Marsh o Putnam o Mercer
Marsh & McLennan Companies




                                                   2004
                                                   Notice of Annual Meeting
                                                   And Proxy Statement


                 [MARSH & MCLENNAN COMPANIES, INC. LETTERHEAD]


Dear MMC Stockholder:

You are cordially invited to attend our annual stockholders meeting. The meeting
will be held at 10:00 a.m. on Thursday, May 20, 2004 in the auditorium on the
second floor at 1221 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York.

In addition to the matters described in the attached proxy statement, we will
report on our Company's activities during 2003. You will have an opportunity to
ask questions and to meet your directors and executives.

Whether you plan to come to the annual meeting or not, your representation and
vote are important, and your shares should be voted. Please complete, sign, date
and return the enclosed proxy card promptly. You also may vote by telephone, or
electronically over the Internet, by following the instructions on your proxy
card.

We look forward to seeing you at the meeting. Your vote is important to us.

                                                  Very truly yours,


                                                  /s/ Jeffrey W. Greenberg

                                                  Jeffrey W. Greenberg
                                                  Chairman

April 1, 2004




                        MARSH & McLENNAN COMPANIES, INC.
                           1166 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS
                          NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10036-2774




                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                                       AND
                                 PROXY STATEMENT

     TIME:

             10:00 a.m. Local Time

     DATE:

             May 20, 2004

     PLACE:

             Second Floor Auditorium
             1221 Avenue of the Americas
             New York, New York

     PURPOSE:

             1.   To elect six persons to serve as Class I directors, each for a
                  three-year term;

             2.   To ratify the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as
                  independent auditors; and

             3.   To conduct any other business that may properly come before
                  the meeting.

     This notice and proxy  statement  describes  the matters being voted on and
contains  other  information  that may be helpful to you. In this  material,  we
refer to Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. as "MMC", the "Company", "we" or "us".

     Only  stockholders  of  record  on March  22,  2004 may vote at the  annual
meeting.  You will need proof of  ownership  of MMC stock to enter the  meeting.
This proxy  solicitation  material is being mailed to  stockholders  on or about
April 1, 2004 with a copy of MMC's 2003 Annual Report,  which includes financial
statements for the period ended December 31, 2003.

     YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT.  YOU MAY CAST YOUR VOTE BY MAIL,  TELEPHONE OR OVER
THE INTERNET BY FOLLOWING THE INSTRUCTIONS ON YOUR PROXY CARD.


/s/ Leon J. Lichter

LEON J. LICHTER
SECRETARY

APRIL 1, 2004





                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

INFORMATION ABOUT OUR ANNUAL MEETING AND SOLICITATION OF PROXIES.............. 3
ITEM 1: ELECTION OF DIRECTORS................................................. 5
        Nominees for Election as Directors for a Three-Year Term
        Expiring in 2007...................................................... 5
        Directors Continuing in Office--Term Expiring in 2005................. 7
        Directors Continuing in Office--Term Expiring in 2006................. 8
INFORMATION REGARDING THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS..................................10
        Corporate Governance Guidelines.......................................10
        Committees............................................................11
        Policy on Stockholder Nominations of Directors........................12
        Attendance............................................................13
        Codes of Business Conduct and Ethics..................................13
        Communications with the Board.........................................13
        Tenure................................................................13
        Directors' Compensation...............................................13
STOCK OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT AND CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS...................14
COMPENSATION OF EXECUTIVE OFFICERS............................................16
        Summary Compensation Table............................................16
        Option Grants in 2003.................................................19
        Aggregated Option Exercises in 2003 & Year-End Option Values..........20
        United States Retirement Program......................................21
        Compensation Committee Report.........................................22
        Stock Performance Graph...............................................26
TRANSACTIONS WITH MANAGEMENT AND OTHERS; OTHER INFORMATION....................27
ITEM 2: RATIFICATION OF SELECTION OF AUDITORS.................................28
        Fees of Independent Auditors..........................................28
AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT........................................................29
SUBMISSION OF FUTURE STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS....................................32
APPENDIX A--AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER..........................................A-1
APPENDIX B--AUDIT COMMITTEE POLICY ON PRE-APPROVAL OF SERVICES PROVIDED
BY THE INDEPENDENT AUDITOR...................................................B-1

                                       2



        INFORMATION ABOUT OUR ANNUAL MEETING AND SOLICITATION OF PROXIES


WHO MAY VOTE

     Holders of our common stock, as recorded in our stock register on March 22,
2004, may vote at the meeting. As of that date, there were 518,157,649 shares of
common  stock  outstanding  and  entitled  to one  vote  per  share.  A list  of
stockholders will be available for inspection at the principal executive offices
of MMC at 1166 Avenue of the Americas,  New York, New York for at least ten days
prior to the meeting.

HOW TO VOTE

     You may vote in person at the meeting or by proxy. We recommend you vote by
proxy even if you plan to attend the meeting. You can always change your vote at
the meeting.

     Most  stockholders  have a choice  of  proxy  voting  by using a toll  free
telephone number,  through the Internet or by completing the enclosed proxy card
and mailing it in the postage-paid envelope provided. Please refer to your proxy
card or the information forwarded by your bank, broker or other holder of record
to see which options are available to you.

     Executors,   administrators,   trustees,  guardians,  attorneys  and  other
representatives  voting on behalf of a stockholder  should indicate the capacity
in which they are signing and corporations  should sign by an authorized officer
whose title should be indicated.

HOW PROXIES WORK

     MMC's board of  directors  is asking for your  proxy.  Giving us your proxy
means you authorize us to vote your shares at the meeting, or at any adjournment
thereof,  in the manner you direct.  You may vote for all,  some, or none of our
director  nominees.  You may also  vote for or  against  the other  proposal  or
abstain from voting.

     If you sign and return the  enclosed  proxy card but do not  specify how to
vote, we will vote your shares in favor of our director nominees and in favor of
Item 2.

     As of the  date of  this  proxy  statement,  we do not  know  of any  other
business that will be presented at the meeting. If other business shall properly
come before the meeting,  including any proposal submitted by a stockholder that
was omitted from this proxy  statement in  accordance  with  applicable  federal
securities  laws,  the persons  named in the proxy will vote  according to their
best judgment.

REVOKING A PROXY

     You may revoke your proxy before it is voted by submitting a new proxy with
a later  date,  by  voting  in  person at the  meeting,  or by  sending  written
notification addressed to:

     Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.
     1166 Avenue of the Americas
     New York, New York 10036-2774
     Attn: Mr. Leon J. Lichter,
           Corporate Secretary

     Mere  attendance at the meeting will not revoke a proxy that was previously
submitted to MMC.

QUORUM AND CONDUCT OF MEETING

     In order to carry on the  business of the  meeting,  we must have a quorum.
This means at least a majority of the  outstanding  shares eligible to vote must
be represented at the meeting, either by proxy or in person.

     The  chairman  of the annual  meeting  has broad  authority  to conduct the
annual  meeting so that the business of the meeting is carried out in an orderly
and timely manner.  In doing so, the chairman has broad  discretion to establish
reasonable rules for discussion,  comments and questions during the meeting. The
chairman also is entitled to rely upon  applicable law regarding  disruptions or
disorderly  conduct to ensure that the meeting is  conducted in a manner that is
fair to all participants.

ATTENDANCE AT THE MEETING

     Only  stockholders,  their proxy  holders,  and MMC's guests may attend the
meeting.  Admission to the meeting will be on a first-come,  first-served basis.
Verification of ownership may be required at the admissions desk. If your shares
are held in the name of your broker,  bank, or other nominee,  you must bring to
the meeting an account statement or letter from the nominee  indicating that you
are the  beneficial  owner of the shares on March 22, 2004,  the record date for
voting.

                                       3



VOTES NEEDED

     Directors are elected by a plurality of the votes cast.  "Plurality"  means
that the  individuals  who  receive  the  largest  number of votes  cast FOR are
elected as directors  up to the maximum  number of directors to be chosen at the
meeting.  Votes  withheld from any director  nominee will not be counted in such
nominee's favor.

     All other  matters to be acted on at the meeting  require  the  affirmative
vote of a  majority  of the  shares  of MMC stock  present  or  represented  and
entitled to vote at the meeting to constitute the action of the stockholders. In
accordance  with  Delaware  law,  abstentions  will be treated  as  present  and
entitled to vote for purposes of the preceding  sentence,  while broker nonvotes
will not.

     A "broker  nonvote"  is a proxy  submitted  by a broker in which the broker
fails  to  vote on  behalf  of a  client  on a  particular  matter  for  lack of
instruction when such instruction is required by the rules of the New York Stock
Exchange.  Broker  nonvotes  will be counted  for  purposes of  determining  the
presence of a quorum for the transaction of business.

ELECTRONIC ACCESS TO PROXY MATERIALS AND ANNUAL REPORT

     This proxy statement and the 2003 Annual Report can be viewed on our
website at http://www.mmc.com/annualreport.html. Most stockholders may elect to
view future proxy statements and annual reports over the Internet instead of
receiving paper copies in the mail.

     If you are a stockholder of record, you may choose this option and save MMC
the cost of producing and mailing these documents by following the  instructions
provided when you vote over the  Internet.  If you hold your MMC stock through a
bank, broker or other holder of record, please refer to the information provided
by that  entity  for  instructions  on how to  elect to view  our  future  proxy
statements and annual reports over the Internet.

     If you choose to view our future proxy  statements  and annual reports over
the Internet,  you will receive an e-mail  message with  instructions  on how to
access MMC's proxy  statement  and annual  report and vote.  Your choice to view
these  materials  over the  Internet  will  remain in  effect  until you tell us
otherwise.  You do not have to elect Internet access each year. To view,  cancel
or change your enrollment profile, please go to www.investordelivery.com.

SOLICITATION OF PROXIES

     We pay the expenses of preparing the proxy  materials and  soliciting  this
proxy.  We also  reimburse  brokers  and other  nominees  for their  expenses in
sending these materials to you and obtaining your voting instructions.

