,338        124,450       149,563        174,675        174,675
$600,000 .................................    141,338        188,450       226,563        264,675        264,675
$800,000 .................................    189,338        252,450       303,563        354,675        354,675
$1,000,000 ...............................    237,338        316,450       380,563        444,675        444,675
$1,200,000 ...............................    285,338        380,450       457,563        534,675        534,675
$1,400,000 ...............................    333,338        444,450       534,563        624,675        624,675


     Mr. Brown  currently has five full years of Credited  Service and will have
23 years of  Credited  Service  at Normal  Retirement  Age under the  retirement
plans.  Current Compensation Covered is the equivalent of the salary reported in
the Summary  Compensation  Table for fiscal 2001 and annual  bonus for 2000 (and
actually paid in 2001). See "Existing  Employment  Agreements and Termination of
Employment  and  Change-in-Control   Arrangements"  for  a  description  of  the
supplemental pension payable to Mr. Brown upon his retirement.


                                       13



     EXISTING   EMPLOYMENT   AGREEMENTS   AND   TERMINATION  OF  EMPLOYMENT  AND
CHANGE-IN-CONTROL ARRANGEMENTS OF NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

   EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS

     The  Company  or  one of  its  subsidiaries  has  entered  into  employment
agreements with two of its named  executive  officers:  Nicholas M. Brown,  Jr.,
Executive  Vice  President  of the  Company  and Chief  Executive  of  Insurance
Operations,  and Jerry de St. Paer,  Executive Vice  President,  Chief Financial
Officer and Treasurer of the Company.

     Mr. Brown entered into a new  employment  agreement  with the Company as of
April  1,  2002.  Mr.  Brown's  employment  agreement  provides  that he will be
employed as the Chief  Executive of  Insurance  Operations  for the Company,  an
Executive  Vice  President of the  Company,  and Chief  Executive  Officer of XL
Insurance,   Inc.  The  agreement  with  Mr.  Brown  also  provides  for  (i)  a
continuation  of his  base  salary  at the  rate in  effect  on the  date of the
agreement,  subject to annual review for possible increases at the discretion of
the  Compensation  Committee;  (ii) annual bonus as approved by the Compensation
Committee based on corporate,  individual and business unit performance measures
established by the Compensation Committee, with target annual bonus equal to 90%
of base salary;  (iii) a special bonus payable as soon as practicable  after the
effective date of the agreement in the amount of US$2,600,000;  (iv) eligibility
on the same basis as comparable  executives to participate in the Company's 1991
Performance   Incentive  Program,   as  determined  in  the  discretion  of  the
administrator  of that program;  and (v) the right to  participate in such other
employee benefit or fringe benefit programs for senior officers as are in effect
from time to time.  The term of the  employment  agreement  with Mr.  Brown will
expire on  January  1, 2005.  Mr.  Brown has agreed to certain  confidentiality,
noncompetition and nonsolicitation provisions set forth in the agreement.

     If Mr.  Brown's  employment is terminated by the Company  without cause (as
defined) or by Mr. Brown for good reason (as  defined),  in either case within 2
years  following  a  change  in  control  (as  defined),  or his  employment  is
terminated  by the Company in  connection  with or  anticipation  of a change in
control  within one year prior to the date on which a change in control  occurs,
he will be entitled  to (i) his  then-current  base  salary  through the date of
termination; (ii) a cash lump sum payment equal to (x) two times his base salary
and (y) two times the highest of the largest  annual bonus  awarded in the three
year  period  preceding  the year in which the change in  control  occurs or the
targeted annual bonus for the year of such termination; (iii) an amount equal to
the  higher  of his  annual  bonus  actually  awarded  in the  year  immediately
preceding the year of the change in control or his targeted annual bonus for the
year of  termination,  prorated  for the period  actually  worked in the year of
termination; (iv) accelerated vesting as of the date of termination of all stock
options  or  restricted  shares  held  by  him to the  extent  specified  in the
applicable  agreements;  (v)  continued  participation  for up to two  years  in
employee  benefit and fringe benefit  programs of the Company;  (vi) accelerated
vesting  of  accrued  benefits  under the  Company's  pension  plans;  and (vii)
continued  participation  under  the  Company's  pension  plans  for  two  years
following termination of employment. Mr. Brown will also be entitled to gross-up
payments in the event excise taxes are imposed on him under  Section 280G of the
United States Internal Revenue Code, as set forth in the agreement.

     In the event that Mr.  Brown's  employment is terminated by the Company not
for  cause  (other  than in the  circumstances  described  above)  or Mr.  Brown
terminates  his employment  (other than in the  circumstances  described  above)
following  the failure to appoint or reappoint  him to the  positions  described
above, the assignment of duties to him that are inconsistent with his positions,
the relocation of his place of employment,  or material breach by the Company of
the  agreement,  which,  in any  such  case,  is not  cured as  provided  in the
agreement,  Mr.  Brown will receive the  following:  (i) his  then-current  base
salary  through the date of  termination;  (ii) a cash lump sum payment equal to
(x) the  amount  of his base  salary  which  would  have been  payable  over the
following  two years and (y) two times (or one times if the date of  termination
is after  January 1, 2003) the higher of targeted  annual  bonus for the year of
termination or the bonus actually  awarded for the  immediately  preceding year;
(iii) a pro rata bonus for the year of  termination  in an amount  determined by
the Compensation Committee,  based on actual achievement of corporate,  business
unit and  individual  performance  results;  (iv)  vesting of stock  options and
restricted shares held by him as specified in the applicable agreements; and (v)
continued participation in employee benefit programs and fringe benefit programs
for the remainder of the stated term of the agreement (or two years if shorter).
In the  event of Mr.  Brown's  death or  disability,  he (or his  estate)  would
receive a pro rata bonus,  accelerated  vesting of stock options and  restricted
stock,  accelerated  vesting under the Company's  pension plans, and base salary
for six months after termination.


                                       14




     Mr. Brown and the Company have also  entered  into a  supplemental  pension
agreement.  The  supplemental  pension  agreement  provides  that Mr. Brown will
receive a  supplemental  pension,  beginning on the later of his  termination of
employment  or the date he  attains  age 50,  equal to 50% of his final  average
compensation,  including  base salary and regular  annual bonus at target.  Such
supplemental  pension  benefits will be reduced by benefits payable to Mr. Brown
under the defined  benefit  plans of the Company or its  affiliates or under the
defined  benefit plans of Mr. Brown's prior  employers.  Any retirement  benefit
that is payable  prior to age 60 shall be reduced by 5% per year to reflect  its
expected  period of payment.  This  benefit will be payable to Mr. Brown for his
lifetime and,  following  his death,  50% of such amount would be payable to his
surviving spouse, if any, for her lifetime.

     Mr. de St. Paer's employment agreement provides for (i) a base salary which
is subject to review for increase annually; (ii) an annual bonus pursuant to the
Company's  incentive   compensation  plan  as  determined  by  the  Compensation
Committee of the Board and stock option and restricted  share grants pursuant to
the Company's performance incentive program;  (iii) reimbursement for or payment
of certain travel, living and other expenses;  and (iv) the right to participate
in such other employee or fringe benefit  programs for senior  executives as are
in effect from time to time. Mr. de St. Paer's  employment  agreement expires on
March 1, 2004 and will be automatically extended for additional one year periods
unless the Company or Mr. de St.  Paer  provides  written  notice at least three
months prior to the then scheduled  expiration  date. Mr. de St. Paer has agreed
to certain  confidentiality,  noncompetition and nonsolicitation  provisions set
forth in the agreement.

     Mr.  de St.  Paer's  agreement  further  provides  that,  in the  event  of
termination of his employment prior to the expiration date by reason of death or
disability,  Mr. de St. Paer (or in the case of death,  Mr. de St. Paer's spouse
or estate) is entitled to receive his then current  base salary  through the end
of the sixth month after the month in which his employment is terminated. Mr. de
St. Paer's estate shall be entitled to any annual bonus awarded but not yet paid
and a PRO RATA

bonus  for  the  year of  death  in an  amount  determined  by the  Compensation
Committee.  Mr. de St.  Paer's  estate  shall also be  entitled  to  accelerated
vesting of his rights  under any option or  restricted  share grants and pension
plans.

     In the event of  termination  of his  employment  without  cause prior to a
Change in Control (as defined in his employment agreement), Mr. de St. Paer will
be  entitled  to his  then  current  base  salary  through  the  date  on  which
termination  occurs,  and (i) if termination  occurs after March 1, 2003, a cash
lump sum payment  equal to two times his then current base salary and the higher
of (x) his annual  bonus for the year of  termination  and (y) the annual  bonus
actually awarded in the year immediately  preceding the year of termination;  or
(ii) if termination occurs on or prior to March 1, 2003, a cash lump sum payment
equal to two times his then  current  base salary and two times the annual bonus
for the year of termination,  and  accelerated  vesting of his stock options and
restricted  shares;  as well as any annual  bonus earned but not yet awarded and
rights under any option or restricted share grants.

     If Mr. de St. Paer is  terminated  (i) by the Company  without cause within
the 24-month period  following a Change in Control and, if the Change in Control
is stockholder  approval of an Event (as defined in his  employment  agreement),
prior to a termination  of the  agreement to effect the Event (the  "Post-Change
Period");  (ii) by Mr. de St. Paer for Good Reason (as defined in his employment
agreement)  during  the  post-Change  Period;  or  (iii) in  connection  with or
anticipation of a Change in Control within one year prior to the date on which a
Change in Control  occurs;  he will be  entitled  to (i) his  then-current  base
salary  through  the  date on which  termination  occurs;  (ii) a cash  lump sum
payment  equal to (x) two times his then  current  base salary and (y) two times
the largest  annual bonus awarded in each of the three years  preceding the year
in which the  Change in  Control  occurs,  provided  that such bonus is at least
equal to the targeted  annual bonus for the year of such  termination;  (iii) an
amount equal to the higher of (x) his annual bonus actually  awarded in the year
immediately  preceding the year of termination  and (y) his annual bonus for the
year of  termination,  pro rated by a fraction  for the number of months or days
actually  worked  in the year of  termination.  Mr.  de St.  Paer  will  also be
entitled to rights under any option or restricted share grants. In addition, Mr.
de St. Paer will be entitled to gross-up  payments in the event excise taxes are
imposed on him under Section 280G of the United States Internal Revenue Code, as
set forth in the agreement.

     CHANGE IN CONTROL ARRANGEMENTS

     All grants of  restricted  shares  and share  options  under the  Company's
incentive  compensation  plans  automatically  vest upon a Change in Control (as
defined in such plans).

                                       15




COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT

     In 2001, the Company updated its compensation principles and practices. The
practices and principles  received  extensive internal vetting and were approved
in principle by the Board. The practices and principles take into account, among
other  matters,  the Company's  recent rapid  increase in size and its expansion
into new geographic areas and new types of businesses.  The Company's  objective
is to be  competitive in the several  markets in which it operates,  in order to
attract, retain and motivate the superior staff needed to be the business leader
and employer of choice.

     The practices and principles  maintain the Company's general  principles of
favoring  performance-based  compensation,  with  a  more  disciplined  link  to
performance and more differentiation in pay to match performance.

     The competitiveness of the compensation  packages is tested in the relevant
markets;  salary is  generally  set at median  levels and  variable  factors are
designed so that  top-performers are targeted to receive total compensation well
above market  median.  The Company also provides  pension and other benefits and
perquisites.

     In order to afford an opportunity  for all employees of the Company and its
participating subsidiaries to purchase shares of the Company, the Board approved
for submission to shareholders an Employee Share Purchase Plan.

GLOBAL INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PLAN

     In 1999, the Company reviewed its incentive compensation plans and policies
in light of its growth and expansion  from a single  business in one location to
several  businesses  operating  in a number of locations  throughout  the world.
Implementation of the Global Incentive Compensation Plan (the "Plan") began with
the Company's  operations in Bermuda and Ireland in 1999 and will  encompass its
other  subsidiaries as soon as practicable.  Subsidiaries to which the Plan does
not yet apply  generally  continue  to operate  under  plans  specific  to their
markets or plans in effect prior to their acquisition by the Company.

     Annual incentive  compensation under the Plan takes the form of a corporate
cash  bonus  pool  allocated  on the  basis  of  corporate,  business  unit  and
individual  performance.  The  corporate  bonus  pool is  funded  based  on four
weighted performance measures: (i) growth in cash earnings per share--40%;  (ii)
cash return on tangible equity--30%; (iii) total return on tangible equity--20%;
and (iv) growth in book value per share,  including dividends paid and excluding
unrealized  appreciation  or depreciation  of  investments--10%.  Performance is
determined  65% on the Company's  absolute  performance  against target rates in
excess of a risk free rate of return approved by the Compensation  Committee and
35% on the  Company's  relative  performance  as  compared  to a peer  group  of
companies.   The  peer  group  is  determined  annually  with  the  Compensation
Committee's  approval and includes  leading  property and casualty and financial
guaranty insurers and reinsurers.

     Long-term  incentive  compensation under the Plan seeks to align management
with the interests of the Company's  shareholders  to create  shareholder  value
over time.  Long-term  incentives  under the Plan are annual stock option awards
and periodic  restricted stock grants,  generally vesting equally over three and
four years, respectively. The Compensation Committee approves stock option award
guidelines  that generally  remain in place for three years.  The guidelines are
based on  competitive  practices and stock dilution  considerations.  Individual
awards  within  the  guidelines  are  determined  by  level  of  responsibility,
corporate, business unit and individual performance, and other relevant factors.
Restricted stock typically will be granted every two or three years at levels up
to  20% of the  value  of an  annual  stock  option  award.  Stock  options  and
restricted  stock also may be granted in  connection  with new hires,  personnel
retention following mergers or acquisitions, or in other special circumstances.

2001 COMPENSATION REVIEW

     The  tragic  events  of  September  11 had two  major  consequences  on the
Company's  compensation  decisions for 2001.  First, the imbalance in supply and
demand for the Company's insurance and reinsurance  products in the aftermath of
the catastrophe  led to the creation of several new companies in Bermuda.  Those
companies  in turn were  actively  recruiting  to fill their  rosters,  with the
Company's  superior  staff  as a  natural  target.  Therefore,  on  management's
recommendation,  the Committee accelerated consideration of grants of restricted
stock and  approved  grants of 200,000  restricted  shares in the  aggregate  in
January 2002 to such officers of the Company (other than Messrs.  O'Hara, Brown,
Keeling, Lusardi) and employees as Mr. O'Hara recommended.


                                       16





     The  terrorist  attack also  caused,  as  announced,  major  losses for the
Company.  Since the  calculations  of the bonus pool under the Plan are based on
financial  results,  those  results,  giving  effect to the  losses,  would have
generated a very limited  bonus pool.  Yet in the view of the  Committee and the
Board,  the Company's  management and staff had performed well before the attack
and responded  effectively  to its impact.  Among the many  positive  factors in
management's  performance  for the  year  were  the  successful  integration  of
Winterthur International, the acquisition of the majority holding in Le Mans Re,
the  continued  expansion of the  financial  products and services  business and
excellent  positioning  of the Company for a resurging  market.  The market,  as
evidenced by the stock price,  also appeared strongly to approve of management's
efforts.

     The Committee  concluded that the severity of the September 11 losses, i.e.
the loss of four  airliners in one day,  the total loss of two major  structures
and the attendant losses of their tenant  enterprises,  was  extraordinary.  The
Committee therefore  recommended to the Board that the actual calculations under
the Plan be averaged  with  hypothetical  calculations  as if the attack had not
occurred.  That averaging resulted in a bonus pool approximately half of what it
would have been absent the catastrophe. Incentive compensation was calculated on
that average basis.

     The  September  11 losses were  unique,  but  nevertheless  underscore  the
inflexibility  of the  current  Plan,  with its simple  reliance  on  calculable
financial  results.  The Company has expanded into businesses with  catastrophic
losses,  which can bring  significant  swings  into the  incentive  compensation
calculations.  The  Committee  has asked the Company to develop a revised  Plan,
retaining the better elements of the current Plan but adding elements that would
allow the Plan as a whole to measure more accurately management's  effectiveness
in building value for shareholders.

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER AND CHAIRMAN'S COMPENSATION

     The Compensation Committee continues to believe that Mr. O'Hara is doing an
excellent  job.  He has set a  clear  strategic  direction  and is  guiding  its
implementation.  The  financial  products and services  business is growing at a
measured pace; the Winterthur International  integration is progressing well, as
is the majority  holding in Le Mans Re. The Company is very well  positioned  to
take  advantage of the market turn;  its financial  position is strong,  and the
spirit of its staff is excellent.

     The Chairman's compensation has been significantly increased to reflect the
fact that that position has evolved into one that is approaching full-time. When
Mr. Esposito was elected,  it was on the  understanding  that the position would
require  between  one-third and one-half of his time.  The Company's  geographic
expansion and its extension
into new areas, in particular  financial products and services,  have caused Mr.
O'Hara to rely increasingly on Mr. Esposito, who has resigned other positions to
allow him to devote more time and energy to the Company.

                                                      COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
                                                      John W. Weiser, Chairman
                                                      Robert R. Glauber
                                                      Dale R. Comey
                                                      John Loudon


                                       17


PERFORMANCE GRAPH

     Set forth below is a line graph  comparing  the yearly dollar change in the
cumulative  total  Shareholder  return over a ten year  period on the  Company's
Shares (assuming reinvestment of dividends) from June 1991 through December 2001
as compared to the  cumulative  total  return of the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock
Index and the cumulative total return of the Standard & Poor's Property Casualty
Index.  This graph assumes the  investment  of $100 in June 1991.  The Company's
shares were listed on the New York Stock Exchange on July 19, 1991.

            [REPRESENTATION OF DATA IN LINE GRAPH IN PRINTED PIECE.]

             XL Capital      S&P 500 S&P   Prop and Casualty
 Jul 91         100             100             100
 Dec 91         128.53          110.19          106.93
 Jun 92         124.22          109.45          102.92
 Dec 92         164.92          118.54          121.88
 Jun 93         169.22          124.3           124.52
 Dec 93         158.34          130.42          117.11
 Jun 94         139.72          126.02          111.75
 Dec 94         145.17          132.14          119.75
 Jun 95         194.12          158.82          131.82
 Dec 95         230.4           181.75          159.12
 Jun 96         270.24          200.09          164.41
 Dec 96         294.48          223.46          189.69
 Jun 97         416.52          269.5           232.9
 Dec 97         506.77          298.01          271.8
 Jun 98         628.81          350.76          283.35
 Dec 98         613.9           383.17          250.28
 Jun 99         469.15          430.6           242.25
 Dec 99         438.6           463.8           183.07
 Jun 00         466.24          461.81          174.22
 Dec 00         761.83          421.59          279.28
 Jun 01         724.35          393.38          283.25
 Dec 01         814.53          371.55          252.6


*    The performance  shown above is not necessarily  indicative of future price
     performance.

AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

     The primary  purpose of the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors is to
assist the Board of Directors in fulfilling its  responsibilities to oversee the
participation  of management in the financial  reporting  process of the Company
and the  role and  responsibilities  of the  independent  auditors,  who  report
directly to the Audit Committee.  The Audit Committee comprises five independent
directors and operates under a written charter adopted and approved by the Board
of Directors on May 12, 2001, which is attached as Appendix A hereto.  It is not
the  responsibility  of the  Audit  Committee  to plan or  conduct  audits or to
determine that the Company's financial  statements are complete and accurate and
are in accordance with generally  accepted  accounting  principles.  This is the
responsibility of management and the independent auditors, as appropriate. It is
also not the  responsibility  of the Audit  Committee to assure  compliance with
laws and regulations and the Company's Code of Ethics or to set or determine the
adequacy of the Company's reserves.

     Based on the Audit Committee's review of the audited financial  statements,
its discussions with management regarding the audited financial statements,  its
receipt of written disclosures and the letter from independent auditors required
by  Independence  Standards  Board  Standard  No.  1, its  discussions  with the
independent auditor regarding such auditor's independence, the audited financial
statements,  the matters  required to be discussed by the  Statement on Auditing
Standards 61 as amended and other matters the Audit  Committee  deemed  relevant
and appropriate,  the Audit Committee recommended to the Board of Directors that
the Company's  audited  financial  statements for the fiscal year ended December
31, 2001 be included in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for such fiscal
year.

                                                    AUDIT COMMITTEE
                                                    John T. Thornton, Chairman
                                                    Brian Corby
                                                    Paul Jeanbart
                                                    Cyril Rance
                                                    Ellen E. Thrower


                                       18



AUDIT FEES

     The aggregate fees billed by  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP for  professional
services rendered for the audit of the Company's annual financial statements for
the year ended December 31, 2001 and for the review of the financial  statements
included in the Company's  Quarterly  Reports on Form 10-Q during the year ended
December 31, 2001 were approximately $4.2 million.

FINANCIAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION FEES

     PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP billed $3.5 million for  professional  services
rendered  to  the  Company  for  information  technology  services  relating  to
financial  information  systems  design and  implementation  for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2001.  These fees primarily  related to the  continuation  of
projects commenced in 1999 and 2000.

ALL OTHER FEES

     The  aggregate  fees  billed  by  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP for  services
rendered to the Company,  other than the services  described  above under "Audit
Fees" and "Financial  Information  Systems Design and Implementation  Fees", for
the fiscal  year ended  December  31, 2001 were $7.0  million.  Included in this
amount is $1.3  million  of fees  related  to other  attestation  services  that
comprised the audits for  insurance  statutory  and  regulatory  purposes in the
various  jurisdictions  in which the  Company  operates,  and the  provision  of
certain  opinions  relating to the  Company's  filings  with the SEC,  including
opinions delivered to securities  underwriters in connection with various equity
and debt offerings during fiscal year 2001. This attestation work is in addition
to the amounts  included in "Audit Fees" above.  Of the  remaining  fees in this
category,  approximately  $4.7  million  related  to due  diligence,  merger and
integration-related  services in connection  with the Company's  acquisition  of
Winterthur International during fiscal year 2001.

GENERAL

     The  Audit  Committee  considered  whether  the  provision  of  information
technology  consulting services relating to financial information systems design
and  implementation  and other non-audit  services  performed by the independent
auditors   is   compatible   with   maintaining   PricewaterhouseCoopers   LLP's
independence.


                     II. APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

     The  Audit  Committee  and the  Board of  Directors  have  recommended  the
appointment  of   PricewaterhouseCoopers   LLP,  New  York,  New  York,  as  the
independent  auditors of the Company  for the fiscal  year ending  December  31,
2002.  Representatives  of the firm are  expected  to be  present  at the Annual
General  Meeting with an opportunity to make a statement if they desire to do so
and to be available to respond to appropriate questions.

     YOUR  BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE FOR THE  PROPOSAL  TO APPOINT
PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP, NEW YORK, NEW YORK.


                                       19




             III. AMENDMENT AND RESTATEMENT OF THE 1991 PERFORMANCE
                                INCENTIVE PROGRAM

     The Board of  Directors  of the Company has  amended  and  restated  the XL
Capital Ltd 1991  Performance  Incentive  Program  (the  "Program"),  subject to
Shareholder approval.

     The principal  amendments to the Program are as follows. The maximum number
of shares available for grant under the Program have been increased by 8,000,000
shares,  resulting in a total of approximately  10,000,000  shares available for
grant if such  increase is approved.  The number of shares that can be issued as
restricted  shares,  performance shares and performance units under the Program,
(I.E. awards other than stock options and stock appreciation rights) after March
8, 2002 will be limited to 1,000,000. Consistent with the Company's longstanding
policies,  the  Program  has also been  formally  amended to provide  that stock
options  cannot be issued  with an  exercise  price per share less than the fair
market value per share at the date of grant,  stock  options  cannot have a term
longer than 10 years, and stock options and stock  appreciation  rights will not
be repriced without shareholder approval.

     The shareholders are now requested to approve the amendment and restatement
of the Program.  The  following  summary of the amended and restated  Program is
qualified in its entirety by express reference to the Program, which is attached
as Appendix B to this proxy statement.

GENERAL

     The  Program is  intended  to provide  incentives  to  attract,  retain and
motivate  employees  and  directors  of the  Company  and its  subsidiaries  and
affiliates in order to achieve the Company's  long-term growth and profitability
objectives.  The Program  will provide for the grant to eligible  employees  and
directors of stock  options,  share  appreciation  rights  ("SARs"),  restricted
stock,  performance shares, and performance units (the "Awards").  An additional
8,000,000  shares of Common  Stock have been  reserved  for  issuance  under the
Program (of which during a calendar  year (i) the maximum  number of shares with
respect to which  options and SARs may be granted to an  individual  participant
under the Program will be 5,000,000  shares,  and (ii) the  performance  shares,
performance  units,  and restricted  stock granted to an individual  participant
intended to qualify as performance-based compensation shall be not more than the
equivalent of 150,000 shares), subject to anti-dilution adjustments in the event
of certain  changes in the  Company's  capital  structure,  as described  below.
Shares  issued  pursuant to the Program will be either  authorized  but unissued
shares or treasury shares.

ELIGIBILITY AND ADMINISTRATION

     Officers  and other  employees  of the  Company  and its  subsidiaries  and
affiliates  and  directors of the Company will be eligible to be granted  Awards
under  the  Program.  The  Program  will  be  administered  by the  Compensation
Committee or such other Board committee or subcommittee (or the entire Board) as
may be designated by the Board (the  "Committee").  The Committee will determine
which eligible employees and directors receive Awards, the types of Awards to be
received and the terms and conditions thereof. The Committee will have authority
to waive conditions  relating to an Award or accelerate  vesting of Awards.  The
actual number of employees who will receive  awards under the Program  cannot be
determined  because  selection for  participation  in the Program is in the sole
discretion of the Committee.

AWARDS

     Incentive  stock  options  ("ISOs")  intended  to qualify  for  special tax
treatment  in  accordance  with the  Code and  nonqualified  stock  options  not
intended to qualify for special tax treatment  under the Code may be granted for
such number of shares of Common Stock as the Committee determines. The Committee
will be  authorized  to set the  terms  relating  to an  option,  including  the
exercise  price  and the time and  method  of  exercise.  The terms of ISOs will
comply with the provisions of Section 422 of the Code.  ISOs may only be granted
to employees.

     Awards  of  restricted  stock  will  be  subject  to such  restrictions  on
transferability  and other  restrictions,  if any, as the  Committee may impose.
Such restrictions will lapse under circumstances as the Committee may determine.
Except as otherwise  determined by the  Committee,  eligible  employees  granted
restricted  stock will have all of the rights of a  stockholder,  including  the
right to vote restricted stock and receive dividends thereon.