     In  addition  to  this  mailing,   proxies  may  be  solicited  personally,
electronically  or by telephone by our directors,  officers,  other employees or
our agents. We have retained Georgeson  Shareholder  Communications  Inc. as our
agent to assist in the proxy  solicitation  at a fee of  approximately  $10,000,
plus expenses.  If any of our directors,  officers and other employees assist in
soliciting  proxies,  they will not receive  additional  compensation  for those
services.

MULTIPLE STOCKHOLDERS SHARING SAME ADDRESS

     If you and other  residents at your mailing address with the same last name
own shares of common  stock  through a bank,  broker or other  holder of record,
your bank or broker may have sent you a notice that your  household will receive
only one annual report and proxy statement for each company in which the members
of your  household  hold stock  through  that bank or broker.  This  practice of
sending only one copy of proxy materials to holders residing at a single address
is known as  "householding",  and is  designed  to reduce  printing  and postage
costs.

     If  you  did  not  respond  that  you  did  not  want  to   participate  in
householding,  you were deemed to have consented to the process.  If you did not
receive a householding  notice from your bank, broker or other holder of record,
you can request  householding  by  contacting  that entity.  You may revoke your
consent to householding at any time by calling 1-800-542-1061.

     If you wish to receive a separate  paper copy of the annual report or proxy
statement,  you may telephone  Corporate  Development at (212) 345-5475 or write
to:

     Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.
     1166 Avenue of the Americas
     New York, New York 10036-2774.
     Attn: Corporate Development

                                       4



ITEM 1

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     Our board of directors is divided into three classes. Members of each class
serve for a three-year term.  Stockholders  elect one class of directors at each
annual meeting.  At this annual meeting,  stockholders will vote on the election
of the six  nominees  described  below  for a term  ending  at the  2007  Annual
Meeting.

     The following  section  contains  information  provided by the nominees and
continuing directors about their principal  occupation,  business experience and
other matters. Mr. Lawrence J. Lasser resigned from the board in November, 2003.

     Five of the nominees are current directors of MMC. Mr. Zachary W. Carter is
a new  nominee  standing  for  election  as a Class  I  director.  Mr.  Carter's
nomination  was   recommended  to  the  Directors  &  Governance   Committee  by
stockholders,  as well as by the chief  executive  officer  and other  executive
officers.

     Each nominee has indicated to MMC that he will serve if elected.  We do not
anticipate  that any nominee will be unable or unwilling to stand for  election,
but if that happens, your proxy may be voted for another person nominated by the
board.

     The  board  of  directors  recommends  a vote FOR the  election  of all six
nominees.

                       NOMINEES FOR ELECTION AS DIRECTORS
                     FOR A THREE-YEAR TERM EXPIRING IN 2007

[PHOTO OMITTED]

                LEWIS W. BERNARD                             DIRECTOR SINCE 1992
                EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
                COMPENSATION COMMITTEE (CHAIR)

                Mr. Bernard,  age 62, was chief of finance,  administration  and
                operations  of Morgan  Stanley & Co.,  Inc.  from 1985 until his
                retirement in 1991.  Mr.  Bernard joined Morgan Stanley in 1963.
                Mr.  Bernard  is  chairman  of  Classroom,  Inc.,  a  non-profit
                educational corporation. He is also chairman of the board of the
                American Museum of Natural History, vice chairman of the J. Paul
                Getty Trust and a trustee of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

[PHOTO OMITTED]

                MATHIS CABIALLAVETTA                         DIRECTOR SINCE 2000

                Mr. Cabiallavetta,  age 59, is vice chairman of MMC, chairman of
                MMC  Global  Development  and a member  of  MMC's  international
                advisory board. Prior to joining MMC in 1999, Mr.  Cabiallavetta
                was  chairman  of the board of UBS A.G.,  a company he joined in
                1971. Mr. Cabiallavetta is a director of Altria Group, Inc., HBM
                BioVentures AG and the Swiss American Chamber of Commerce.

                                       5



[PHOTO OMITTED] ZACHARY W. CARTER                                    NEW NOMINEE

                Mr.  Carter,  age 54, is a  partner  at the law firm of Dorsey &
                Whitney LLP,  where he is co-chair of the White Collar Crime and
                Civil Fraud practice  group. He joined Dorsey & Whitney in 1999.
                Mr.  Carter  was the  United  States  Attorney  for the  Eastern
                District of New York from 1993 to 1999.  Mr.  Carter is chairman
                of the Mayor's Advisory Committee on the Judiciary,  chairman of
                the board of directors of Hale House Center,  Inc. and a trustee
                of the New York University  School of Law and the Vera Institute
                of Justice.

[PHOTO OMITTED] ROBERT F. ERBURU                             DIRECTOR SINCE 1996
                COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
                DIRECTORS & GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE (CHAIR)

                Mr.  Erburu,  age 73, was chairman of The Times  Mirror  Company
                from 1986 until his  retirement in 1996. Mr. Erburu joined Times
                Mirror in 1961 and was its chief executive  officer from 1981 to
                1995.  Mr.  Erburu is  chairman  of the board of trustees of the
                National  Gallery of Art and chairman of the Board of Councilors
                of the College of Letters, Arts and Science of the University of
                Southern California.  He is a director of the Pacific Council on
                International  Policy,  the Ahmanson  Foundation and the William
                and Flora Hewlett Foundation.

[PHOTO OMITTED]

                OSCAR FANJUL                                 DIRECTOR SINCE 2001
                AUDIT COMMITTEE
                COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

                Mr. Fanjul, age 54, is vice chairman and chief executive officer
                of Omega Capital, a private investment firm in Spain. Mr. Fanjul
                is honorary  chairman of Repsol YPF,  where he was  chairman and
                chief  executive  officer from its inception in 1986 until 1996.
                He was chairman of  Hidroelectrica  del Cantabrico  from 1999 to
                2001 and chairman of NH Hoteles from 1997 until 1999. Mr. Fanjul
                is a director of Acerinox,  the London Stock Exchange,  Unilever
                (advisory director) and a member of MMC's international advisory
                board.

[PHOTO OMITTED] RAY J. GROVES                                DIRECTOR SINCE 1994

                Mr. Groves,  age 68, is chairman and chief executive  officer of
                Marsh  Inc.,  a  subsidiary  of MMC.  He joined  MMC as a senior
                advisor in August 2001,  became  president  and chief  operating
                officer of Marsh in October 2001 and chief executive  officer of
                Marsh in January 2003.  Prior to joining MMC, he was chairman of
                Legg  Mason  Merchant  Banking,  Inc.  from  1995 to  2001,  and
                chairman and chief executive  officer of Ernst & Young from 1977
                until 1994. He is a director of Boston  Scientific  Corporation,
                Electronic Data Systems  Corporation  and The Gillette  Company.
                Mr.  Groves is a managing  director  of the  Metropolitan  Opera
                Association and a director and former chairman of The Ohio State
                University Foundation.

                                       6



                         DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE
                             (TERM EXPIRING IN 2005)

[PHOTO OMITTED] JEFFREY W. GREENBERG                         DIRECTOR SINCE 1996
                EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE (CHAIR)

                Mr.  Greenberg,  age 52, is chairman and chief executive officer
                of MMC. Mr. Greenberg joined MMC in 1995 and was chairman of MMC
                Capital,  Inc., a subsidiary  of MMC,  from 1996 until 2002.  He
                became  chief  executive  officer of MMC in 1999 and was elected
                chairman in 2000.  Mr.  Greenberg is a trustee of The  Brookings
                Institution,  Brown University,  the Metropolitan  Museum of Art
                and New York-Presbyterian Hospital.



[PHOTO OMITTED]

                STEPHEN R. HARDIS                            DIRECTOR SINCE 1998
                EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
                AUDIT COMMITTEE (CHAIR)

                Mr. Hardis,  age 68, was chairman of Eaton Corporation from 1996
                until his  retirement in 2000.  Mr. Hardis joined Eaton in 1979,
                and was its chief  executive  officer  from 1995 to 2000.  He is
                chairman  of  Axcelis  Technologies,  Inc.  and  a  director  of
                American  Greetings  Corporation,   Apogent  Technologies  Inc.,
                Lexmark   International   Corporation,    Nordson   Corporation,
                Progressive Corporation and Steris Corporation.

[PHOTO OMITTED]

                THE RT. HON. LORD LANG OF MONKTON, DL        DIRECTOR SINCE 1997
                EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
                COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
                DIRECTORS & GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE

                Lord Lang, age 63, was a member of the British  Parliament  from
                1979 to 1997. He served in the cabinet as president of the Board
                of Trade and secretary of state for trade and industry from 1995
                to 1997 and as  secretary  of state  for  Scotland  from 1990 to
                1995.  Lord Lang is  chairman  of BFS US  Special  Opportunities
                Trust plc,  Thistle  Mining Inc.  and Second  Scottish  National
                Trust plc. He is also  chairman  of the Patrons of the  National
                Galleries of Scotland and a governor of Rugby School, England.

[PHOTO OMITTED] MORTON O. SCHAPIRO                           DIRECTOR SINCE 2002
                AUDIT COMMITTEE
                DIRECTORS & GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE

                Mr. Schapiro, age 50, is president of Williams College. Prior to
                joining Williams College, he was dean of the College of Letters,
                Arts and Sciences of the University of Southern  California from
                1994 to 2000, the university's  vice president for planning from
                1999 to 2000 and chair of its  Department of Economics from 1991
                to 1994. Mr. Schapiro is a trustee of the  Williamstown  Theatre
                Festival,  the  Sterling &  Francine  Clark Art  Institute,  the
                College  Board,  Massachusetts  Museum of  Contemporary  Art and
                Hillel.

                                       7



[PHOTO OMITTED] ADELE SIMMONS                                DIRECTOR SINCE 1978
                EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
                AUDIT COMMITTEE

                Mrs. Simmons,  age 62, is vice chair of Chicago  Metropolis 2020
                and president of the Global Philanthropy Partnership.  From 1989
                to 1999,  she was  president  of the John D.  and  Catherine  T.
                MacArthur  Foundation.  Ms. Simmons is a senior associate of the
                Center for  International  Studies at the  University of Chicago
                and a  director  of The Field  Museum  and the  Global  Fund for
                Women.