     Performance  shares and performance  units will provide for future issuance
of shares or payment of cash, respectively, to the recipient upon the attainment
of corporate performance goals established by the Committee over


                                       20



specified  performance  periods.  Prior to  payment  of  performance  shares  or
performance  units,  the Committee will certify that the performance  objectives
were satisfied. Performance objectives may vary from employee to employee.

     If  the  Committee   determines  that  an  award  of  performance   shares,
performance units or restricted stock should qualify under the performance-based
compensation  exception  to the $1 million cap on  deductibility  under  Section
162(m) of the Code, the grant, vesting and/or settlement of such awards shall be
contingent upon achievement of pre-established performance goals based on one or
more of the  following  business  criteria  for the Company,  on a  consolidated
basis,  and/or for  specified  subsidiaries  or  business  units of the  Company
(except  with  respect to the total  stockholder  return and  earnings per share
criteria):  earnings  per  share;  revenues;  cash  flow;  cash  flow  return on
investment; return on assets; return on investment; return on capital; return on
equity;  economic value added;  operating margin;  net income;  pretax earnings;
pretax earnings before interest, depreciation and amortization; pretax operating
earnings  after  interest  expense  and before  incentives,  service  fees,  and
extraordinary or special items;  operating  earnings;  total stockholder return;
and any of the above  goals as  compared to the  performance  of a published  or
special index deemed applicable by the Committee including,  but not limited to,
the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index.

NONTRANSFERABILITY

     Unless otherwise set forth by the Committee in an award  agreement,  Awards
will generally not be transferable by the participant  other than by will or the
laws of descent and distribution and will be exercisable  during the lifetime of
the  participant  only by  such  participant  or his or her  guardian  or  legal
representative.

CAPITAL STRUCTURE CHANGES

     In the event of stock dividends, stock splits, recapitalizations,  mergers,
consolidations,  combinations,  exchanges  of shares,  spin-offs,  liquidations,
reclassifications or other similar changes in the capitalization of the Company,
the number of shares of common stock available for grant under the Program shall
be adjusted  proportionately  or otherwise by the Board of Directors,  and where
deemed  appropriate,  the number of shares covered by outstanding stock options,
the number of performance shares and shares of restricted stock outstanding, and
the option price of outstanding stock options shall be similarly adjusted.

AMENDMENT AND TERMINATION

     The Board of  Directors  of the  Company  may, at any time and from time to
time, suspend or terminate the Program in whole or amend it from time to time in
such  respects as the Board of  Directors  of the Company may deem  appropriate;
provided,  however,  that,  without the consent of an affected  participant,  no
amendment,  suspension,  or termination of the Program may adversely  affect the
rights of such participant under any award theretofore granted to him or her.

MARKET VALUE

     The per share closing  price of the  Company's  Shares on April 1, 2002 was
$92.51.

FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

     The  following  is a  summary  of the  United  States  federal  income  tax
consequences  of the Program,  based upon current  provisions  of the Code,  the
Treasury  regulations  promulgated  thereunder and  administrative  and judicial
interpretation  thereof,  and does not address the consequences under any state,
local or foreign tax laws.

STOCK OPTIONS

     In  general,  the  grant of an option  will not be a  taxable  event to the
recipient  and it  will  not  result  in a  deduction  to the  Company.  The tax
consequences  associated  with the  exercise  of an  option  and the  subsequent
disposition  of shares of common  stock  acquired on the exercise of such option
depend on whether the option is a nonqualified stock option or an ISO.

     Upon the exercise of a  nonqualified  stock option,  the  participant  will
recognize  ordinary  taxable income equal to the excess of the fair market value
of the shares of common stock received upon exercise over the exercise price. If
the participant is employed by a United States  subsidiary,  the subsidiary will
generally be able to claim a deduction in an equivalent amount. Any gain or loss
upon a subsequent sale or exchange of the shares of common


                                       21



stock will be capital gain or loss,  long-term or  short-term,  depending on the
holding period for the shares of common stock.

     Generally,  a participant will not recognize ordinary taxable income at the
time  of  exercise  of an  ISO  and  no  deduction  will  be  available  to  the
participant's  employer,  provided the option is exercised while the participant
is an  employee or within  three  months  following  termination  of  employment
(longer,  in the case of  disability  or  death).  If an ISO  granted  under the
Program is  exercised  after these  periods,  the  exercise  will be treated for
United  States  federal  income tax purposes as the  exercise of a  nonqualified
stock  option.  Also,  an ISO  granted  under the  Program  will be treated as a
nonqualified  stock option to the extent it (together with other ISOs granted to
the  participant by the Company) first becomes  exercisable in any calendar year
for shares of common stock having a fair market value, determined as of the date
of grant, in excess of $100,000.

     If shares of common  stock  acquired  upon  exercise  of an ISO are sold or
exchanged  more than one year after the date of exercise and more than two years
after  the date of  grant of the  option,  any  gain or loss  will be  long-term
capital gain or loss. If shares of common stock acquired upon exercise of an ISO
are disposed of prior to the  expiration of these  one-year or two-year  holding
periods (a "Disqualifying Disposition"), the participant will recognize ordinary
income at the time of disposition, and the participant's employer will generally
be entitled to a deduction,  in an amount equal to the excess of the fair market
value of the shares of common  stock at the date of exercise  over the  exercise
price.  Any  additional  gain will be  treated  as capital  gain,  long-term  or
short-term, depending on how long the shares of common stock have been held.

     Although  the  exercise  of an ISO as  described  above  would not  produce
ordinary  taxable income to the  participant,  it would result in an increase in
the  participant's  alternative  minimum  taxable  income  and may  result in an
alternative minimum tax liability.

     If an  option is  exercised  through  the use of  shares  of  common  stock
previously  owned  by the  participant,  such  exercise  generally  will  not be
considered a taxable  disposition of the  previously  owned shares and, thus, no
gain or loss will be  recognized  with respect to such  previously  owned shares
upon such  exercise.  The amount of any built-in  gain on the  previously  owned
shares  generally  will not be recognized  until the new shares  acquired on the
option exercise are disposed of in a sale or other taxable transaction.

RESTRICTED STOCK

     A  participant  who  receives  shares of  restricted  stock will  generally
recognize  ordinary income at the time that they "vest",  I.E., either when they
are not  subject to a  substantial  risk of  forfeiture  or when they are freely
transferable.  The  amount of  ordinary  income so  recognized  will be the fair
market  value  of the  common  stock  at  the  time  the  income  is  recognized
(determined  without regard to any restrictions other than restrictions which by
their terms will never lapse), less the amount, if any, paid for the stock. This
amount  is  generally   deductible  for  federal  income  tax  purposes  by  the
participant's  employer.  Dividends  paid with  respect to common  stock that is
non-vested  will  be  ordinary  compensation  income  to  the  participant  (and
generally  deductible by the employer).  Any gain or loss upon a subsequent sale
or exchange of the shares of common stock,  measured by the  difference  between
the sale price and the fair market value on the date restrictions lapse, will be
capital gain or loss,  long-term or short-term,  depending on the holding period
for the shares of common stock.  The holding  period for this purpose will begin
on the date following the date restrictions lapse.

     In lieu of the treatment described above, a participant may elect immediate
recognition  of income  under  Section  83(b) of the Code.  In such  event,  the
participant  will  recognize as income the fair market  value of the  restricted
stock at the time of grant (determined  without regard to any restrictions other
than restrictions  that by their terms will never lapse),  and the participant's
employer will generally be entitled to a corresponding deduction. Dividends paid
with respect to shares as to which a proper Section 83(b) election has been made
will not be  deductible.  If a Section 83(b) election is made and the restricted
stock is subsequently  forfeited,  the  participant  will not be entitled to any
offsetting tax deduction.

SARS AND OTHER AWARDS

     With respect to SARs, performance shares, and performance units, generally,
when a  participant  receives  payment with respect to any such Award granted to
him or her under the Program, the amount of cash and the fair


                                       22



market  value of any other  property  received  will be ordinary  income to such
participant  and will be allowed as a deduction for federal  income tax purposes
to the employer.

DEDUCTIBILITY LIMIT ON COMPENSATION IN EXCESS OF $1 MILLION

     Section 162(m) of the Code generally limits the deductible amount of annual
compensation  paid  (including,   unless  an  exception  applies,   compensation
otherwise  deductible in connection  with Awards granted under the Program) by a
public company to a "covered  employee" (I.E.,  the chief executive  officer and
four other most highly compensated executive officers of the Company) to no more
than $1 million.  The  Company  currently  intends to  structure  stock  options
granted under the Program to comply with an exception to non-deductibility under
Section 162(m) of the Code in order to maximize the tax deductions  available to
United States based subsidiaries of the Company.

NEW PROGRAM BENEFITS

     The amount of benefits  that will be granted  under the  Program  cannot be
determined at this time.

     YOUR BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE FOR THE  PROPOSAL TO AMEND AND
RESTATE THE PROGRAM.


                                       23




             IV. PROPOSAL TO ADOPT THE EMPLOYEE SHARE PURCHASE PLAN

     The Company's  Board of Directors has adopted the Employee  Share  Purchase
Plan pursuant to which employees of the Company and its designated  subsidiaries
may be entitled to purchase  ordinary shares of the Company.  The Employee Share
Purchase Plan is intended to enhance the Company's ability to attract and retain
employees  and to better  enable such persons to  participate  in the  long-term
success and growth of the Company.

     The material  features of the Employee  Share  Purchase  Plan are described
below,  but this  description is only a summary and is qualified in its entirety
by reference to the actual text of the Employee  Share  Purchase Plan. A copy of
the Employee Share Purchase Plan is attached as Appendix C hereto.

ADMINISTRATION

     The Employee Share Purchase Plan will be administered by a committee of the
Board of Directors of the Company (the "Committee").

     Subject to the express  provisions of the Employee Share Purchase Plan, the
Committee has the power to determine  the terms and  conditions of each offering
of shares to employees thereunder. The Committee also has authority to adopt and
revise  rules,  guidelines  and  practices  governing the plan, to interpret the
terms  and  provisions  of the plan and any  offering  made  thereunder,  and to
otherwise supervise the administration of the plan.

STOCK SUBJECT TO THE PLAN

     A total of  1,225,000  ordinary  shares of the  Company  are  reserved  for
issuance under the Employee Share Purchase Plan, subject to equitable adjustment
by the Committee in the event of stock  dividends,  recapitalizations  and other
similar corporate events.

ELIGIBILITY

     All employees of the Company or any of its  participating  subsidiaries who
have been employed for at least six months (or another period  determined by the
Committee  not in excess of two years) will be eligible to purchase  stock under
the  plan.  The  participating  subsidiaries  will be  those  designated  by the
Committee to participate in the Employee Share Purchase Plan.

OPERATION OF THE PLAN

     The plan is designed to qualify as an "employee  share purchase plan" under
Section 423 of the U.S.  Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code").
The plan will allow  participating  employees to purchase ordinary shares of the
Company through payroll withholding. The plan provides for consecutive six month
offering  periods (or other  periods of not more than 27 months as determined by
the  Committee)  under which  participating  employees can elect to have amounts
withheld from their total compensation during the offering period and applied to
purchase  ordinary  shares  of the  Company  at the  end of the  period.  Unless
otherwise  determined by the Committee before an offering  period,  the purchase
price will be the lesser of 85% of the fair market  value of ordinary  shares of
the Company at the  beginning or end of the offering  period.  Unless  otherwise
determined by the Committee,  the maximum number of shares that may be purchased
by an employee in any offering is 1,000  shares.  In addition,  applicable  Code
limitations  specify,  in general,  that a participant's right to purchase stock
under the plan cannot accrue at a rate in excess of $25,000  (based on the value
at the beginning of the applicable offering periods) per calendar year.

AMENDMENTS AND TERMINATION

     The Employee Share Purchase Plan will terminate when all shares  authorized
to be  issued  under  it  have  been  exhausted.  The  Board  of  Directors  may
discontinue  the Employee  Share Purchase Plan at any time and may amend it from
time to time.  Amendments  may be made without  shareholder  approval  except as
required to satisfy Section 423 of the Code.

NEW PLAN BENEFITS

     The  amount of  benefits  payable in the future  under the  Employee  Share
Purchase  Plan  is not  currently  determinable  and,  as of the  date  of  this
prospectus, no stock has been granted under this plan.


                                       24



FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

     The  following  is a summary  of  certain  of the U.S.  federal  income tax
consequences to participants in the plan and to the Company,  based upon current
provisions of the Code and the regulations and rulings thereunder,  and does not
address the consequences under state, local, foreign or any other applicable tax
laws. A participating employee in the plan will not recognize income at the time
a purchase  right is granted at the beginning of an offering  period or when the
employee  purchases  shares  at the end of the  offering  period.  However,  the
employee  will be taxed on amounts  withheld  from  salary  under the plan as if
actually received, and a participating subsidiary that employs the employee will
generally be entitled to a corresponding income tax deduction.

     If a participating  employee  disposes of shares purchased  pursuant to the
plan after one year from the end of the applicable offering period and two years
from the beginning of the applicable  offering period, the employee must include
in gross income as compensation (as ordinary income and not as capital gain) for
the taxable year of  disposition an amount equal to the lesser of (a) the excess
of the fair  market  value of the  shares  at the  beginning  of the  applicable
offering  period  over the  purchase  price  computed  on the  first  day of the
offering  period or (b) the excess of the fair market value of the shares at the
time of  disposition  over their purchase  price.  Thus, if the one and two year
holding periods described above are met, the participating  employee's  ordinary
compensation  income will be limited to the discount  available on the first day
of  the  applicable  offering  period.  If the  amount  recognized  upon  such a
disposition  by way of sale or exchange of the shares exceeds the purchase price
plus the amount, if any, included in income as ordinary compensation income, the
excess will be long-term  capital gain. If the one and two year holding  periods
described above are met, the Company and its participating subsidiaries will not
be entitled to any income tax deduction.

     If the  participating  employee disposes of shares within one year from the
end of the  applicable  offering  period or two years from the  beginning of the
offering  period,  the employee will  recognize  ordinary  income at the time of
disposition which will equal the excess, if any, of the fair market value of the
shares on the date the  participating  employee  purchases the shares (i.e., the
end of the applicable  offering  period) over the amount paid for the shares.  A
participating subsidiary that employs the employee will generally be entitled to
a corresponding income tax deduction.

     The excess,  if any, of the amount  recognized on disposition of the shares
over their  fair  market  value on the date of  purchase  (I.E.,  the end of the
applicable  offering  period)  will  be  short-term  capital  gain,  unless  the
participating  employee's holding period for the shares (which will begin at the
time of purchase at the end of the  offering  period) is more than one year.  If
the  participating  employee  disposes of the shares for less than the  purchase
price for the shares,  the  difference  between the amount  recognized  and such
purchase  price will be a long- or short-term  capital loss,  depending upon the
holding period for the shares.

     YOUR BOARD OF DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS THAT SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR THE PROPOSAL
TO ADOPT THE EMPLOYEE SHARE PURCHASE PLAN.



                                       25



                V. SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 2003 ANNUAL MEETING

     Shareholder proposals intended for inclusion in the Proxy Statement for the
2003 Annual  General  Meeting of  Shareholders  should be sent to the  Company's
Secretary at XL House, One Bermudiana Road,  Hamilton HM 11, Bermuda and must be
received by December 7, 2002. In addition, if a shareholder intends to present a
proposal at the 2003 Annual  General  Meeting  other than pursuant to Rule 14a-8
under the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, and if the proposal is not received
by the Company's  Secretary by February 20, 2003, then the proxies designated by
the Board of  Directors  of the Company for the 2003 Annual  General  Meeting of
Shareholders  may vote in their  discretion  on any such proposal any Shares for
which they have been  appointed  proxies  without  mention of such matter in the
Proxy Statement for such meeting or on the proxy card for such meeting.

     Any  Shareholder  entitled  to vote at a meeting may  nominate  persons for
election as Directors  if written  notice of such intent is delivered or mailed,
postage  prepaid,  and  received by the  Secretary  at the  principal  executive
offices  of the  Company  not less than 5 days nor more than 21 days  before the
date  appointed  for such  meeting.  The  shareholder  notice  must  include the
following  information about the proposed  nominee:  (a) name, age, and business
and residence addresses;  (b) principal occupation or employment;  (c) class and
number of Shares or securities of the Company  beneficially  owned;  and (d) any
other information  required to be disclosed in solicitations of proxies pursuant
to Regulation 14A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, including the proposed
nominee's  written  consent to serve if elected.  The notice  must also  include
information  on  the   Shareholder   making  the   nomination,   including  such
Shareholder's  name and  address as it appears  on the  Company's  books and the
class and number of Shares of the Company  beneficially owned. The nomination of
any  person  not made in  compliance  with  the  foregoing  procedures  shall be
disregarded.


                                       26



                                VI. OTHER MATTERS

     While  management  knows of no other issues,  if any other matters properly
come  before  the  meeting,  it is the  intention  of the  persons  named in the
accompanying  proxy form to vote the proxy in accordance  with their judgment on
such matters.

PROXY SOLICITATION

     The Company will bear the cost of this solicitation of proxies. Proxies may
be  solicited  by  Directors,  officers  and  employees  of the  Company and its
subsidiaries  without  receiving  additional  compensation.  In  addition to the
foregoing,  the Company has  retained  Georgeson & Company Inc. to assist in the
solicitation  of proxies  for a fee of  approximately  $10,000  plus  reasonable
out-of-pocket expenses and disbursements of that firm. Upon request, the Company
will also reimburse  brokers and others holding stock in their names,  or in the
names of nominees, for forwarding proxy materials to their principals.

     THE COMPANY WILL FURNISH, WITHOUT CHARGE TO ANY SHAREHOLDER,  A COPY OF ITS
ANNUAL  REPORT ON FORM  10-K  THAT IT FILES  WITH THE  SECURITIES  AND  EXCHANGE
COMMISSION.  A COPY OF THIS REPORT FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED  DECEMBER  31, 2001
MAY BE OBTAINED UPON WRITTEN REQUEST TO THE COMPANY'S SECRETARY AT XL HOUSE, ONE
BERMUDIANA ROAD, HAMILTON HM 11, BERMUDA.

                                     As ordered,


                                     Brian M. O'Hara
                                     PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER


                                       27



                                                                      APPENDIX A

                                 XL CAPITAL LTD

                             AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER

ORGANIZATION

     The  Board  of  Directors  shall  designate  annually  an  Audit  Committee
comprised of three or more Directors,  each of whom is independent of management
and the Company and free of any relationship  which, in the opinion of the Board
of  Directors,  would  interfere  with the  Director's  exercise of  independent
judgment  as a  Committee  member.  The Audit  Committee  shall  comply with all
applicable rules and regulations of the New York Stock Exchange.

PURPOSE

     The  primary  purpose  of the Audit  Committee  is to  assist  the Board of
Directors in fulfilling its  responsibilities  to oversee the  participation  of
management and the independent  auditors in the financial  reporting  process of
the Company. Without limiting the foregoing, it is not the responsibility of the
Audit  Committee to plan or conduct  audits or to determine  that the  Company's
financial  statements  are  complete and  accurate  and are in  accordance  with
generally  accepted  accounting  principles.   This  is  the  responsibility  of
management and the independent  auditors.  It is also not the  responsibility of
the Audit  Committee  to assure  compliance  with laws and  regulations  and the
Company's  Code of Ethics or to set or determine  the adequacy of the  Company's
reserves.

MEETINGS

     The Committee  shall meet at least four times each year, or more frequently
as circumstances dictate. In order to foster open communications,  the Committee
shall meet at least annually with management, the director of the internal audit
department  and the  independent  auditors  in  separate  executive  sessions to
discuss any matters that the Committee or each of these groups  believes  should
be discussed privately.

RELATIONSHIP WITH INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

     The Company's independent auditors are ultimately  accountable to the Board
of Directors and the Audit  Committee,  and the Board of Directors and the Audit
Committee have the ultimate  authority and  responsibility to select,  evaluate,
and, where  appropriate,  replace the independent  auditors.  Additionally,  the
Audit Committee shall:

     o  Obtain  from  the  independent  auditors  each  year  a  formal  written
        statement  delineating  all  relationships  between the auditors and the
        Company;

     o  Periodically  engage in a dialogue with and require  disclosure from the
        independent  auditors  regarding all  relationships or services that may
        impact the objectivity and independence of the auditors; and

     o  Recommend  that the  Board  of  Directors  take  appropriate  action  in
        response  to the  outside  auditor's  report  to  satisfy  itself of the
        outside auditor's independence.

RESPONSIBILITIES

The Audit Committee shall:

     Review with Company  management and the  independent  auditors the proposed
overall  plan and scope of the  Company's  annual  audit,  the  adequacy  of the
Company's  system of internal  controls,  and the  Company's  audited  financial
statements and related disclosures.

     Discuss with the  independent  auditors their  judgments about the quality,
not just the acceptability, of the Company's accounting principles as applied in
its  financial  reporting  and  any   recommendations   made  by  the  Company's
independent auditors concerning its system of internal controls.

     Approve the fees and  expenses of the  independent  auditors in  connection
with the  Company's  annual  audit  and  review  the fees  and  expenses  of the
independent  auditors in connection with services rendered apart from the annual
audit.


                                       A-1




     Review  annually with the General  Counsel and the Compliance  Director the
Company's Code of Ethics, as well as the  administration,  training,  monitoring
and auditing of the related Compliance Program.

     Review any  exceptions  to the  Company's  Code of Ethics  and the  actions
management has taken to resolve the exceptions.

     Review  with the  Company's  General  Counsel  any  legal,  regulatory  and
environmental matters that may have a material impact on the Company's financial
statements.

     Review the activities of the Company's internal audit department, including
the proposed annual audit plan,  periodic  progress reports on the status of the
plan, and summaries of any  significant  issues raised during the performance of
internal audits.

     Review  the  reserving  methodology  and  process  of the  Company  and the
Company's  reserves,  together  with internal or external  actuarial  reports or
studies.

     Review and assess the adequacy of the Audit Committee  Charter on an annual
basis.

     Review and assess  compliance with all applicable  rules and regulations of
the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  and  the  New  York  Stock  Exchange
specifically  applicable to the  composition and  responsibilities  of the Audit
Committee.

     Review the effects of new and proposed accounting  standards  applicable to
the Company.

     Perform such other  activities  as the  Committee or the Board of Directors
may from time to time deem necessary or appropriate.


                                       A-2



                                                                      APPENDIX B


                                 XL CAPITAL LTD

                       1991 PERFORMANCE INCENTIVE PROGRAM
                 AS AMENDED AND RESTATED EFFECTIVE MARCH 8, 2002

                                 I. INTRODUCTION

A.   PURPOSE OF THE PROGRAM

     XL Capital Ltd (the  "Company") has  established the Program to further its
long-term financial success by offering stock, and stock-based compensation,  to
employees and  directors of the Company  whereby they can share in achieving and
sustaining such success. The Program also provides a means to attract and retain
the  executive  talent  needed to achieve  the  Company's  long-term  growth and
profitability objectives.

B.   DEFINITIONS

     When used in the Program,  the following  terms shall have the meanings set
forth below:

     "Award(s)" shall mean Performance Shares, Restricted Stock, Incentive Stock
Options,  Nonstatutory Stock Options,  Stock Appreciation  Rights or Performance
Units granted under the Program.

     "Board" shall mean the Board of Directors of the Company.

     "Change  of  Control"  shall be  deemed  to have  occurred  if and when any
person, meaning an individual,  a partnership,  or other group or association as
defined in Sections 13(d) and 14(d) of the United States Securities Exchange Act
of 1934  (other  than a group of which the Grantee is a member or which has been
organized by the Grantee for the purpose of making such acquisition),  acquires,
directly or indirectly,  40 percent or more of the combined  voting power of the
outstanding  securities of the Company having a right to vote in the election of
directors.  Ownership of 40 percent or more of the combined  voting power of the
outstanding  securities  of the  Company by any person  controlled  directly  or
indirectly  by the  Company  shall  not be  deemed a Change  of  Control  of the
Company.

     "Code"  shall mean the United  States  Internal  Revenue  Code of 1986,  as
amended.

     "Committee" shall mean the entire Board or the Compensation  Committee,  or
such other  committee or  subcommittee  of the Board as may be designated by the
Board to administer the Program.

     "Common Stock" shall mean the ordinary shares of the Company,  par value of
$0.01 per share, and may be either stock previously  authorized but unissued, or
stock required by the Company.

     "Company"  shall mean XL Capital  Ltd, a Cayman  Islands  corporation,  any
other  entity in which XL Capital  Ltd owns 20% or more of the  ordinary  voting
power or equity, and any successor in a reorganization or similar transaction.

     "Disability"  shall mean the  inability  of a  Participant  to perform  the
services  normally rendered due to any physical or mental impairment that can be
expected to be of either permanent or indefinite duration,  as determined by the
Committee on the basis of appropriate medical evidence,  and that results in the
Participant's Termination of Employment; provided, however, that with respect to
any Participant  who has entered into an employment  agreement with the Company,
the  term of  which  has not  expired  at the  time a  determination  concerning
Disability is to be made,  Disability shall have the meaning  attributed in such
employment agreement.

     "Fair  Market  Value"  shall mean with  respect to a given day, the closing
sales price of Common Stock, as reported by such responsible  reporting  service
as the  Committee  may select,  or if there were no  transactions  in the Common
Stock on such day, then the last preceding day of which transactions took place.
The foregoing notwithstanding, the Committee may determine the Fair Market Value
in such other manner as it may deem more  appropriate for Program purposes or as
is required by applicable laws or regulations.


                                       B-1



     "Incentive  Stock  Option"  or "ISO"  shall  mean a right to  purchase  the
Company's Common Stock which is intended to comply with the terms and conditions
for an incentive  stock option as set forth in Section 422 of the Code,  or such
other sections of the Code as may be in effect from time to time.

     "Nonstatutory  Stock  Option" or "NQSO"  shall mean a right to purchase the
Company's  Common  Stock  which is not  intended  to  comply  with the terms and
conditions for a tax-qualified  stock option, as set forth in Section 422 of the
Code, or such other sections of the Code as may be in effect from time to time.

     "Participant"  shall mean any employee of the Company and any member of the
Board  (whether or not an employee of the  Company)  who, in the judgment of the
Committee,  is  in  a  position  to  make  a  substantial  contribution  to  the
management,  growth,  and success of the Company and is thus  designated  by the
Committee to receive an Award.