[PHOTO OMITTED] A. J. C. SMITH                               DIRECTOR SINCE 1977
                EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

                Mr.  Smith,  age  69,  is  chairman  of  Putnam  Investments,  a
                subsidiary  of MMC.  Mr.  Smith was chairman of MMC from 1992 to
                2000 and was its chief executive  officer from 1992 to 1999. Mr.
                Smith is a trustee of approximately  100 mutual funds managed by
                Putnam Investment Management, LLC. He is chairman of the Central
                Park  Conservancy  and a trustee of the Carnegie  Hall  Society,
                Inc., the Educational Broadcasting Corporation in New York City.
                Mr. Smith is also a member of the board of overseers of the Joan
                and  Sanford I. Weill  Graduate  School of Medical  Sciences  of
                Cornell University.



                         DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE
                             (TERM EXPIRING IN 2006)

[PHOTO OMITTED] PETER COSTER                                 DIRECTOR SINCE 1988

                Mr. Coster, age 64, is president of Mercer Inc., a subsidiary of
                MMC. Mr. Coster joined Mercer in 1984 upon its  acquisition of a
                U.K.  consulting  firm that he joined in 1962. Mr. Coster became
                president of Mercer in 1987.  He is a trustee of The  Foundation
                Fighting Blindness.

[PHOTO OMITTED] CHARLES A. DAVIS                             DIRECTOR SINCE 2000

                Mr.  Davis,  age 55, is vice  chairman of MMC and  chairman  and
                chief executive officer of MMC Capital. He joined MMC Capital as
                president in 1998, was named chief executive officer in 1999 and
                chairman in 2002.  He has been vice  chairman of MMC since 1999.
                Prior to joining MMC,  Mr. Davis was a partner of Goldman  Sachs
                Group L.P., a firm he joined in 1975. Mr. Davis is a director of
                Axis Capital Holdings Limited,  Media General, Inc., Progressive
                Corporation and Merchants Bancshares, Inc.

                                       8



[PHOTO OMITTED] GWENDOLYN S. KING                            DIRECTOR SINCE 1998
                AUDIT COMMITTEE
                DIRECTORS & GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE

                Ms.  King,  age 63, is president  of Podium  Prose,  a speaker's
                bureau.  From 1992  until 1998 she was  senior  vice  president,
                corporate and public  affairs at Peco Energy.  From 1989 to 1992
                she served as commissioner of the Social Security Administration
                in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Ms. King is
                a director of Countrywide Financial Corporation, Lockheed Martin
                Corporation,  Monsanto  Company and the National  Association of
                Corporate Directors.



[PHOTO OMITTED]

                DAVID A. OLSEN                               DIRECTOR SINCE 1997
                AUDIT COMMITTEE

                Mr.  Olsen,  age 66, was chairman of Johnson & Higgins from 1991
                until its business  combination  with MMC in 1997.  He served as
                vice  chairman  of MMC from May  through  December  of 1997.  He
                joined  Johnson & Higgins in 1966,  and was its chief  executive
                officer from 1990 to 1997. Mr. Olsen is a director of U.S. Trust
                Corporation.  He is an  honorary  director  of New York's  South
                Street Seaport Museum.


                                       9



                  INFORMATION REGARDING THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

     MMC is a global professional services company. Our business is conducted by
our business units, and their employees and officers, under the direction of the
chief executive officer and the oversight of the board, to enhance the long-term
value of MMC for its stockholders.  The board of directors,  which is elected by
the  stockholders,  is the  ultimate  decision-making  body of MMC  except  with
respect  to those  matters  reserved  to the  stockholders.  The board  held ten
meetings during 2003.

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE GUIDELINES

     Our  board of  directors  has  adopted  the MMC  Guidelines  for  Corporate
Governance.  These  guidelines are posted on the MMC website and a print copy is
available to any stockholder upon request.

     Our board  includes a balance of  non-executive  and  executive  directors.
Independent  non-executive directors constitute a majority of our board and meet
the independence requirements of both MMC and the New York Stock Exchange.

     With respect to our directors:

   o a meaningful  portion of the  compensation for  non-executive  directors is
     paid in MMC stock;

   o all new directors participate in an orientation.  This orientation includes
     background material and presentations by management on MMC's operations and
     strategic  plans,  its  financial  statements  and  its  key  policies  and
     practices;

   o board  members  have  complete  access  to MMC's  officers  and  employees.
     Directors are encouraged to communicate directly with MMC's chief financial
     officer, general counsel and other members of senior management;


   o in addition to access to MMC officers,  the board and its  committees  have
     the authority to obtain  advice and  assistance  from external  advisors or
     consultants as they may deem necessary; and


   o the non-executive  directors meet at regularly scheduled executive sessions
     without  management,  at  which  meetings  the  chair  of the  Directors  &
     Governance Committee presides.

DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE

     It is the  policy of MMC that a  majority  of the  members  of its board of
directors  be  independent  of MMC's  management.  For a  director  to be deemed
"independent",  the board must affirmatively  determine that the director has no
direct  or  indirect  material  relationship  with MMC.  To assist  the board in
determining  director   independence,   the  board  has  adopted  the  following
guidelines which include the categorical  standards  established by the New York
Stock  Exchange,  as  amended  from  time to time,  and which  currently  are as
follows:

     A director will not be deemed  "independent" if, within the preceding three
years:

     (a)  the director  was employed by MMC or a member of his or her  immediate
          family was employed by MMC as an executive officer;

     (b)  the  director,  or a member of his or her immediate  family,  received
          more than  $100,000  per year in direct  compensation  from MMC (other
          than director and committee fees and pension or certain other forms of
          deferred compensation);

     (c)  the director was employed by, or  affiliated  with, or a member of his
          or her immediate  family was employed in a  professional  capacity by,
          MMC's independent auditor;

     (d)  an  MMC  executive  officer  was on the  compensation  committee  of a
          company which concurrently employed the director, or which employed an
          immediate family member of the director as an executive officer; or

     (e)  the director was an executive  officer or employee,  or the director's
          immediate  family member was an executive  officer,  of a company that
          made  payments  to, or received  payments  from,  MMC for  property or
          services in an amount which exceeds the greater of $1 million or 2% of
          such company's consolidated gross revenues.

     In addition, a director who satisfies the independence standards of the New
York Stock  Exchange as set forth above will be presumed  "independent"  unless,
within the preceding three years:

     (f)  the director served as an executive officer,  director or trustee of a
          charitable organization to which MMC's charitable contributions (other
          than matching contributions) exceed the greater of $1 million or 2% of
          such organization's consolidated gross revenues in a particular fiscal
          year.

                                       10


     With  respect to items (a) through (f) above,  the term "MMC"  includes any
subsidiaries  within MMC's  consolidated  reporting  group.  The term "immediate
family" includes a person's spouse,  parents,  children,  siblings,  mothers and
fathers-in-law,  sons and  daughters-in-law,  brothers and  sisters-in-law,  and
anyone (other than domestic employees) who shares such person's home.

     Any director who fails to meet any of the standards  outlined above will be
presumptively disqualified from a finding of independence.

     The board has determined that the following commercial relationships do not
impair a director's independence:

   o A director's  ownership  interest in MMC stock,  Putnam mutual funds or the
     private  equity funds managed by MMC Capital;  and

   o A director's use of any of the services  provided by MMC's  subsidiaries in
     the ordinary course of the subsidiaries' business (i.e., personal insurance
     placements and any other services).

     In accordance  with these  guidelines,  the board has  determined  that the
following  directors are independent:  Mr. Bernard;  Mr. Erburu; Mr. Fanjul; Mr.
Hardis;  Ms. King;  Lord Lang;  Mr.  Olsen;  Mr.  Schapiro and Ms.  Simmons.  In
addition,  the board has  determined  that  Zachary W.  Carter,  a new  director
nominee,  also will be an  independent  director  if elected at the 2004  annual
meeting.

COMMITTEES

     Our board has established an Executive  Committee,  an Audit  Committee,  a
Compensation  Committee  and a Directors &  Governance  Committee  to assist the
board in discharging its responsibilities.  Following each committee meeting the
respective  committee  chair  reports the  highlights of the meeting to the full
board.

     Membership on each of the Audit, Compensation, and  Directors &  Governance
Committees   is   limited   to   independent    non-executive   directors.   The
charters   for   these   committees   can   be   viewed   on  our   website   at
http://www.mmc.com/corpgov.html.  In addition,  MMC's Audit Committee charter is
attached to this proxy statement as Appendix A.

THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE:


   o is empowered to act for the full board in intervals between board meetings,
     with the  exception  of certain  matters  that under  Delaware law or MMC's
     by-laws may not be delegated; and


   o meets as necessary, with all actions taken by the committee reported at the
     next board of directors meeting.

     The  current  members  of the  Executive  Committee  are  Messrs.  Bernard,
Greenberg (Chair),  Hardis, Smith, Lord Lang and Ms. Simmons. The committee held
three meetings during 2003.

THE AUDIT COMMITTEE:

     The Audit  Committee is charged with  assisting the board in fulfilling its
oversight  responsibilities  with respect to:

   o the integrity of MMC's financial statements;

   o the  qualifications,  independence  and  performance  of MMC's  independent
     auditors;

   o the performance of MMC's internal audit function; and

   o compliance by MMC with legal and regulatory requirements.

     The Audit Committee  selects and oversees MMC's independent  auditors,  and
pre-approves all services to be performed by the independent  auditors  pursuant
to the Audit  Committee  pre-approval  policy.  The current members of the Audit
Committee are Messrs. Fanjul, Hardis (Chair),  Olsen, Schapiro, Ms. King and Ms.
Simmons.  All members of the Audit  Committee are independent as required by MMC
and the listing standards of the New York Stock Exchange.

     The  board  of  directors  has  determined  that  Stephen  R.  Hardis,   an
independent  director and the chair of the Audit  Committee,  has the  requisite
qualifications  to satisfy  the SEC  definition  of "audit  committee  financial
expert".  Though Mr.  Hardis  currently  serves on the audit  committees of four
public companies including MMC, the board has determined that Mr. Hardis is able
to serve effectively on our Audit Committee.

     The Audit Committee held ten meetings during 2003.

THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE:

   o evaluates the  performance  and determines the  compensation of MMC's chief
     executive officer;

                                       11



   o reviews and approves the compensation of other senior executives; and

   o makes  recommendations  to  the  board  with  respect  to  MMC's  incentive
     compensation    plans   and   equity-based   plans   and   discharges   the
     responsibilities of the committee set forth in these plans.

     The current  members of the  Compensation  Committee  are Messrs.  Bernard,
Erburu,  Fanjul and Lord Lang.  All members of the  Compensation  Committee  are
independent  as required by MMC and the listing  standards of the New York Stock
Exchange. The Compensation Committee held eight meetings during 2003.

THE DIRECTORS & GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE:

   o develops,  reviews and periodically  reassesses MMC's corporate  governance
     principles  and  recommends  proposed  changes to the  board;

   o identifies,  considers and recommends qualified candidates to the board for
     election as  directors,  including  the slate of  directors  that the board
     proposes for election at the annual meeting;

   o in  consultation   with  the  MMC  chairman  and  other  committee  chairs,
     recommends committee  assignments to the board; and

   o develops  processes  for and  oversees  annual  assessments  of the board's
     performance and effectiveness.

     The current members of the Directors & Governance Committee are Mr. Erburu,
Lord  Lang,  Ms.  King  and Mr.  Schapiro.  All  members  of the  committee  are
independent  as required by MMC and the listing  standards of the New York Stock
Exchange. The Directors & Governance Committee held six meetings in 2003.

POLICY ON STOCKHOLDER NOMINATIONS OF DIRECTORS

     The  Directors &  Governance  Committee  gives equal  consideration  to all
director nominees whether recommended by our stockholders, management or current
directors (both executive and non-executive).

     The board has determined  that 15 to 19 directors is the  appropriate  size
for the  board  and that  this  range is  flexible  enough  to  accommodate  the
availability  of any  outstanding  candidate  at any time.  The  quality  of the
individuals  serving  and the overall  balance of  executive  and  non-executive
members of the board are more important than the precise number of members,  and
these considerations could lead to a Board outside this range from time to time.
All  directors  represent  the  interests  of all  stockholders,  not  just  the
interests   of  any   particular   stockholder,   stockholder   group  or  other
constituency.  Candidates  for the  board  of  directors  must  be  experienced,
dedicated, and meet the highest standards of ethics and integrity. The Directors
&  Governance  Committee,  with the active  involvement  of the board  chairman,
periodically reviews with the board the requisite skills and characteristics for
new directors as well as the  composition  of the board as a whole,  taking into
account,  among other things,  the mix and diversity of skills,  backgrounds and
experience.   A  majority  of  our  directors  must  satisfy  the   independence
requirements  of both MMC and the New York Stock  Exchange.  Each  member of the
Audit  Committee  must be  financially  literate  and at least one  member  must
possess the  requisite  qualifications  to satisfy the SEC  definition of "audit
committee financial expert".

     Once a candidate is identified,  the Directors & Governance  Committee will
consider the  candidate's mix of skills and experience with businesses and other
organizations of comparable  size, as well as his or her reputation,  background
and time availability (in light of anticipated  needs).  The committee will also
consider the  interplay of the  candidate's  experience  with the  experience of
other  board  members,  the extent to which the  candidate  would be a desirable
addition to the board and any  committees  of the board and any other factors it
deems appropriate.

     Stockholders may propose director  nominees for consideration by submitting
a recommendation in writing to:

     Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.
     1166 Avenue of the Americas
     New York, New York 10036-2774
     Attn: Directors & Governance Committee
           c/o Mr. Leon J. Lichter,
           Corporate Secretary

     The  Directors  &  Governance  Committee  may ask any  proposed  nominee to
provide such  information  as is  reasonably  necessary to determine  his or her
eligibility  and  qualifications  to  serve  as a  director  of  MMC,  including
information that relates to a candidate's independence and financial literacy.

                                       12



     Depending on the needs of the Board,  the Directors & Governance  Committee
may consider director  nominees  proposed by stockholders at anytime  throughout
the year,  but in no event  will a nominee  be  considered  later  than the next
annual meeting of stockholders for which a  recommendation  was timely received.
To be timely  received in connection with an annual meeting of  stockholders,  a
recommendation  on a  proposed  director  candidate  should be sent to us at the
above address no later than the December 31st preceding that annual meeting.

ATTENDANCE

     The average attendance by directors at meetings of the board and committees
thereof was approximately  95%. All current  directors  attended at least 75% of
the meetings of the board and committees on which they served. All directors are
expected  to attend our  annual  meeting of  stockholders.  In 2003,  all of our
directors attended the annual stockholders' meeting.

CODES OF BUSINESS CONDUCT AND ETHICS

     We have  adopted  the MMC  Code of  Business  Conduct  and  Ethics  that is
applicable to all directors,  officers and other  employees of MMC. This code is
posted on the MMC website and a print copy is available to any stockholder  upon
request.  We have also adopted the Code of Ethics for Chief Executive and Senior
Financial Officers which applies to our chief executive officer, chief financial
officer  and  controller  and which is filed as an  exhibit  to our 2002  Annual
Report on Form 10-K.

COMMUNICATIONS WITH THE BOARD

     To  report  any  issue  relating  to the  accounting,  internal  accounting
controls  or  auditing   practices  of  MMC  (including  its   subsidiaries  and
affiliates),  employees, stockholders and others may contact the company by mail
or  telephone.  Anyone  who  wishes to send a  communication  to all or  certain
directors,  including a communication to our independent directors,  may also do
so by mail or telephone:

     By mail to:

     Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.
     P.O. Box 4974
     New York, N.Y. 10185-4974

     By telephone to the MMC Compliance & Ethics Line:

     CANADA & THE U.S.: 1-800-381-2105

     OUTSIDE CANADA & THE U.S. use your country's AT&T Direct(R)  service number
     to reach the MMC Ethics & Compliance Line toll-free.

     MMC's   procedures  for  handling  complaints  and  concerns  of  employees
and   other    interested    parties    are    posted   on   our    website   at
http://www.mmc.com/corpgov.html.

TENURE

     Non-executive  directors retire at the annual meeting  following their 72nd
birthday,  unless the person has been a non-executive director for less than ten
years.  In such  cases,  non-executive  directors  retire at the annual  meeting
following  the earlier of ten years of service or  attaining  age 75.  Executive
directors  other than the chief  executive  officer  resign  from the board upon
their  retirement.  Currently a former MMC chief executive officer serves on the
board.

DIRECTORS' COMPENSATION

     Directors who are also employees receive no specific compensation for their
services as directors.

     With  regard  to  compensation  for  the  services  of  our   non-executive
directors,  we paid the  following  compensation  to  Messrs.  Bernard,  Erburu,
Fanjul, Hardis, Olsen, Schapiro, Smith, Lord Lang, Ms. King and Ms. Simmons:

   o a basic  retainer  of  $40,000  per  year  and an  annual  stock  grant  as
     determined by the Directors & Governance Committee,  which was 1,800 shares
     in 2003 (the "Annual Stock Grant");

   o a fee of $1,000 and  reimbursement  of related expenses for each meeting of
     the board or a committee they attend;

   o an  additional  retainer of $5,000 per year to the chair of each  committee
     (other than Mr. Greenberg as chair of the Executive Committee); and

   o an additional  retainer of $2,000 per year to other members of  committees.

     We also offer travel accident insurance benefits to non-executive directors
in connection  with  MMC-related  business  travel.  Non-executive directors are
included in MMC's matching-gift program

                                       13


for certain  charitable  gifts by  employees up to a maximum of $5,000 per year.

     Under  the  terms  of  MMC's   Directors  Stock   Compensation   Plan,  the
non-executive  directors receive  twenty-five percent of their basic retainer in
shares of stock at the fair market value thereof,  as well as their Annual Stock
Grant, on each June 1. The balance of their compensation  (including  attendance
fees and committee  retainers) is paid in either shares of stock or cash, as the
director  elects.  The  non-executive  directors  may defer  receipt of all or a
portion  of their  compensation  to be paid in shares  until the year  following
either their retirement from the board or a specified earlier date.

     Mr. Fanjul serves on MMC's  International  Advisory Board and is a director
of  Marsh,  S.A.,  a Spanish  subsidiary  of MMC,  but  receives  no  additional
compensation for such service.

     Certain  directors  are  investors  in a fund that is a limited  partner of
Trident II, L.P.  ("Trident  II"), a $1.4 billion private equity fund managed by
MMC Capital,  Inc., a subsidiary of MMC.  Neither the directors nor the fund are
required to pay management or carried  interest  performance  fees in connection
with their investments in Trident II.

     Since June 1, 2000,  MMC has had an annual  agreement  with  A.J.C.  Smith,
pursuant to which Mr. Smith provides certain advisory and consultative  services
for MMC or its affiliates,  serves as chairman of MMC's  International  Advisory
Board and is a trustee of various  Putnam Funds.  In November 2003 Mr. Smith was
appointed chairman of Putnam Investments, a subsidiary of MMC. He also serves as
a director of Marsh & McLennan Risk Capital Holdings,  Ltd. and MMC Capital. For
these  services MMC pays Mr. Smith $2 million per year and provides  support and
other services and business expense  reimbursement.  On May 16, 2003 the term of
this agreement was extended through May 31, 2004. For services rendered in 2003,
Mr. Smith received an additional incentive payment of $500,000.

           STOCK OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT AND CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS

     The following  table  reflects as of February 27, 2004 (except with respect
to interests in MMC's Stock  Investment Plan and Stock  Investment  Supplemental
Plan,  which are as of  December  31,  2003) the  number of shares of our common
stock which each director,  nominee and named executive  officer has reported as
owning  beneficially or otherwise having a pecuniary  interest in, and which all
directors,  nominees  and  executive  officers  of MMC have  reported  as owning
beneficially  as a  group.  It also  includes  the  number  of  shares  of stock
beneficially  owned  by  persons  known  to  MMC  to  own  more  than  5% of the
outstanding shares.