     "Performance  Goal" shall mean any financial,  statistical or other measure
selected by the Committee,  including without limitation (a) the attainment of a
specified  financial  or  statistical  objective or (b) the  performance  of the
Company relative to a peer group as applicable to a specific Performance Period.

     "Performance  Period" shall mean a period set by the  Committee  over which
Performance  Shares or Performance  Units may be earned.  There may be more than
one  Performance  Period in  existence  at any one  time,  and the  duration  of
Performance Periods may differ from each other.

     "Performance  Shares" shall mean Common Stock granted to a Participant with
respect to a Performance Period under Article III of the Program,  together with
any other rights  attached  thereto or associated  therewith  including  without
limitation any right to receive cash in connection therewith.

     "Performance  Unit" shall mean a cash award made  pursuant to Section VI of
the Program.

     "Program" shall mean the Company's 1991 Performance Incentive Program.

     "Restricted  Stock"  shall  mean a  share  of  common  stock  granted  to a
Participant  under Article IV of the Plan.  Restricted  Stock awards entitle the
Participant  to receive  shares of Common Stock which have certain  restrictions
that lapse upon satisfaction of conditions  imposed by the Committee at the time
of award.

     "Retirement"  shall  mean,  except  as  otherwise  set  forth  in an  Award
agreement,   a  Participant's   Termination  of  Employment  by  reason  of  the
Participant's  retirement  at his normal  retirement  date,  pursuant  to and in
accordance  with  a  pension,  retirement  or  similar  plan  or  other  regular
retirement  practice of the Company,  or in accordance with the early retirement
provisions thereof.

     "Stock Appreciation Rights" or "SARs" shall mean a contingent right granted
to a Participant  with respect to Stock  Options  granted under Article V of the
Plan,  which grants the Participant the right to receive the difference  between
the Fair Market  Value of the Common Stock on the date of exercise and the price
at which the SAR was granted.

     "Termination of Employment" shall mean a cessation of the employee-employer
relationship  between a  Participant  and the  Company for any reason or, in the
case of a member of the  Board,  termination  of the  director's  service on the
Board for any reason.

                           II. PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION

A.   ADMINISTRATION

     The Program shall be administered by the Committee.  Subject to the express
provisions of the Program, the Committee shall have full and exclusive authority
to interpret the Program, to prescribe,  amend and rescind rules and regulations
relating to the Program and to make all other determinations deemed necessary or
advisable in the  implementation  and  administration of the Program;  provided,
however,  that subject to the express  provisions  hereof or unless  required by
applicable law or regulation,  no action of the Committee shall adversely affect
the terms and conditions of any Award made to, or any rights  hereunder or under
any grant letter of, any Participant,  without such Participant's  consent.  The
Committee's  interpretation  and construction of the Program shall be conclusive
and binding on all persons, including the Company and all Participants.


                                       B-2



B.   PARTICIPATION

     The Committee may, from time to time, make all determinations  with respect
to  selection  of  Participants  and the Award or Awards to be  granted  to each
Participant. In making such determinations,  the Committee may take into account
the nature of the services rendered or expected to be rendered by the respective
Participants, their present and potential contributions to the Company's success
and such other factors as the Committee in its discretion shall deem relevant.

C.   MAXIMUM NUMBER OF SHARES AVAILABLE

     Subject to  adjustment  as provided  under  Article II,  Paragraph D of the
Program, (i) the maximum number of shares which may be granted under the Program
after March 8, 2002 is 10,000,000 shares plus shares which  subsequently  become
available as a result of  forfeitures,  cancellation or expiration of options or
restricted stock granted under the Program or separate  agreements  entered into
before the  effective  date of the Program,  and (ii) of such maximum  number of
shares,  no more  than an  aggregate  of  1,000,000  shares  may be  granted  as
Performance  Shares,  Restricted Stock or Performance  Units after March 8, 2002
under the  Program.  In the event that a stock  option  issued under the Program
expires or is terminated unexercised as to any shares covered thereby, or shares
are forfeited for any reason under the Program,  such shares shall thereafter be
again  available  for  issuance  under  the  Program,  and the  number of shares
surrendered  in payment of any exercise or purchase price of any stock option or
other Award under the Program  will again be  available  for Awards  (other than
Incentive Stock Options) under the Program. At the Committee's discretion, these
shares may be granted as stock options,  Performance  Shares,  Restricted Stock,
Stock Appreciation Rights or any combination of these provided that the combined
total number of shares  granted does not exceed the overall share  authorization
described above.

     Subject to  adjustment  as provided  under  Article II,  Paragraph D of the
Program,  (i) the maximum number of shares of Common Stock with respect to which
stock  options and Stock  Appreciation  Rights may be granted  during a calendar
year to any Participant  under the Program shall be 5,000,000  shares,  and (ii)
with respect to  Performance  Shares,  Performance  Units or  Restricted  Shares
intended  to  qualify,  as  set  forth  in  Article  VII,  as  performance-based
compensation  within  the  meaning of Section  162(m) of the Code,  the  maximum
number of shares of Common  Stock (or amount of cash in the case of  Performance
Units) subject to such awards granted during a calendar year to any  Participant
under the Program shall be the equivalent of 150,000 shares.

     No Incentive Stock Options shall be granted after March 8, 2012.

D.   ADJUSTMENTS

     In the event of stock dividends, stock splits, recapitalizations,  mergers,
consolidations,  combinations,  exchanges  of shares,  spin-offs,  liquidations,
reclassifications or other similar changes in the capitalization of the Company,
the number of shares of Common  Stock  available  for grant  under this  Program
shall be adjusted  proportionately  or otherwise by the Board,  and where deemed
appropriate,  the number of shares  covered by outstanding  stock  options,  the
number of Performance  Share and Restricted  Stock shares  outstanding,  and the
option price of outstanding stock options shall be similarly adjusted.  Also, in
instances where another  corporation or other business entity is acquired by the
Company,  and the Company has assumed outstanding employee option grants under a
prior existing plan of acquired entity, similar adjustments are permitted at the
discretion  of the  Committee.  In the event of any other change  affecting  the
Common Stock  reserved  under the Program,  such  adjustment,  if any, as may be
deemed  equitable  by the  Board,  shall be made to give  proper  effect to such
event.

E.   REGISTRATION CONDITIONS

     1. Unless  issued  pursuant  to a  registration  statement,  under the U.S.
Securities  Act of 1933, as amended,  no shares shall be issued to a Participant
under the Program unless the Participant  represents and agrees with the Company
that such shares are being  acquired for  investment  and not with a view to the
resale or distribution  thereof,  or such other documentation as may be required
by  the  Company,  unless  in  the  opinion  of  counsel  to  the  Company  such
representation,  agreement or documentation is not necessary to comply with such
Act.

     2. Any  restriction  on the  resale of  shares  shall be  evidenced  by the
following  legend on the stock  certificate  or such other legend as the Company
deems appropriate.


                                       B-3



     "The shares  represented by this certificate have not been registered under
the  Securities  Act  of  1933,  as  amended.  The  shares  cannot  be  offered,
transferred  or sold unless (a) a  registration  statement  under such Act is in
effect  with  respect to such  shares,  or (b) a written  opinion  from  counsel
acceptable to the Company is obtained to the effect that no such registration is
required.  The Company  reserves the right to refuse the transfer of such shares
until such conditions  have been  fulfilled.  The Articles of Association of the
Company contain other restrictions on share transfers."

     Any  certificate  issued at any time in  exchange or  substitution  for any
certificate  bearing such legend (or such other legend deemed appropriate by the
Company) shall also bear such a legend unless,  in the opinion of counsel or the
Company,  the  securities  represented  thereby need no longer be subject to the
restriction  contained herein. The provisions of this paragraph shall be binding
upon all subsequent holders of certificates bearing such legend.

F.   COMMITTEE ACTION

     The Committee may,  through Award  agreements,  limit its discretion  under
this Program.  To the extent such  discretion is not  specifically  waived in an
Award agreement, the Committee shall retain such discretion.

G.   NO OPTION OR SAR REPRICING WITHOUT SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL

     Except as provided in Article II.D hereof relating to certain  antidilution
adjustments,  unless the  approval of  shareholders  of the Company is obtained,
ISOs,  NQSOs and SARs  issued  under the  Program  shall not be amended to lower
their exercise prices and ISOs, NQSOs and SARs issued under the Plan will not be
exchanged for other stock options or SARs with lower exercise prices.

                             III. PERFORMANCE SHARES

A.   GRANT OF PERFORMANCE SHARES

     After selecting  Participants who will receive Awards of Performance Shares
for a given Performance Period, the Committee shall inform each such Participant
of  the  Award  to be  granted  to the  Participant  at  the  completion  of the
Performance Period, and the applicable terms and conditions of the Award.

     The Committee  shall cause to be issued to each  Participant a grant letter
specifying the number of Performance Shares equal to his Award and the number of
Performance  Shares which may be awarded  subject to the terms and conditions of
such grant letter and the Program.

B.   ESTABLISHMENT OF PERFORMANCE GOALS

     1. The Committee shall establish the Performance Goals for each Performance
Period.  The Committee any also establish a schedule for such Performance Period
setting  forth the  percentage  of the  Performance  Share  Award  which will be
earned,  based on the extent to which the Performance Goals for such Performance
Period are  actually  achieved,  the date on which  Performance  Shares  awarded
hereunder  shall vest,  or the date on which such  Performance  Shares  shall be
forfeited  (in  whole  or in  part)  by the  Company  for  failure  to meet  the
Performance Goals, shall be as specified by the Committee.

     2. As promptly as practical after each  Performance  Period,  the Committee
shall determine whether, or the extent to which, the Performance Goals have been
achieved.  Based on such determination,  the Participant shall be deemed to have
earned  the  Performance  Shares  awarded  to him,  or a  percentage  thereof as
provided  in  any  schedule  established  by the  Committee.  In  addition,  the
Committee may, from time to time during a Performance Period and consistent with
the terms and conditions of applicable Awards and Performance  Goals,  determine
that  all or a  portion  of  the  Performance  Shares  awarded  to  one or  more
Participants have been earned.

     3. If during the course of a Performance Period, there should occur, in the
opinion of the Committee,  significant  changes in economic conditions or in the
nature of the operations of the Company,  or any other  pertinent  changes which
the  Committee  did  not  foresee  or  accurately   predict  the  extent  of  in
establishing the Performance Goals for such Performance Period and which, in the
Committee's sole judgment,  have, or are expected to have, a substantial  effect
on the performance of the Company during such Performance  Period, the Committee
may  make  such  adjustment  to the  Performance  Goals or  measurement  of such
Performance Goals as the Committee, in its sole judgment, may deem appropriate.


                                       B-4



C.   TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT

     In  the  event  of a  Participant's  Termination  of  Employment  prior  to
satisfaction of conditions  related to outstanding  Performance Share Awards for
reasons  other  than   discharge  or   resignation,   the   Participant  or  the
Participant's  estate or  beneficiary,  in the sole discretion of the Committee,
may be entitled to receive from Performance Shares held by the Corporation a pro
rata number of shares with  respect to that  Performance  Share  Award,  or such
larger portion of the Award, as the Committee shall  determine.  In the event of
Termination of Employment  due to  resignation  or discharge,  the Award will be
cancelled,   and  the   Participant   shall  not  be  entitled  to  any  further
consideration with respect to the forfeited  Performance Shares,  subject to the
discretion  of the  Committee to release  restrictions  on all or any part of an
Award.

                              IV. RESTRICTED STOCK

A.   GRANT OF RESTRICTED STOCK

     1.  Following the selection of  Participants  who will receive a Restricted
Stock  Award,  the  Committee  shall  inform each  Participant  of the number of
Restricted  Stock shares granted to the Participant and the terms and applicable
conditions of the Award.

     2. Each certificate for Restricted Stock shall be registered in the name of
the  Participant  and deposited  together with a stock power  endorsed in blank,
with the Company.

B.   OTHER TERMS AND CONDITIONS

     Company stock,  when awarded pursuant to a Restricted Stock Award,  will be
represented by a stock certificate registered in the name of the Participant who
is granted the  Restricted  Stock  Award.  Such  certificate  shall be deposited
together with a stock power endorsed in blank with the Company.  The Participant
shall be entitled to receive  dividends and all other  distributions  during the
restriction period and shall have all shareholder's  rights with respect to such
stock,  if any, with the exception  that: (1) the  Participant  may not transfer
ownership of the shares during the restriction period except by will or the laws
of  descent  and  distribution,  (2) the  Participant  will not be  entitled  to
delivery of the stock certificate during the restriction period, (3) the Company
will  retain  custody of the stock  during the  restriction  period,  and (4), a
breach of a restriction or a breach of the terms and  conditions  established by
the Committee  pursuant to the Restricted Stock Award will cause a forfeiture of
the Restricted Stock shares.  The Committee may impose additional  restrictions,
terms, or conditions upon the Restricted Stock Award.

C.   RESTRICTED STOCK AWARD AGREEMENT

     Each Restricted  Stock Award shall be evidenced by a Restricted Stock Award
Agreement in such form and containing such terms and conditions not inconsistent
with the  provisions  of the  Program as the  Committee  from time to time shall
approve.