                                                   AMOUNT AND NATURE OF
                                                 BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP (1)
                                          --------------------------------------
                                        SOLE VOTING  OTHER THAN
                                            AND      SOLE VOTING
                                        INVESTMENT  AND INVESTMENT
NAME                                       POWER      POWER (2)       TOTAL
---------                                 ---------   ----------  --------------
Lewis W. Bernard .......................      6,000       59,971       65,971
Mathis Cabiallavetta ...................     15,740      823,753      839,493
Zachary W. Carter ......................         --           --           --
Peter Coster ...........................     70,542    1,158,053    1,228,595
Charles A. Davis .......................     29,622    1,002,403    1,032,025
Robert F. Erburu .......................         --       42,977       42,977
Oscar Fanjul ...........................     16,635           --       16,635
Jeffrey W. Greenberg ...................    113,284    2,514,111    2,627,395
Ray J. Groves ..........................      9,727      391,238      400,965
Stephen R. Hardis ......................     22,000       17,057       39,057
Gwendolyn S. King ......................         --       12,385       12,385
Lord Lang ..............................      6,260        3,800       10,060
David A. Olsen .........................    425,680      213,154      638,834
Morton O. Schapiro .....................         --        4,130        4,130
Adele Simmons ..........................    194,882      178,271      373,153
A.J.C. Smith ...........................  1,176,488    1,748,128    2,924,616
All directors, nominees and executive
  officers as a group, including the
  above (20 individuals) ...............  2,190,744    9,624,561   11,815,305
                                          ---------    ---------   ----------

                                       14



                                            AMOUNT          PERCENTAGE OF STOCK
                                         BENEFICIALLY       OUTSTANDING AS OF
NAME                                         OWNED           DECEMBER 31, 2003
---------                                ------------        -----------------
Marsh & McLennan Companies
  Stock Investment Plan (3)
1166 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10036-2774 ...............   27,472,785               5.2%

Barclays Global Investors, NA (4)
45 Fremont Street
San Francisco, CA 94105 ...............   27,159,881               5.2%


----------
(1)  As of February 27, 2004, no director,  nominee or named  executive  officer
     beneficially owned more than 1% of the outstanding stock, and all directors
     and executive officers as a group beneficially owned  approximately 2.3% of
     the outstanding stock.

(2)  Includes  shares  of  stock:  (i) that are  held in the form of  shares  of
     restricted  stock;  (ii) that are held  indirectly  for the benefit of such
     individuals or jointly,  or directly or indirectly  for certain  members of
     such individuals'  families,  with respect to which beneficial ownership in
     certain cases may be disclaimed; and (iii) that represent such individuals'
     interests in MMC's Stock  Investment  Plan.  Also  includes MMC stock units
     that are subject to issuance  in the future with  respect to the  Directors
     Stock  Compensation Plan, cash bonus deferral plans, MMC's Stock Investment
     Supplemental  Plan or  restricted  stock units in the  following  aggregate
     amounts: Mr. Bernard, 59,971 shares; Mr. Cabiallavetta, 120,007 shares; Mr.
     Coster,  147,717  shares;  Mr. Davis,  196,036 shares;  Mr. Erburu,  42,977
     shares;  Mr. Greenberg,  142,980 shares;  Mr. Groves,  129,636 shares;  Mr.
     Hardis, 17,057 shares; Ms. King, 11,985 shares; Mr. Schapiro, 4,130 shares;
     Mrs. Simmons,  29,781 shares; and all directors and executive officers as a
     group, 1,217,728 shares.  Additionally,  includes shares of stock which may
     be acquired  on or before  April 27,  2004  through  the  exercise of stock
     options as follows: Mr. Cabiallavetta,  635,000 shares; Mr. Coster, 855,000
     shares;  Mr. Davis,  732,500 shares;  Mr. Greenberg,  2,010,000 shares; Mr.
     Groves,  250,000 shares;  Mr. Smith,  1,700,000 shares;  and all directors,
     nominees and executive officers as a group, 7,092,650 shares.

(3)  Under the provisions of the Stock Investment Plan, voting rights are passed
     through to the employees in proportion to their  interests.  Unvoted shares
     will generally be voted by the trustee in the same proportion as the shares
     voted.  Shares  held in the Plan are  registered  in the name of the Plan's
     trustee  and  not  in the  names  of the  individual  participants.  Of the
     27,472,785  shares held in the Plan at  December  31,  2003,  approximately
     24,043, or .01%, were held for directors and executive  officers of MMC and
     are included in the  ownership  shown above for all directors and executive
     officers as a group.

(4)  Based upon the number of shares  listed in a Schedule 13G filed by Barclays
     Global  Investors,  dated  February  13,  2004,  on behalf  of  itself  and
     affiliated entities.

                                       15



                       COMPENSATION OF EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

     The following  tables contain  information  with respect to the CEO and the
five other most highly  compensated  executive  officers  of MMC.  The number of
shares and per share  prices are  adjusted to reflect  MMC's  two-for-one  stock
split effective June 28, 2002.

SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

     The following table sets forth cash and other  compensation  paid or earned
for services rendered in 2003, 2002 and 2001.



                                              ANNUAL COMPENSATION                              LONG TERM COMPENSATION
                                  --------------------------------------------   --------------------------------------------------
         NAME AND                                                 OTHER ANNUAL    RESTRICTED    SECURITIES     LTIP      ALL OTHER
         PRINCIPAL                                                COMPENSATION       STOCK      UNDERLYING    PAYOUTS  COMPENSATION
         POSITION                 YEAR    SALARY($)  BONUS($)(1)       ($)       AWARDS ($)(2) OPTIONS(#)(3)   ($)(4)      ($)(5)
                                  ----   ---------   ----------   ------------   ------------  ------------  --------- ------------
                                                                                                   
Jeffrey W. Greenberg ...........  2003   1,200,000    3,500,042          --       1,056,988      500,000       542,293     51,602
Chairman and Chief                                                                8,060,625(6)
Executive Officer                 2002   1,200,000    4,500,040      91,798         921,150      450,000     2,107,832     48,003
Marsh & McLennan                  2001   1,200,000    3,750,037     188,642         839,020      400,000            --     48,902
Companies, Inc.

Charles E. Haldeman(7) .........  2003     483,333    8,600,006          --       4,000,076       45,000            --     15,000
President and Chief                                                                               80,000(9)
Executive Officer                 2002      75,000    8,600,008          --       2,595,408       55,600            --  4,000,000
Putnam Investments                                                                  869,952(8)    19,200(9)

Charles A. Davis ...............  2003     900,000    2,350,042          --       1,341,283      250,000       599,175     41,252
Vice Chairman                     2002     850,000    2,000,000          --         636,281      200,000     1,794,373     34,002
Marsh & McLennan                  2001     800,000    1,750,046          --         551,977      200,000            --     32,001
Companies Inc.
President
MMC Capital, Inc.

Mathis Cabiallavetta(10) .......  2003     900,000    2,200,043          --       2,596,591      300,000            --     54,000
Vice Chairman                     2002     850,000    1,900,040          --         560,000      220,000            --     48,450
Marsh & McLennan                  2001     800,000    1,750,046          --         516,320      200,000            --     46,200
Companies, Inc.

Ray J. Groves ..................  2003     900,000    2,000,013          --       1,518,459      200,000            --     54,000
Chief Executive Officer           2002     850,000    1,700,044          --         595,366      200,000            --     20,188
Marsh Inc.                        2001     333,333      400,059          --       1,012,601      200,000            --         --

Peter Coster ...................  2003     950,000    1,650,013          --         666,345      200,000            --     57,000
President                         2002     950,000    1,550,031     515,930         820,337      120,000            --     54,150
Mercer Inc.                       2001     950,000    1,650,039     198,051         791,878      140,000            --     54,863


----------
(1)  The bonus amounts shown in the table include both cash and (except as noted
     below with respect to Mr.  Haldeman) the value of restricted stock units of
     MMC,  respectively,  for the years 2003,  2002 and 2001,  as  follows:  Mr.
     Greenberg  $2,000,000 and $1,500,042 in 2003,  $3,000,000 and $1,500,040 in
     2002 and  $2,500,000  and  $1,250,037  in 2001;  Mr. Davis  $1,000,000  and
     $1,350,042  in 2003,  $900,000  and  $1,100,000  in 2002 and  $875,000  and
     $875,046 in 2001;  Mr.  Cabiallavetta  $1,000,000  and  $1,200,043 in 2003,
     $950,000 and $950,040 in 2002 and $875,000 and $875,046 in 2001; Mr. Groves
     $1,200,000 and $800,013 in 2003, $950,000 and $750,044 in 2002 and $250,000
     and  $150,059  in 2001;  and Mr.  Coster  $850,000  and  $800,013  in 2003,
     $750,000  and  $800,031 in 2002 and  $750,000  and  $900,039  in 2001.  The
     restricted  stock  units of MMC vest  three  years  from the date of grant.
     Other features of the  restricted  stock units are described in footnote 2,
     below. For Mr. Haldeman,  the bonus amounts shown in the table include: for
     2003,  $6,500,000 of cash and $2,100,006 of Class B common shares of Putnam
     ("Putnam Class B Shares") (as described further in footnote 8, below);  and
     for 2002,  $6,600,000  of cash and  $2,000,008  of MMC stock.  These  bonus
     amounts  were  guaranteed  to Mr.  Haldeman in his  employment  letter upon
     joining  Putnam in 2002.  (Bonus  amounts shown in this column for 2002 and
     2001  have  been  revised  from  the  amounts  shown in last  year's  proxy
     statement to include  restricted  stock units awarded in 2003 and 2002 as a
     component  of  each  officer's   bonus  for  2002  and  2001   performance,
     respectively.)