D.   TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT

     In  the  event  of a  Participant's  Termination  of  Employment  prior  to
satisfaction of conditions  related to outstanding  Restricted  Stock Awards for
reasons  other  than   discharge  or   resignation,   the   Participant  or  the
Participant's  estate or  beneficiary,  in the sole discretion of the Committee,
may be entitled to receive from Restricted  Stock shares held by the Corporation
a pro rata number of shares with respect to that Restricted Stock Award, or such
larger portion of the Restricted  Stock Award, as the Committee shall determine.
In the event of Termination  of Employment due to resignation or discharge,  all
Restricted  Stock  shares  held  by the  Company  shall  be  forfeited,  and the
Participant shall not be entitled to any further  consideration  with respect to
the  forfeited  Restricted  Stock  shares,  subject  to  the  discretion  of the
Committee to release of  restrictions  on all or any part of an Award, or unless
otherwise stated in the Restricted Stock Agreement.

E.   PAYMENT FOR RESTRICTED STOCK

     Restricted  Stock  Awards  may be made by the  Committee  under  which  the
Participant shall, upon payment of the par value, or, in the alternative,  under
which the Participant  shall pay all (or any lesser amount than all) of the Fair
Market Value of the stock,  determined as of the date the Restricted Stock Award
is made, receive a Restricted


                                       B-5



Stock  Award.  If payment is  required,  such  purchase  price  shall be paid as
provided in the Restricted Stock Award Agreement.

                                V. STOCK OPTIONS

A.   STOCK OPTION TERMS AND CONDITIONS

     All stock  options  granted  to  Participants  under the  Program  shall be
evidenced by agreements  which shall be subject to applicable  provisions of the
Program,  and such other  provisions as the  Committee may adopt,  including the
following provisions:

     1.   PRICE:  The  option  price per  share of  Nonstatutory  Stock  Options
          (NQSOs) and Incentive  Stock Options (ISOs) shall not be less than 100
          percent  of the Fair  Market  Value of a share of Common  Stock on the
          date of grant.

     2.   PERIOD:  An ISO shall not be  exercisable  for a term  longer than ten
          years from date of its grant.  NQSOs shall have a term not longer than
          ten years from the date of grant.

     3.   TIME OF  EXERCISE:  The  Committee  may  prescribe  the  timing of the
          exercise  of  the  stock  option  and  any  minimums  and  installment
          provisions and may accelerate the time at which a stock option becomes
          exercisable.

     4.   EXERCISE  PROCEDURES:  A stock option,  or portion  thereof,  shall be
          exercised by delivery of a written  notice of exercise to the Company,
          and payment of the full price of the shares being purchased.

     5.   PAYMENT:  The price of an exercised stock option,  or portion thereof,
          may be paid:

          a.   in cash or by check,  bank  draft or money  order  payable to the
               order of the Company; or

          b.   through  the  delivery  of shares of  Common  Stock  owned by the
               Participant,  having an aggregate Fair Market Value as determined
               on the date of exercise equal to the option price; or

          c.   by a combination of both a and b above.  The Committee may impose
               such  limitations  and  prohibitions  on the use of any shares of
               Common Stock to exercise a stock option as it deems appropriate.

     6.   SPECIAL RULE FOR INCENTIVE  STOCK OPTIONS:  Notwithstanding  any other
          provisions  of the  Program,  the  aggregate  Fair Market Value of the
          shares of Common Stock,  determined as of the time the stock option is
          granted,  for which the Participant may first exercise Incentive Stock
          Options in any  calendar  year shall not exceed U.S.  $100,000 or such
          other  individual  employee  grant limit as may be in effect under the
          Code.

     7.   EFFECT OF LEAVES OF ABSENCE:  It shall not be considered a Termination
          of Employment  when a Participant is placed by the Company on military
          leave, sick leave or other bona fide leave of absence. In case of such
          leave of absence,  the employment  relationship  for Program  purposes
          shall be  continued  until the  later of the date  when such  leave of
          absence  equals  ninety  days  or  when  the  Participant's  right  to
          reemployment  with the Company shall no longer be guaranteed either by
          statute or contract.

     8.   TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT:  In the event of Termination of Employment,
          the following  provisions  shall apply unless waived by the Committee,
          or as otherwise specifically provided in the Stock Option Agreement:

          a.   Discharge for Cause: All outstanding options shall be cancelled.

          b.   Termination Other Than for Cause:  Unless and except as otherwise
               specified in a Participant's  agreement, all options shall expire
               on the  earlier  of (i) 90  days  following  the  Termination  of
               Employment or (ii) the expiration of the full term of the option.

     Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  the  Committee  may  rescind the right to
exercise stock options  following  Termination of Employment if the  Participant
has been found to be directly or indirectly  engaged in any activity which is in
competition with the Company or otherwise adverse to or not in the best interest
of the Company.  Further, no option agreement for ISOs may extend their exercise
period beyond the time allowed by the Code.

B.   STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS (SARS)

     1. Stock  options  granted  under the  Program  may be  granted  with Stock
Appreciation  Rights  attached on a  one-to-one  basis.  SARs are subject to all
terms and conditions of the related stock options. SARs may only be granted


                                       B-6



     in connection with a stock option,  and as such are subject to the limit on
shares  authorized  under Article II,  Paragraph C. A Stock  Appreciation  Right
shall entitle the Participant to receive from the Company an amount equal to the
positive  difference between the Fair Market Value of a share of Common Stock on
the  exercise  of the Stock  Appreciation  Right and the  exercise  price of the
related stock option.

     2. Stock Appreciation  Rights will be subject to all applicable  provisions
of the Program,  as well as any other  provisions  the Committee may adopt.  The
exercise of an SAR will result in the  cancellation of the related stock option,
and options so  cancelled  shall not be  available  for future  awards under the
Program.  The exercise,  expiration,  forfeiture or other termination of a stock
option will result in termination of the attached SAR.

                           VI. PERFORMANCE UNIT AWARDS

     A. Each Award shall be subject to the limitations and terms provided in the
Program. A new Award may commence on the first anniversary date of the preceding
Award. The Committee shall grant to each Participant in a Performance Unit Award
a  number  of units  with a target  cash  value as shall be  established  by the
Committee prior to the first year of each Performance Period.

     B. To allow for recognition of significant individual  contributions to the
Company's performance,  individual awards of Performance Units may be granted to
new  Participants  during  the  first  year  of a  Performance  Period,  at  the
discretion of the Committee.

     C. Performance Unit Awards for each Participant shall be recommended by the
Chief   Executive   Officer  and   submitted  to  the  Committee  for  approval.
Participants  will generally be notified of their  individual  Performance  Unit
Award within the first six months of a Performance Period.

     D. Performance Goals for each Performance Period will be recommended by the
Chief  Executive  Officer of the Company,  and  submitted to the  Committee  for
approval.

     E. Once a  Performance  Period  has begun and  Performance  Goals have been
established,  they may not be changed for that Performance  Period except in the
event of:

     1.   A significant  acquisition of another business concern by the Company,
          as deemed by the Committee;

     2.   A disposition of a significant part of the business by the Company, as
          deemed by the Committee;

     3.   An external calamitous event, such as a natural disaster,  which has a
          significant effect on the Company, as determined by the Committee;

     4.   Any  significant  changes  due  to  legislation,   as  deemed  by  the
          Committee; or

     5.   Any other extraordinary event, as deemed by the Committee.

     F. A  performance  valuation  schedule  shall be  recommended  by the Chief
Executive Officer of the Company and approved by the Committee before grants are
made under the  Program.  The  Committee  shall  approve or modify the  proposed
schedule  which will contain  various levels of  performance  and  corresponding
Performance Unit values.

     G. At the end of a Performance  Period,  the Committee  shall review actual
performance and determine the Award payouts, if any.

     H. In the event of a Participant's  Termination of Employment  prior to the
satisfaction of conditions  related to outstanding  Performance  Unit Awards for
reasons  other  than  discharge  or  resignation,   the   Participant,   or  the
Participant's  estate or  beneficiary,  in the sole discretion of the Committee,
may be entitled to receive a pro-rata  distribution  of outstanding  Performance
Unit Awards.  In the event of  Termination  of Employment  due to resignation or
discharge,  all  Awards  will be  cancelled,  and the  Participant  shall not be
entitled to any further  consideration with respect to the forfeited Performance
Units, subject to the discretion of the Committee.

                             VII. PERFORMANCE AWARDS

A.   PERFORMANCE AWARDS GRANTED TO DESIGNATED PARTICIPANTS

     If  the  Committee   determines  that  an  award  of  Performance   Shares,
Performance  Units or  Restricted  Stock to be granted to a  Participant  should
qualify as "performance-based compensation" for purposes of Section 162(m) of


                                       B-7



the Code, the grant, vesting and/or settlement of such award shall be contingent
upon achievement of  preestablished  performance goals and other terms set forth
in this Article VII.A.

     1.  PERFORMANCE  GOALS  GENERALLY.  The  performance  goals for such awards
("Performance  Awards")  shall  consist of one or more  business  criteria and a
targeted level or levels of  performance  with respect to each of such criteria,
as specified by the Committee  consistent  with this Article VII.A.  Performance
goals shall be objective and shall  otherwise meet the  requirements  of Section
162(m) of the Code and regulations thereunder (including Regulation 1.162-27 and
successor   regulations   thereto).   The  Committee  may  determine  that  such
Performance  Awards shall be granted,  vested and/or settled upon achievement of
any one performance  goal or that two or more of the  performance  goals must be
achieved as a condition to grant,  vesting and/or settlement of such Performance
Awards.  Performance goals may differ for Performance  Awards granted to any one
Participant or to different Participants.

     2. BUSINESS  CRITERIA.  One or more of the following  business criteria for
the Company,  on a  consolidated  basis,  and/or for specified  subsidiaries  or
business  units of the Company  (except  with  respect to the total  stockholder
return and  earnings  per share  criteria),  shall be used by the  Committee  in
establishing  performance  goals for such Performance  Awards:  (1) earnings per
share;  (2) revenues;  (3) cash flow;  (4) cash flow return on  investment;  (5)
return on assets, return on investment, return on capital, return on equity; (6)
economic value added;  (7) operating  margin;  (8) net income;  pretax earnings;
pretax earnings before interest, depreciation and amortization; pretax operating
earnings  after  interest  expense  and before  incentives,  service  fees,  and
extraordinary  or  special  items;  operating  earnings;  (9) total  stockholder
return;  and (10) any of the above  goals as compared  to the  performance  of a
published or special index deemed applicable by the Committee including, but not
limited to, the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index.

     3.  PERFORMANCE   PERIOD.   Timing  for  Established   Performance   Goals.
Achievement of performance goals in respect of such Performance  Awards shall be
measured over a performance  period, as specified by the Committee.  Performance
goals shall be  established  not later than 90 days after the  beginning  of any
performance period applicable to such Performance  Awards, or at such other date
as may be required  or  permitted  for  "performance-based  compensation"  under
Section 162(m) of the Code.

     4.  SETTLEMENT  OF  PERFORMANCE  AWARDS.  Other Terms.  Settlement  of such
Performance  Awards  shall be in cash,  Common Stock or other  property,  in the
discretion of the Committee.  The Committee may, in its  discretion,  reduce the
amount of a settlement  otherwise to be made in connection with such Performance
Awards, but may not exercise discretion to increase any such amount payable to a
the Participant in respect of a Performance Award subject to this Article VII.A.
The Committee shall specify the  circumstances in which such Performance  Awards
shall be paid or  forfeited in the event of  Termination  of  Employment  by the
Participant  prior  to  the  end  of  a  performance  period  or  settlement  of
Performance Awards.

B.   WRITTEN DETERMINATION

     All  determinations by the Committee as to the establishment of performance
goals or potential  individual  Performance  Awards and as to the achievement of
performance goals relating to Performance  Awards under Article VII.A.  shall be
made in  writing in the case of any award  intended  to  qualify  under  Section
162(m) of the Code.

                            VIII. GENERAL PROVISIONS

A.   AMENDMENT AND TERMINATION OF PROGRAM

     The Board may, at any time and from time to time,  suspend or terminate the
Program in whole or amend it from time to time in such respects as the Board may
deem appropriate;  provided,  however,  that, without the consent of an affected
Participant,  no  amendment,  suspension,  or  termination  of the  Program  may
adversely  affect the  rights of such  Participant  under any Award  theretofore
granted to him or her.

B.   GOVERNMENT AND OTHER REGULATIONS

     The right of the Company to issue Awards under the Program shall be subject
to all  applicable  laws,  rules and  regulations,  and to such approvals by any
government agencies as may be required.


                                       B-8



C.   OTHER COMPENSATION PLANS AND PROGRAMS

     The Program shall not be deemed to preclude the  implementation  by Company
of other  compensation  plans or  programs  which may be in effect  from time to
time.

D.   MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

     1. NO RIGHT TO CONTINUE EMPLOYMENT:  Nothing in the Program or in any Award
confers upon any  Participant the right to continue in the employ of the Company
or  interferes  with or  restricts  in any  way the  rights  of the  Company  to
discharge any Participant at any time for any reason whatsoever, with or without
cause.

     2. NON-TRANSFERABILITY: Except as otherwise determined by the Committee and
set  forth in the  applicable  Award  Agreement,  prior to  being  earned  under
Articles  III,  IV,  or VI,  or being  exercised  under  Article  V, no right or
interest  of any  Participant  in any  Award  under  the  Program  shall  be (a)
assignable  or  transferable,  except  by  will  or  the  laws  of  descent  and
distribution or a valid beneficiary  designation  taking effect at death made in
accordance with procedures  established by the Committee,  or (b) liable for, or
subject  to,  any lien,  obligation  or  liability,  except to the  extent  that
Non-Qualified  Stock Options may be pledged as security in a margin  account for
their exercise.