                                       16



(2)  Amounts shown in the table for 2003 include the value of  restricted  stock
     of MMC  granted  in March  2003.  The  restricted  stock  vests in the year
     following  completion  of ten (10) years of service from the date of grant.
     The amounts shown in 2003 for Messrs. Greenberg,  Davis,  Cabiallavetta and
     Groves  also  include  the value of  restricted  stock units of MMC granted
     under MMC's voluntary deferral programs.  These restricted stock units vest
     no earlier  than three  years from the date of grant.  The amount  shown in
     2003 for Mr. Haldeman  represents  restricted stock units of MMC granted to
     Mr.  Haldeman  in 2004 for 2003  performance,  one-half of which vest after
     three  years and  one-half  of which  vest  after  five  years.  During the
     applicable vesting and restricted periods,  holders of shares of restricted
     stock receive the same dividend  payments as those paid on the  outstanding
     shares of stock,  and holders of restricted  stock units  receive  dividend
     equivalent payments that are equal in amount to dividends paid on shares of
     common stock. Vesting of restricted stock and restricted stock units may be
     accelerated  upon a change in  control.  "Change in  Control"  of MMC means
     generally any of the  following:  any person or group becoming the owner of
     securities  with 50% or more of the voting power of MMC;  within a two-year
     period  (with  certain  exceptions)  a change in directors  constituting  a
     majority of the board; stockholder approval of a merger or consolidation of
     MMC resulting in MMC stockholders not owning securities with 50% or more of
     the voting power of the surviving  entity;  and  stockholder  approval of a
     plan of complete liquidation or an agreement for the sale or disposition of
     all or substantially  all of MMC's assets.  Under the MMC Special Severance
     Pay  Plan,  certain  holders  of  restricted  stock  or  awards  in lieu of
     restricted stock with at least ten years of service will receive payment in
     shares of stock upon  forfeiture of their awards if their  employment  with
     MMC or one of its  subsidiaries  terminates.  The amount of such payment is
     based on years of service, with the individual receiving up to a maximum of
     90% of the  value of the  restricted  shares  after  25  years of  service,
     subject to execution of a  non-solicitation  agreement.  (Amounts  shown in
     this column for 2002 and 2001 have been revised  from the amounts  shown in
     last year's proxy statement to move the value of  bonus-related  restricted
     stock units from this column to the "Bonus" column.)

     As of December  31,  2003,  each  individual  in the table had  outstanding
     restricted  stock and restricted stock units of MMC with an aggregate value
     (using the closing  price of common stock on the  Consolidated  Transaction
     Reporting System on December 31, 2003 of $47.89) as follows: Mr. Greenberg,
     356,800 shares  (including  the shares  described in footnote 6, below) and
     98,808 units worth $17,087,152 and $4,731,915,  respectively; Mr. Haldeman,
     41,700 units worth $1,997,013;  Mr. Davis,  73,559 shares and 102,712 units
     worth $3,522,741 and $4,918,878,  respectively;  Mr. Cabiallavetta,  68,500
     shares and 87,634 units worth $3,280,465 and $4,196,793,  respectively; Mr.
     Groves,  11,568  shares and 63,587  units worth  $553,992  and  $3,045,182,
     respectively;  and Mr.  Coster,  171,700  shares and  119,201  units  worth
     $8,222,713 and $5,708,536, respectively.

(3)  Amounts shown in the table for 2003 represent options to purchase shares of
     MMC (and,  as noted in  footnote 9, below,  with  respect to Mr.  Haldeman,
     options to purchase Putnam Class B Shares) granted in March 2003.

(4)  MMC Capital's Long Term  Incentive  Plan ("LTIP")  operates as an incentive
     compensation  pool that varies in amount based on the extent of  investment
     return  and  fees  from  originating,   structuring  and  managing  certain
     insurance  and  related  industry  investments  in which MMC has  direct or
     indirect interests. Vesting schedules under the LTIP will accelerate upon a
     change in control of MMC (as  described  in footnote 2 above),  a change in
     control of MMC  Capital  (defined to mean that MMC no longer owns more than
     50% of MMC  Capital),  or upon the  retirement,  death or disability of the
     participating executive.

     In addition,  in 1999, Mr. Greenberg purchased partnership interests in the
     general  partner  of  Trident  II, and in 1999,  2000 and 2003,  Mr.  Davis
     purchased  partnership  interests  in the general  partners of five private
     equity funds managed by MMC Capital,  including Trident II and Trident III.
     These  purchases were on an after-tax,  out-of-pocket  basis. In connection
     with these  partnership  interests,  Mr.  Greenberg and Mr. Davis  received
     participations in carried  interests in these funds.  Based on the carrying
     values contained in the financial  statements of these private equity funds
     as of December 31, 2003,  the estimated  value of Mr.  Greenberg's  and Mr.
     Davis'  interest  in future  payouts  in  respect  of these  participations
     aggregated  approximately $2.8 million and $4.9 million,  respectively,  in
     each  case  based on a  liquidation  value as of that date and  subject  to
     realization  of estimated  returns.  The carried  interests  are subject to
     reduction or forfeiture in connection with  termination of employment under
     certain circumstances.  However, in the event of a change in control of MMC
     or MMC Capital prior to a termination  of employment  other than for cause,
     the carried interests cannot be so reduced or forfeited,  even with respect
     to subsequent  investments.  From time to time, Mr. Greenberg and Mr. Davis
     may be excused from  participating  in a particular  investment in order to
     avoid the  appearance  of any  inappropriate  remuneration  or as otherwise
     deemed  advisable.   In  2003,  Mr.  Davis  purchased,   on  an  after-tax,
     out-of-pocket  basis, a limited partnership interest in a fund that invests
     alongside a private equity fund managed by a subsidiary of MMC.  Neither he
     nor the  fund is  required  to pay  any  fees,  except  in  some  cases  an
     administrative fee, in connection with these investments.

                                       17



(5)  Amounts  shown in the  table for 2003  consist  of the  following:  (a) MMC
     matching  contributions  under the Stock  Investment Plan of $8,600 for Mr.
     Greenberg, $3,763 for Mr. Davis, $12,000 for Mr. Cabiallavetta,  $5,250 for
     Mr.  Groves and  $12,000  for Mr.  Coster,  and under the Stock  Investment
     Supplemental  Plan of $43,002 for Mr.  Greenberg,  $37,489  for Mr.  Davis,
     $42,000 for Mr.  Cabiallavetta,  $48,750 for Mr. Groves and $45,000 for Mr.
     Coster and (b)  contributions  by Putnam of  $15,000  to the Putnam  Profit
     Sharing  Retirement  Plan for Mr.  Haldeman.  The 2002 amount shown for Mr.
     Haldeman  of $4  million  was paid to him to offset  the  value of  amounts
     forfeited from his prior employer in connection  with his joining Putnam in
     2002.

(6)  This amount  represents  the value of a special  10-year  restricted  stock
     grant to Mr. Greenberg of 187,500  restricted  shares,  as described in the
     Compensation  Committee  Report  on page 25 of this  proxy  statement.  The
     restricted  stock vests in the year following  completion of ten (10) years
     of service from the date of grant and, except as noted below, is subject to
     the same conditions as the restricted stock described in footnote 2, above.
     After the ten (10) year vesting period,  Mr. Greenberg must retain at least
     50% of  the  after-tax  shares  until  at  least  one  year  following  his
     termination  as an  officer  and/or  director  of MMC.  This  grant is also
     subject to  non-competition  and  non-solicitation  restrictions that apply
     both during and after employment.

(7)  Mr. Haldeman joined Putnam in 2002. Mr.  Haldeman's  compensation  for 2002
     and 2003 was based in part on  commitments  made to him in connection  with
     his joining Putnam in 2002.

(8)  This amount  represents the value of restricted  Putnam Class B Shares.  At
     December 31, 2003, Mr. Haldeman had 14,400 restricted Putnam Class B Shares
     with  an  estimated  aggregate  value  of  $484,128  based  on a  specified
     valuation  methodology for determining  fair market value which at December
     31,  2003 was $33.62 per share.  All grants of  restricted  Putnam  Class B
     Shares include the right to dividend  payments equal in amount to dividends
     paid on the  outstanding  Class A Shares of Putnam.  The restricted  Putnam
     Class B  Shares  vest  at a rate of 25% a year  beginning  with  the  first
     anniversary  of the  date  of the  grant.  Upon  certain  corporate  events
     affecting  Putnam or MMC,  vesting of shares of  restricted  Putnam Class B
     Shares may be accelerated.

(9)  Represents options to purchase Putnam Class B shares.

(10) Mr.  Cabiallavetta's US  dollar-denominated  salary and cash bonus for 2003
     were paid  approximately  66% in Swiss Francs.  The Swiss Franc amounts for
     2003 were determined using an average exchange rate for 2002 (1.53 CHF to 1
     US$).  Were   fluctuating   exchange  rates  to  have  been  applied,   Mr.
     Cabiallavetta's 2003 salary and cash bonus amounts would have been $982,848
     and $1,125,695, respectively.


                                       18



OPTION GRANTS IN 2003

     The table below describes MMC stock options granted in March 2003 and stock
options to purchase Putnam Class B Shares granted to Mr. Haldeman in March 2003.



                                              INDIVIDUAL GRANTS(1)
                              --------------------------------------------------
                                                                                      POTENTIAL REALIZABLE VALUE
                               NUMBER OF   % OF TOTAL                                 AT ASSUMED ANNUAL RATES OF
                              SECURITIES     OPTIONS                                   STOCK PRICE APPRECIATION
                              UNDERLYING   GRANTED TO   EXERCISE                           FOR OPTION TERM(2)
                                OPTIONS     EMPLOYEES    PRICE        EXPIRATION    -------------------------------
NAME                            GRANTED      IN 2003     ($/SH)          DATE            5%($)             10%($)
----                          ----------   ----------   --------      ----------    -------------     -------------
                                                                                    
Jeffrey W. Greenberg .........  500,000        2.9        42.99        3/19/2013      313,518,090        34,257,494
Charles E. Haldeman ..........   45,000        0.3        42.99        3/19/2013        1,216,628         3,083,174
                                 80,000(3)     3.7        39.57        3/15/2013        1,990,829         5,045,151
Charles A. Davis .............  250,000        1.5        42.99        3/19/2013        6,759,045        17,128,747
Mathis Cabiallavetta .........  300,000        1.7        42.99        6/19/2013        8,110,854        20,554,497
Ray J. Groves ................  200,000        1.2        42.99        3/19/2013        5,407,236        13,702,998
Peter Coster .................  200,000        1.2        42.99        3/19/2013        5,407,236        13,702,998
MMC Stockholders(4) ..........                                                     14,247,903,240    36,106,984,213


----------
(1)  All MMC stock options become exercisable 25% a year beginning one year from
     the date of  grant.  The  option  exercise  price may be paid in cash or in
     shares of common  stock.  In the  event of a change in  control  of MMC (as
     described in footnote 2 to the Summary Compensation Table above), all stock
     options  will become fully  exercisable  and vested,  and any  restrictions
     contained in the terms and conditions of the option grants shall lapse.  If
     any payments made in connection with a change in control are subject to the
     excise tax imposed under the federal tax laws, MMC will increase the option
     holder's  payment as necessary  to restore  such option  holder to the same
     after-tax position had the excise tax not been imposed.

(2)  The dollar amounts are the result of  calculations at the 5% and 10% growth
     rates set by the SEC; the rates are not intended to be a forecast of future
     stock price  appreciation.  A zero  percent  stock  price  growth rate will
     result in a zero gain for all option holders.

(3)  Mr.  Haldeman was granted an option to acquire  Putnam Class B Shares which
     becomes exercisable 25% a year beginning on March 15, 2004. The fair market
     value of each Putnam Class B Share on the date of grant was $39.57.

(4)  The dollar  amounts  are  included  for  comparative  purposes  to show the
     aggregate  gain that would be achieved  by all  holders of the  outstanding
     stock of MMC at the assumed  stock price  appreciation  rates at the end of
     the  10-year  term of the MMC  options  granted  on  March  20,  2003 at an
     exercise price of $42.99.

                                       19



AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN 2003 & YEAR-END OPTION VALUES

     The following table sets forth certain information concerning stock options
exercised during 2003 and the number and value of specified  unexercised options
at December 31, 2003.  There were no stock option  exercises by any of the named
executives in 2003.



                                                             NUMBER OF SECURITIES UNDERLYING          VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                                 UNEXCERCISED OPTIONS AT             IN-THE-MONEY OPTIONS AT
                                   SHARES       VALUE               DECEMBER 31, 2003                  DECEMBER 31, 2003(1)
                                ACQUIRED ON   REALIZED     ----------------------------------    --------------------------------
NAME                            EXERCISE(#)      ($)       EXERCISABLE(#)    UNEXERCISABLE(#)    EXERCISABLE($)  UNEXERCISABLE($)
------                          ------------  --------     --------------    ----------------    --------------  ----------------
                                                                                                        
Jeffrey W. Greenberg ...........     --           --          1,572,500         1,137,500         24,809,587        2,748,000
Charles E. Haldeman ............     --           --             13,900            86,700             16,819          270,957
                                                                  4,800(2)         94,400(2)              --               --
Charles A. Davis ...............     --           --            520,000           550,000          3,445,737        1,404,000
Mathis Cabiallavetta ...........     --           --            405,000           615,000          1,014,875        1,649,000
Ray J. Groves ..................     --           --            150,000           450,000                 --          980,000
Peter Coster ...................     --           --            710,000           390,000         12,984,359        1,105,300


----------
(1)  The value of unexercised  in-the-money  stock options at December 31, 2 003
     is presented pursuant to SEC rules and is based on the fair market value on
     December 31, 2003, minus the grant price. Fair Market Value with respect to
     MMC stock is based on the  closing  price on the  Consolidated  Transaction
     Reporting  System on December  31, 2003 of $47.89 and,  with respect to the
     Putnam Class B Shares,  is based on a specified  valuation  methodology for
     determining  fair market  value  which at December  31, 2003 was $33.62 per
     share. The actual amount,  if any,  realized upon exercise of stock options
     will depend  upon the market  price of the stock  relative to the  exercise
     price  per share at the time the stock  option  is  exercised.  There is no
     assurance  that  the  values  of  unexercised  in-the-money  stock  options
     reflected in this table will be realized.

(2)  Represents options to acquire Putnam Class B Shares.

                                       20



UNITED STATES RETIREMENT PROGRAM

     MMC maintains a United States retirement  program consisting of the Marsh &
McLennan Companies  Retirement Plan, a non-qualified  Benefit  Equalization Plan
and a non-qualified Supplemental Retirement Plan.

     The following  table shows the estimated  before-tax  annual  straight-life
annuity  benefit payable under these  retirement  programs to employees with the
specified Maximum Average Salary (average salary over the 60 consecutive  months
of employment that produces the highest  average) and specified years of service
upon  retirement  at age 65,  after  giving  effect to  adjustments  for  Social
Security benefits:

                                         YEARS OF SERVICE
                    ------------------------------------------------------------
MAXIMUM
AVERAGE SALARY          5        10        20        30        40         45
-------------       --------  --------  --------  --------  --------  ----------
$  800,000 .......  $ 75,718  $151,437  $302,874  $442,592  $522,592  $  562,592
$  900,000 .......  $ 85,718  $171,437  $342,874  $500,592  $590,592  $  635,592
$1,000,000 .......  $ 95,718  $191,437  $382,874  $558,592  $658,592  $  708,592
$1,100,000 .......  $105,718  $211,437  $422,874  $616,592  $726,592  $  781,592
$1,200,000 .......  $115,718  $231,437  $462,874  $674,592  $794,592  $  854,592
$1,300,000 .......  $125,718  $251,437  $502,874  $732,592  $862,592  $  927,592
$1,400,000 .......  $135,718  $271,437  $542,874  $790,592  $930,592  $1,000,592
$1,500,000 .......  $145,718  $291,437  $582,874  $848,592  $998,592  $1,073,592

     The compensation of participants  used to calculate the retirement  benefit
consists of regular  salary as disclosed  in the "Salary"  column of the Summary
Compensation  Table and  excludes  bonuses and other forms of  compensation  not
regularly received. For the six individuals named above, other than Mr. Haldeman
who participates in the Putnam Profit Sharing  Retirement Plan and related plans
and  not in  MMC's  U.S.  retirement  program,  the  2003  compensation  used to
calculate the Maximum Average Salary and the number of years of credited service
are as follows:  Mr.  Greenberg,  $1,200,000,  9 years; Mr. Davis,  $900,000,  7
years; Mr. Cabiallavetta,  $900,000, 6 years; Mr. Groves, $900,000, 3 years; and
Mr. Coster, $950,000, 43 years.

                                       21



                          COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT

     This report is submitted to the stockholders of Marsh & McLennan Companies,
Inc.  ("MMC") by the  Compensation  Committee (the  "Committee") of the board of
directors. The Compensation Committee consists solely of non-executive directors
who  are  independent,  as  determined  by the  board  in  accordance  with  MMC
guidelines  and New York Stock  Exchange  listing  standards.  The Committee met
eight times in 2003.

     By its charter, the Committee is charged with reviewing and approving MMC's
compensation  philosophies and overseeing the development and  implementation of
compensation  programs for the CEO and other senior  executives.  The  Committee
determines the compensation of MMC's chief executive  officer ("CEO"),  approves
the  compensation of other senior  executives and makes  recommendations  to the
board of directors with respect to incentive compensation plans and equity-based
plans.  This report reflects the Committee's  executive  compensation  policies,
plans and actions.

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION PRINCIPLES

     MMC is a professional  services  organization  comprising  businesses  with
distinct economic characteristics, marketplaces and operating conditions. In its
consideration   of  the  level,   composition,   and  terms  and  conditions  of
compensation for executive  officers of MMC and its subsidiaries,  the Committee
seeks to enable MMC to attract,  retain and motivate  the most highly  qualified
and capable professionals  available to lead the organization's  businesses.  To
that end, MMC's executive  compensation  program is designed to support business
strategies,  to enhance the  achievement of financial  objectives and to reflect
marketplace  practices and dynamics.  The Committee  also wants to ensure that a
substantial portion of executive officers' long-term compensation is tied to the
long-term  performance  of MMC and  MMC's  stock  price.  These  principles  are
reflected in the actions discussed below relating to salaries,  annual incentive
awards and long-term compensation.

     Federal tax law limits the ability of  publicly-traded  companies to secure
an income tax  deduction for  compensation  paid to certain  highly  compensated
individuals.  The Committee's policy is to take actions deemed to be in the best
interests of MMC and its stockholders,  recognizing, however, that achieving the
desired  flexibility  in the design and delivery of  compensation  may result in
compensation  that is not in all  instances  deductible  for federal  income tax
purposes because of the restrictions set forth in Section 162(m) of the Internal
Revenue Code.

MAJOR COMPENSATION COMPONENTS

     The  compensation  program for executive  officers  comprises  base salary,
annual   performance-based   incentive   compensation  and  long-term  incentive
compensation.  The Committee  reviews  periodically the levels and components of
executive compensation and utilizes an independent  compensation consulting firm
to provide data, to offer professional  observations  regarding the compensation
practices  of  comparable  companies  and to advise the  Committee  on  specific
executive  compensation  subjects  that arise.  Survey data is developed  from a
group of selected major corporations (16 in 2003) in the diversified  financial,
banking and insurance  sectors that are  representative  of the size and type of
company with which MMC competes in the  marketplace for executive  talent.  This
grouping is broader than the peer group in the Stock Performance Graph set forth
below in order to obtain a meaningful  understanding of competitive compensation
practices and levels for senior executive positions in comparable  companies and
industry segments.  The compensation  components and levels among the comparator
companies are considered by the Committee in determining base salary,  incentive
compensation  awards and equity-based  compensation for the CEO and in approving
the   recommendations  of  the  CEO  for  executive  officers  of  MMC  and  its
subsidiaries,  as described  below. In addition,  in 2002 and 2003 the Committee
utilized  an  independent  compensation  consulting  firm  to  evaluate  MMC CEO
compensation and MMC's equity  compensation  practices with respect to executive
officers, as discussed more fully below.

     Members of  Putnam's  senior  management  group  (including  Mr.  Haldeman)
participate in a compensation  program designed over time to complement Putnam's
business needs and reflect its marketplace. Mr. Haldeman's compensation for 2003
was based in part on  commitments  made to him in  connection  with his  joining
Putnam in 2002 and also  reflects his increased  responsibilities  in connection
with becoming president and chief

                                       22



executive officer of Putnam in November 2003. Annual incentive awards for Putnam
executives  are made under plans that are funded  based on the level of Putnam's
earnings,   earnings  growth,   annual  plan  funding  agreements  with  MMC  or
predetermined  plan  formulae.   Long-term  incentive  compensation  for  Putnam
executives is in the form of restricted  stock and stock options with respect to
Class B shares of Putnam.  Putnam employees may also be considered for grants of
MMC  restricted  stock and/or  options from time to time.  Because  employees of
Putnam participate in a compensation  program specific to Putnam, the discussion
provided in the following  sections of this report relating to the  compensation
of MMC's executive officers excludes Putnam.