     3. DESIGNATION OF BENEFICIARY: A Participant, in accordance with procedures
established by the Committee,  may designate a person or persons to receive,  in
the event of the Participant's death, (a) any payments with respect to which the
Participant would then be entitled, and (b) the right to continue to participate
in the  Program to the extent of such  Participant's  outstanding  Awards.  Such
designation  shall be made upon forms  supplied by and  delivered to the Company
and may be revoked in writing.

     4. WITHHOLDING  TAXES: The Company may require a payment from a Participant
to cover  applicable  withholding for income and employment  taxes.  The Company
reserves  the right to offset such tax payment from any other funds which may be
due the Participant by the Company.

     5. PROGRAM  EXPENSES:  Any expenses of  administering  the Program shall be
borne by the Company.

     6.  CONSTRUCTION  OF  PROGRAM:  The  interpretation  of the Program and the
application of any rules  implemented  hereunder  shall be determined  solely in
accordance with the laws of the State of New York.

     7. UNFUNDED PROGRAM:  The Program shall be unfunded,  and the Company shall
not be required to segregate any assets which may at any time be  represented by
Awards.  Any  liability  of the Company to any person  with  respect to an Award
under this  Program  shall be based  solely  upon any  obligations  which may be
created by this Program: no such obligation of the Company shall be deemed to be
secured by any pledge or other encumbrance on any property of the Company.

     8. BENEFIT PLAN  COMPUTATIONS:  Any benefits  received or amounts paid to a
Participant  with respect to any Award  granted under the Program shall not have
any effect on the level of benefits  provided to or received by any Participant,
or the Participant's estate or beneficiary, as part of any employee benefit plan
(other than the Program) of the Company.

     9.  PRONOUNS,  SINGULAR AND PLURAL:  The masculine may be read as feminine,
the singular as plural and the plural as singular as necessary to give effect to
the Program.

E.   EFFECTIVE DATES

     The  amendment  and  restatement  of the Program  will become  effective on
approval  by the Board of the  Company,  subject to  shareholder  approval.  All
outstanding Awards shall remain in effect until all outstanding awards have been
earned, have been exercised or repurchased, have expired or have been cancelled.


                                       B-9



                                                                      APPENDIX C


                                 XL CAPITAL LTD

                          EMPLOYEE SHARE PURCHASE PLAN

1.   PURPOSE

     The purpose of this Plan is to provide an  opportunity  for employees of XL
Capital Ltd (the  "Company")  and its  Participating  Subsidiaries,  to purchase
ordinary  shares of the Company and thereby to have an  additional  incentive to
contribute to the prosperity of the Company.  It is the intention of the Company
that the Plan qualify as an "employee  share purchase plan" under Section 423 of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), although the Company
makes no undertaking nor representation to maintain such qualification.

2.   DEFINITIONS

     The  following  terms,  when used in the  Plan,  shall  have the  following
meanings:

(a)  "Board"  or  "Board of  Directors"  means  the  Board of  Directors  of the
     Company, as constituted from time to time.

(b)  "Code"  means the Internal  Revenue  Code of 1986,  as amended from time to
     time.  References to a particular section of the Code include any successor
     provisions.

(c)  "Committee"  means the  committee  appointed  by the Board of  Directors to
     administer the Plan pursuant to the provisions of Section 3(a) below.

(d)  "Common Stock" means the ordinary  shares,  par value US$0.01 per share, of
     the Company.

(e)  "Company" means XL Capital Ltd, a Cayman Islands corporation.

(f)  "Fair Market Value" on a particular date means the mean between the highest
     and lowest sales prices of a share of Common Stock on the  principal  stock
     exchange  or stock  market  on which  the  Common  Stock  may be  listed or
     admitted to trading.  If there were no sales on such date,  the  respective
     prices on the most recent prior day on which sales were  reported  shall be
     used. If the foregoing  method of  determining  fair market value should be
     inconsistent  with Section 423 of the Code,  "Fair  Market  Value" shall be
     determined by the Committee in a manner  consistent with Section 423 of the
     Code and shall mean the value as so determined.

(g)  "Offering"  means a period,  designated by the Committee in accordance with
     the  provisions of Section 6 of the Plan, on the first day of which options
     will be granted to eligible  employees pursuant to Section 8(a) of the Plan
     and on the last day of which such options will be deemed  exercised or will
     expire, as applicable, in accordance with Section 8(b) of the Plan.

(h)  "Participant" or "Participating  Employee" means an employee of the Company
     or a Participating Subsidiary who is eligible to participate in an Offering
     under the Plan pursuant to Section 5 below and who elects to participate in
     such Offering in accordance with Section 6 below.

(i)  "Participating  Subsidiary"  means,  with respect to an Offering  under the
     Plan, a Subsidiary  the employees of which are  authorized by the Committee
     as provided in Section 5 below to participate in such Offering.

(j)  "Plan"  means the XL Capital Ltd  Employee  Share  Purchase  Plan set forth
     herein, as amended from time to time.

(k)  "Parent"  means a parent  corporation  as defined in Section  424(e) of the
     Code, including a corporation, which becomes such a parent in the future.

(l)  "Subsidiary" means a subsidiary corporation as defined in Section 424(f) of
     the Code,  including a corporation,  which becomes such a subsidiary in the
     future.

(m)  "Total  Compensation"  means,  with  respect  to  any  Offering,  the  cash
     compensation  received by a  Participating  Employee  from the Company or a
     Participating  Subsidiary for services,  including  overtime,  premium pay,
     commissions  and annual bonus,  in each case prior to reduction for pre-tax
     contributions  made to a plan or salary  reduction  contributions to a plan
     excludable from income under Sections 125 or 402(g) of the Code.


                                       C-1



     Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  "Total  Compensation"  shall not  include
     severance pay,  stay-on  bonuses,  retirement  income,  welfare benefits or
     income  derived  from share  options,  share  appreciation  rights or other
     equity-based compensation.

3.   ADMINISTRATION

     (a) The Plan shall be administered  by a committee of the Board  consisting
of two or more directors appointed from time to time by the Board.

     (b)  Subject to the  provisions  of the Plan,  the powers of the  Committee
shall include having the authority, in its discretion, to:

          (i)  define,   prescribe,   amend  and  rescind  rules,   regulations,
               procedures, terms and conditions relating to the Plan; and

          (ii) interpret,  administer  and  construe the Plan and make all other
               determinations  necessary or advisable for the  administration of
               the  Plan,  including  but not  limited  to  correcting  defects,
               reconciling inconsistencies and resolving ambiguities.

     (c) The  interpretation by the Committee of the terms and conditions of the
Plan, and its administration of the Plan, and all action taken by the Committee,
shall be  final,  binding  and  conclusive  on the  Company,  its  stockholders,
Subsidiaries,   all  Participants  and  employees,  and  upon  their  respective
successors and assigns, and upon all other persons claiming under or through any
of them.

     (d)  Members of the Board,  members of the  Committee  and  persons to whom
authority is delegated  under Section 3(e) below acting under this Plan shall be
fully  protected  in relying in good faith upon the advice of counsel  and shall
incur no liability except for gross or willful  misconduct in the performance of
their duties.

     (e) The Committee may delegate its authority to administer  the Plan to any
individuals  as the Committee may  determine  and such  individuals  shall serve
solely at the pleasure of the Committee.  Any  individuals who are authorized by
the Committee to administer  the Plan shall have the full power to act on behalf
of the Committee, but shall at all times be subordinate to the Committee and the
Committee shall retain ultimate authority for the administration of the Plan.

4.   STOCK SUBJECT TO THE PLAN

     (a)  Subject to  paragraph  (c) below,  the  aggregate  number of shares of
Common  Stock  that may be sold  under  the Plan is  1,225,000  shares of Common
Stock.

     (b) If the number of shares of Common  Stock that  Participating  Employees
become entitled to purchase is greater than the number of shares of Common Stock
that are offered in a  particular  Offering or that remain  available  under the
Plan,  the available  shares of Common Stock shall be allocated by the Committee
among  such  Participating  Employees  in  such  manner  as it  deems  fair  and
equitable.

     (c)  In  the  event  of  any   change   in  the   Common   Stock,   through
recapitalization, merger, consolidation, stock dividend or split, combination or
exchange of shares, spin-off or otherwise, the Committee may make such equitable
adjustments in the Plan and the then outstanding Offerings as it deems necessary
and appropriate including,  but not limited to, changing the number of shares of
Common Stock  reserved  under the Plan,  and the purchase price of shares in the
current  Offering;  provided that any such adjustments  shall be consistent with
Sections 423 and 424 of the Code.

     (d) Shares of Common Stock which are to be delivered  under the Plan may be
obtained by the Company from its treasury, by purchasing such shares on the open
market or from private sources,  or by issuing authorized but unissued shares of
its Common  Stock.  Shares of  authorized  but unissued  Common Stock may not be
delivered  under the Plan if the  purchase  price  thereof  is less than the par
value (if any) of the Common Stock at the time. The Committee may (but need not)
provide at any time or from time to time (including  without  limitation upon or
in  contemplation of a change in control) for a number of shares of Common Stock
equal in number to the number of shares then subject to options  under this Plan
to be issued or  transferred  to, or  acquired  by, a trust  (including  but not
limited  to a  grantor  trust)  for the  purpose  of  satisfying  the  Company's
obligations  under such options,  and, unless prohibited by applicable law, such
shares held in trust shall be considered  authorized and issued shares with full
dividend  and  voting  rights,  notwithstanding  that the  options to which such
shares relate might not be exercisable at the time.


                                       C-2



5.   ELIGIBILITY

     (a)  All  employees  of the  Company  and  any  Participating  Subsidiaries
designated by the Committee from time to time will be eligible to participate in
the Plan, in accordance  with and subject to such rules and  regulations  as the
Committee may  prescribe;  provided,  however,  that (a) such rules shall comply
with  the  requirements  of the  Code  (including  but not  limited  to  Section
423(b)(3),  (4) and (8)  thereof),  (b) the  Committee may (but need not) in its
discretion  exclude  employees  who  have  been  employed  by the  Company  or a
Participating Subsidiary less than two years and/or highly compensated employees
within  the  meaning  of  Section  414(q) of the Code  from  being  eligible  to
participate  in the  Plan  or any  Offering,  but  unless  and  until  otherwise
determined by the Committee, only employees who have been employed less than six
months will be excluded,  and (c) no employee may be granted an option under the
Plan if such  employee,  immediately  after the  option is  granted,  owns stock
possessing 5% or more of the total combined voting power or value of all classes
of stock of his employer corporation or any Parent or Subsidiary (with the rules
of Section 424(d) of the Code  applicable in determining  the stock ownership of
an  employee,  and stock  which the  employee  may  purchase  under  outstanding
options,  whether or not such  options  qualify for the  special  tax  treatment
afforded by Section 421 (a) of the Code,  shall be treated as stock owned by the
employee),  and (d) all  Participating  Employees shall have the same rights and
privileges under the Plan except for differences  which may be mandated by local
law and which are consistent with Section 423(b)(5) of the Code.

6.   OFFERINGS; PARTICIPATION

     The  Company  may make  Offerings  of up to 27 months'  duration  each,  to
eligible  employees to purchase shares of Common Stock under the Plan, until all
shares  authorized to be delivered  under the Plan have been  exhausted or until
the Plan is sooner terminated by the Board.  Subject to the preceding  sentence,
the number,  commencement date and duration of any Offerings shall be determined
by the Committee in its sole  discretion;  provided  that,  unless the Committee
determines otherwise,  (a) the first Offering shall commence on July 1, 2002 and
shall  terminate on December 31, 2002,  and (b) a new six-month  Offering  shall
commence immediately after the end of the previous Offering. The duration of any
Offering  need not be the same as the duration of any other  Offering,  and more
than one Offering may commence or terminate on the same date if the Committee so
provides.  Subject to such rules and  procedures as the Committee may prescribe,
an eligible  employee may elect to participate in an Offering at such time(s) as
the  Committee  may permit by  authorizing  a payroll  deduction  (to the extent
permitted by applicable local law) for such purpose in one percent increments of
up to a maximum of twenty percent of his or her Total  Compensation with respect
to  such  Offering  or  such  lesser  amount  as the  Committee  may  prescribe.
Participant  elections  may be  made in any  manner  deemed  appropriate  by the
Committee  from  time to  time,  including  by voice  response  or  through  the
internet.  The Committee may (but need not) permit employee  contributions to be
made by means other than payroll deductions,  provided that in no event shall an
employee's  contributions  (excluding  interest,  if any,  credited  pursuant to
Section 7(a) below) from all sources in any Offering  exceed  twenty  percent of
his or her Total  Compensation  with  respect to such  Offering  or such  lesser
amount as the Committee may prescribe.  The Committee may at any time suspend or
accelerate  the  completion  of an  Offering if required by law or deemed by the
Committee to be in the best interests of the Company,  including in the event of
a change in ownership or control of the Company or any Subsidiary.

7.   PAYROLL DEDUCTIONS

     (a) The Company will maintain payroll  deduction  accounts on its books for
all  Participating  Employees,  and  may  (but  need  not,  unless  required  by
applicable  law)  credit  such  accounts  with  interest  if (and  only  if) the
Committee so directs at such rate (if any) as the Committee may  prescribe.  All
employee  contributions  and  any  interest  thereon  which  the  Committee  may
authorize in accordance  with the preceding  sentence  shall be credited to such
accounts.  Employee  contributions  and any  interest  credited  to the  payroll
deduction  accounts of  Participating  Employees  need not,  unless  required by
applicable  law, be  segregated  from other  corporate  funds and, to the extent
permitted by applicable law, may be used for any corporate purpose.

     (b) At such times as the Committee may permit and subject to such rules and
procedures as the Committee may prescribe,  a Participating Employee may suspend
his or her payroll deduction during an Offering,  or may withdraw the balance of
his or her payroll deduction account and thereby withdraw from  participation in
an Offering.

     (c) Any balance remaining in an employee's  payroll deduction account after
shares have been purchased in an Offering pursuant to Section 8(b) below will be
refunded to the Participating Employee. Upon termination of the


                                       C-3



Plan, all amounts in the accounts of  Participating  Employees  shall be carried
forward into their payroll deduction accounts under a successor plan, if any, or
refunded to them, as the Committee may decide.

     (d)  In  the  event  of  the  termination  of  a  Participating  Employee's
employment for any reason,  his or her  participation  in any Offering under the
Plan shall cease, no further amounts shall be deducted  pursuant to the Plan and
the  balance  in the  employee's  account  shall be paid as soon as  practicable
following such  termination  of employment to the employee,  or, in the event of
the employee's death, to the employee's  beneficiary  designated under this Plan
or, in the absence of such a beneficiary designation, to the employee's estate.

8.   PURCHASE; LIMITATIONS

     (a) Subject to Section 5 above and within the  limitations  of Section 8(d)
below, each person who is an eligible employee of the Company or a Participating
Subsidiary on the first day of an Offering  under the Plan is hereby  granted an
option, on the first day of such Offering,  to purchase a number of whole and/or
partial  shares  of  Common  Stock  at the end of such  Offering  determined  by
dividing  twenty  percent (or such lesser  percentage as may be specified by the
Committee as the maximum employee  contribution  percentage in such Offering) of
such  employee's  Total  Compensation  with respect to such Offering,  plus such
interest (if any) as the  Committee  may  authorize  to be credited  during such
Offering in accordance with Section 7(a) above, by 85 percent of the Fair Market
Value of a share of Common  Stock on the first date of such  Offering  or on the
last date of such Offering,  whichever is lower, provided that in no event shall
the number of shares of Common Stock that may be purchased under any such option
exceed 1,000 shares or such higher or lower number of whole or partial shares as
the  Committee  may have  specified  in advance of such  Offering as the maximum
amount of stock which may be  purchased  by an employee  in such  Offering.  The
purchase  price  of such  shares  under  such  options  shall be  determined  in
accordance with Section 8(c) below. The Company's obligation to sell and deliver
Common  Stock in any Offering or pursuant to any such option shall be subject to
the  approval  of  any  governmental  authority  whose  approval  the  Committee
determines  it is  necessary  or  advisable  to  obtain in  connection  with the
authorization, issuance, offer or sale of such Common Stock.

     (b) As of the last day of the Offering,  the payroll  deduction  account of
each  Participating  Employee  shall be totaled.  Subject to the  provisions  of
Section 7(b) above and 8(d) below, if such account contains  sufficient funds as
of that date to purchase one or more whole or partial  shares of Common Stock at
the price determined under Section 8(c) below, the Participating  Employee shall
be conclusively  deemed to have exercised the option granted pursuant to Section
8(a) above for as many whole or partial  shares of Common Stock as the amount of
his or her payroll deduction account  (including any contributions made by means
other than  payroll  deductions  and  including  any  interest  credited  to the
account) at the end of the Offering can purchase  (but in no event for more than
the total  number of shares that are  subject to the  option);  such  employee's
account  will be charged  for the amount of the  purchase  and for all  purposes
under the Plan the employee  will be deemed to have  acquired the shares on that
date; and either a stock certificate  representing such shares will be issued to
him or her, or the  Company's  record keeper will make an entry on its books and
records  evidencing  that such shares have been duly issued or transferred as of
that date,  as the Committee  may direct.  Notwithstanding  any provision of the
Plan to the contrary,  unless otherwise determined by the Committee,  fractional
shares may be purchased  under the Plan. Any option granted  pursuant to Section
8(a) above which is not deemed  exercised  as of the last day of the Offering in
accordance  with the  foregoing  provisions of this Section 8(b) shall expire on
that date.

     (c) Unless the  Committee  determines  before the first day of an  Offering
that a higher price that complies with Section 423 of the Code shall apply,  the
price at which shares of Common Stock may be purchased under each option granted
pursuant to Section  8(a) above shall be the lesser of (i) an amount equal to 85
percent of the Fair Market  Value of the Common Stock at the time such option is
granted,  or (ii) an amount  equal to 85 percent of the Fair Market Value of the
Common Stock at the time such option is exercised.

     (d) In addition to any other limitations set forth in the Plan, no employee
may be  granted  an option  under the Plan  which  permits  his or her rights to
purchase  stock under the Plan,  and any other stock purchase plan of his or her
employer  corporation  and its Parent and  Subsidiary  that is  qualified  under
Section 423 of the Code, to accrue at a rate which exceeds US$25,000 of the Fair
Market Value of such stock  (determined  at the time such option is granted) for
each calendar year in which the option is outstanding at any time. The Committee
may  further  limit the  amount of Common  Stock  that may be  purchased  by any
employee during an Offering in accordance with Section 423(b)(5) of the Code.


                                       C-4



9.   NO TRANSFER

     (a) No option,  right or benefit under the Plan may be  transferred  by any
employee,  whether by will, the laws of descent and distribution,  or otherwise,
and all options,  rights and benefits under the Plan may be exercised  during an
employee's lifetime only by such employee.

     (b) Book  entry  accounts  and  certificates  for  shares of  Common  Stock
purchased  under the Plan may be maintained or  registered,  as the case may be,
only in the name of the Participating Employee or, if such employee so indicates
on his or her payroll deduction  authorization  form, in his or her name jointly
with a member of his or her family, with right of survivorship.

10.  COMMITTEE RULES FOR FOREIGN JURISDICTIONS.

     With respect to employees  of the Company or any  Subsidiary  who reside or
work outside the United States, the Committee may, in its sole discretion, adopt
rules or procedures  relating to the operation and administration of the Plan to
accommodate  the specific  requirements  of local laws and  procedures.  Without
limiting  the  generality  of  the  foregoing,  the  Committee  is  specifically
authorized  to  adopt  rules  and  procedures   regarding  handling  of  payroll
deductions,  payment of interest,  conversion  of local  currency,  payroll tax,
withholding  procedures and handling of stock certificates which vary with local
requirements.  The Committee may also, where it deems it appropriate,  establish
one or more  separate  plans  to  reflect  such  amended  or  varied  rules  and
procedures.

11.  EFFECTIVE DATE AND DURATION OF PLAN

     The Plan shall become  effective  when adopted by the Board,  provided that
the stockholders of the Company approve it within 12 months  thereafter.  If not
so approved  by  shareholders,  the Plan shall be null,  void and of no force or
effect.  If so  approved,  the Plan  shall  remain  in effect  until all  shares
authorized to be issued or  transferred  hereunder  have been exhausted or until
the Plan is sooner  terminated  by the Board of  Directors,  and may continue in
effect  thereafter  with respect to any options  outstanding at the time of such
termination if the Board of Directors so provides.

12.  AMENDMENT AND TERMINATION OF THE PLAN

     The Plan may be  amended  by the Board of  Directors,  without  shareholder
approval,  at any time and in any respect,  unless  shareholder  approval of the
amendment in question is required  under  Section 423 of the Code.  The Plan may
also be terminated at any time by the Board of Directors.

13.  GENERAL PROVISIONS

     (a)  Nothing  contained  in this Plan  shall be  deemed to confer  upon any
person any right to continue as an employee of or to be  associated in any other
way  with  the  Company  for any  period  of time or at any  particular  rate of
compensation.

     (b) No person  shall have any rights as a  stockholder  of the Company with
respect to any shares  optioned  under the Plan until such  shares are issued or
transferred to him or her.

     (c) All expenses of adopting and  administering  the Plan shall be borne by
the Company, and none of such expenses shall be charged to any employee.

     (d) The Plan shall be governed by and construed under the laws of the State
of New York, without giving effect to the principles of conflict of laws of that
State.

     (e) The Company  shall not be under any  obligation  to issue  Common Stock
upon the  exercise of any option  unless and until the  Company  has  determined
that: (i) it and the Participant have taken all actions required to register the
Common Stock under the  Securities  Act of 1933, or to perfect an exemption from
the registration  requirements  thereof; (ii) any applicable listing requirement
of any stock  exchange on which the Common  Stock is listed has been  satisfied;
and (iii) all other  applicable  provisions  of state,  federal  and  applicable
foreign law have been satisfied.


                                       C-5



[LOGO] XL CAPITAL                              2002  ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
                                               MAY 10, 2002
                                               HAMILTON, BERMUDA



                     THERE ARE THREE WAYS TO VOTE YOUR PROXY




             TELEPHONE                                        INTERNET                                       MAIL
                                                                                         
This   method  is   available   for             Visit  the   Internet   website  at            Simply complete, sign and date
residents  of the U.S.  and Canada.             http:// proxy.georgeson.com.  Enter            your  Proxy Card and return it
On a  touch  tone  telephone,  call             the  COMPANY   NUMBER  AND  CONTROL            in the postage-paid  envelope.
TOLL FREE 1 o 800 o 786 o 5337,  24             NUMBER  shown  below and follow the            If  you  are  delivering  your
hours  a day,  7 days a  week.  You             instructions    on   your   screen.            proxy  by   telephone  or  the
will be  asked  to  enter  ONLY the             Available until 5 p.m. Eastern Time            Internet,  please  do not mail
CONTROL  NUMBER shown  below.  Have             on Thursday, May 9, 2002.                      your Proxy Card.
your Proxy Card ready,  then follow
the   pre-recorded    instructions.
Available until 5 p.m. Eastern Time
on Thursday, May 9, 2002.


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      COMPANY NUMBER                                   CONTROL NUMBER
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          TO DELIVER YOUR PROXY BY MAIL, PLEASE DETACH PROXY CARD HERE

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[X] PLEASE MARK YOUR
    VOTE AS INDICATED
    IN THIS EXAMPLE.


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THE  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS   RECOMMENDS  A  VOTE  "FOR"  PROPOSALS  1  THROUGH  4
(INCLUSIVE.)



                                                FOR  AGAINST                                                    FOR  AGAINST ABSTAIN
                                                                                                     
1.To elect the following six Nominees as         [ ]   [ ] 2. To appoint PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, New York   [ ]    [ ]    [ ]
  Class I Directors to hold office until 2005:                to act as the Independent Auditors of the Company
                                                              for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2002.
    (01)    R. Bornhuetter   (02) M.P. Esposito
    (03)    R.R. Glauber     (04) P. Jeanbart              3. To approve the amendment and restatement of the   FOR  AGAINST ABSTAIN
    (05)    C. Rance         (06) E.E. Thrower                Company's 1991 Performance Incentive Program.     [ ]    [ ]    [ ]

INSTRUCTION: To withhold authority to vote for any nominee
listed, write that nominee's name in the  space provided   4. To approve the Company's Employee Share           FOR  AGAINST ABSTAIN
below:                                                        Purchase Plan.                                    [ ]    [ ]    [ ]

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                                           DATE: --------------------------,2002


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


                                           -------------------------------------
                                                        SIGNATURE(S)

                                           IMPORTANT:  Please sign exactly as
                                           your name(s)  appear(s) hereon. If
                                           you      are       acting       as
                                           attorney-in-fact,        corporate
                                           officer,   or   in   a   fiduciary
                                           capacity,   please   indicate  the
                                           capacity in which you are signing.





















                          PLEASE DETACH PROXY CARD HERE

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PROXY


                                 XL CAPITAL LTD

          THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

The  undersigned  Shareholder of XL Capital Ltd hereby  appoints Brian M. O'Hara
or,  failing  him,  Paul  S.  Giordano  to be its  proxy  and to  vote  for  the
undersigned on all matters arising at the meeting or any adjournment thereof and
to represent the undersigned at the Annual General Meeting of Shareholders of XL
Capital Ltd to be held on May 10, 2002 in Hamilton, Bermuda.


THE SHARES  REPRESENTED  HEREBY  WILL BE VOTED WITH THE  INSTRUCTIONS  CONTAINED
HEREIN.  IF NO  INSTRUCTION  IS GIVEN,  THE SHARES  WILL BE VOTED  "FOR" ITEMS 1
THROUGH  4  (INCLUSIVE)  ON THE  REVERSE  HEREOF,  ALL SAID  ITEMS  BEING  FULLY
DESCRIBED IN THE NOTICE OF SUCH MEETING AND THE  ACCOMPANYING  PROXY  STATEMENT,
RECEIPT OF WHICH ARE  ACKNOWLEDGED.  THE  UNDERSIGNED  RATIFIES AND CONFIRMS ALL
THAT SAID PROXIES OR THEIR SUBSTITUTES MAY LAWFULLY DO BY VIRTUE HEREOF.

       (Continued, and to be marked, dated and signed, on the other side)


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                                                                SEE REVERSE SIDE
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