BASE SALARY

     Base salaries of executive officers are intended to reflect their roles and
responsibilities  and be competitive with respect to the relevant marketplace as
to the availability of talent and compensation  levels. In general, an executive
officer's  base salary is  adjusted  when such an  adjustment  is  necessary  to
reflect a change in the individual's responsibilities,  growth in their job role
or when market or internal equity  conditions may warrant.  Salaries for Messrs.
Cabiallavetta, Davis and Groves were increased in 2003 based on a combination of
these  factors.  In  2003,  salaries  accounted  for 21% of  total  compensation
(excluding stock options) for MMC's executive officers.

ANNUAL INCENTIVE COMPENSATION

     For  2003,  annual  incentive   compensation  for  executive  officers  was
comprised  of cash and  restricted  stock  units.  The size of the  annual  cash
incentive  award pool is based on  earnings  and  reflects  MMC's net  operating
income growth. However, the Committee may approve awards that, in the aggregate,
may be less than the pool. For 2003, the Committee  approved an annual incentive
award pool based on MMC's pre-tax income for 2003 and pre-tax income growth over
2002.

     With respect to individual annual incentive awards, the Committee exercises
its judgment,  weighing the CEO's recommendation and evaluation of the executive
officer's  managerial and professional  role within the  organization,  relative
contribution  (compared with the internal peer group) to the individual business
segment,  the  firm's  overall  operations  and  earnings  growth,  any  special
circumstances  and  marketplace  factors.  Awards reflect  judgments  reached in
weighing these considerations and are not formulaic.

     The restricted  stock unit component of the annual  incentive for executive
officers is  distributable in shares and vests after three years of service from
the date of grant  with no annual  incremental  vesting.  These  grants  reflect
annual performance and are intended to serve as both a retention and longer-term
performance-linked  component of the annual  incentives for executive  officers.
The  proportion of restricted  stock units relative to cash bonus is approved by
the Committee using the factors outlined in the preceding  paragraph.  For 2003,
the value of restricted  stock units granted to executive  officers  ranged from
approximately  25% to 60% of the executive  officer's  total annual  bonus.  The
value of  restricted  stock  units  awarded to the named  executive  officers is
included in the Summary Compensation Table under the "Bonus" column for the year
earned.

     In 2003, cash bonuses and restricted  stock units  constituted 27% and 21%,
respectively,   of  total  compensation  (excluding  stock  options)  for  MMC's
executive officers.

LONG-TERM COMPENSATION

     The Committee believes that retaining and motivating the executive officers
of MMC by fostering  stock  ownership is essential to  continuing  success.  The
Committee  has relied  historically  on various forms of  stock-based  grants as
incentives  and  rewards for  executive  officers  to  reinforce  a  longer-term
perspective and to link executive  officers'  financial interests over time with
those of stockholders.  The professional services businesses of MMC compete also
with privately-held firms that offer attractive equity ownership  opportunities.
Relative to this market  segment,  MMC's  ability to recruit,  reward and retain
executives is heavily  dependent on offering  opportunities  for long-term stock
accumulation. In 2003, long-term incentive grants to MMC executive officers were
made in the form of 10-year  restricted  stock and stock  options that vest over
time. In addition,  under voluntary deferral programs, a supplemental restricted
stock unit  award  with  vesting  requirements  may be granted as an  additional
inducement for long-term stock ownership.

                                       23



     The long-term  restricted stock granted to executive  officers vests in the
year  following  completion  of ten (10) years of service from the date of grant
with no annual incremental  vesting.  This restriction period is longer than the
restriction  period applied to similar  restricted  stock grants by companies in
the comparator group described above. The Committee believes restricted stock is
an effective  retention tool because of the length of the restriction period and
is an  appropriate  reward for  contributions  over time.  The long  restriction
period can foster  executive  officers'  accumulation  of substantial  MMC stock
ownership positions, linking their long-term capital accumulation opportunity to
shareholder return.

     Stock  options are another  element of  executive  long-term  compensation.
Executive officers are eligible for option grants on an annual basis. Individual
grants  reflect  factors   discussed  earlier   including   organization   role,
performance,  potential for future contributions to the long-term success of MMC
and  marketplace  factors.  Stock options granted to executives have an exercise
price  equal to the fair  market  value of MMC stock on the trading day prior to
the date of the grant and vest  ratably  over four (4) years of service from the
date of grant.

     Within this framework,  the mix and value of long-term incentive grants for
executive  officers  (other than the CEO) are approved by the Committee based on
the  recommendations  of the CEO. As noted earlier in this report, the Committee
utilized an independent  compensation  consulting  firm to evaluate MMC's equity
compensation practices for executives and to compare the practices and resultant
equity  holding  levels with multiple  groupings of comparator  companies.  As a
result of that  study,  long-term  incentive  grants  made to certain  executive
officers  in 2003  include a special  grant of  10-year  restricted  stock.  The
special  10-year  restricted  stock  award was made to  executive  officers  who
recently  joined  MMC and is  intended  to  enhance  their  share  holdings  for
long-term incentive and retention.

     In  2003,  10-year  restricted  stock  awards  accounted  for 31% of  total
compensation (excluding stock options) for MMC's executive officers.

CEO COMPENSATION

     Mr.   Greenberg's   compensation   is  composed  of  base  salary,   annual
performance-based   incentive  compensation  and  long-term  compensation.   Mr.
Greenberg has no employment  agreement,  nor does he have any special retirement
or severance arrangement with MMC.

     The Committee  evaluates Mr.  Greenberg's  performance  and  determines his
compensation  by  applying  both  the  quantitative  and  qualitative   criteria
described earlier for executive  officers.  In doing so, the Committee considers
MMC's current and long-term financial performance.  The Committee also considers
Mr. Greenberg's  influence on the strategic direction and long-term strength and
performance  of MMC in the context of his broader  leadership  responsibilities,
including his role in developing talent, enabling  value-creating  collaboration
among MMC's businesses and leading corporate development.

     Mr.  Greenberg's  base  salary  for 2003 was  $1,200,000,  unchanged  since
January 1, 2000.

     Mr.  Greenberg  participates in the same MMC annual incentive plan as MMC's
other  executive  officers.   For  2003,  the  Committee's   evaluation  of  Mr.
Greenberg's  performance  considered MMC's strong financial  results measured by
net operating  income  increasing 10% and earnings per share increasing 15%. The
Committee also recognized Mr. Greenberg's outstanding leadership and his ongoing
role in guiding MMC and Putnam in the  context of the  regulatory  and  business
issues resulting from the revelations of inappropriate  market timing in certain
Putnam  mutual funds by a number of investment  professionals  who have now left
the firm.

     Notwithstanding MMC's and Mr. Greenberg's positive performance in 2003, the
Committee  considered  the  effects  of the  events at Putnam and made an annual
incentive award to Mr. Greenberg of $1,000,000 less than in 2002 (i.e.,  cash of
$3,000,000 in 2002 and  $2,000,000 in 2003,  and  restricted  stock units with a
value at grant of $1,500,000 in each year).

     In 2003, Mr. Greenberg received long-term incentive grants of 21,000 shares
of 10-year  restricted  stock and 500,000  stock  options.  Mr.  Greenberg  also
received a supplemental grant of 3,285 restricted stock units under a voluntary

                                       24



deferral  program  in  connection  with  his  deferral  of  previously   granted
restricted stock units.

     As noted earlier in this report, in 2002 and 2003 the Committee utilized an
independent compensation consulting firm to assist in evaluating Mr. Greenberg's
compensation,  including  components and amounts,  relative to MMC's performance
against the 16-company  comparator group as previously described on page 22. The
study compared Mr.  Greenberg's  compensation and MMC performance  (measured by,
among  other  time  frames,   three-year  total  shareholder  return)  with  the
compensation  of CEOs of the comparator  group.  The study  concluded that MMC's
performance  was in the top  quartile  of the  comparator  group for the  period
analyzed but that Mr.  Greenberg's total  compensation was below the average and
median of the group.  The study also  concluded that Mr.  Greenberg's  total MMC
equity  holdings  were  significantly  below  the  average  and  median  of  the
comparator  group,  primarily because Mr. Greenberg joined MMC in mid-career and
did not receive a large MMC stock grant upon joining MMC or upon  becoming  CEO.
The  study  found  Mr.  Greenberg's  total  equity  holdings  to be at the  34th
percentile of the comparator group.

     The  Committee  believes  it is  important  for  Mr.  Greenberg  to  have a
substantial  ownership interest in MMC and that Mr. Greenberg's long-term equity
awards  recognize  his  leadership  and capacity to  contribute to the long-term
growth  and  success  of the  company.  Since Mr.  Greenberg  has no  employment
agreement  or  special  retirement  or  severance  arrangement,   his  long-term
remuneration  opportunities  are based on MMC  stock  ownership.  The  Committee
believes  that this  emphasis  on MMC  stock  serves  as an  incentive  to build
stockholder value over the long-term.  At the same time, the Committee  believes
that Mr.  Greenberg's  equity grants  should also serve as a retention  tool. To
accomplish these objectives,  the Committee  established a program in March 2003
for a series of special 10-year  restricted stock grants to Mr.  Greenberg.  The
restricted  stock granted  pursuant to this program vests in the year  following
completion  of ten (10) years of service  from the date of grant.  In  addition,
after the ten (10) year vesting period,  Mr.  Greenberg must retain at least 50%
of the after-tax  shares until at least one year following his termination as an
officer  and/or  director  of  MMC.  This  special  grant  is  also  subject  to
non-competition  and  non-solicitation  restrictions  that apply both during and
after  employment,  the breach of which will require  return of a portion of the
shares under certain  circumstances.  In 2003, Mr. Greenberg was granted 187,500
shares of 10-year  restricted stock pursuant to this program.  The value of this
special  grant is included in the  Summary  Compensation  Table under the column
captioned "Restricted Stock Awards."

     Based on a review of CEO compensation for 2002 (latest data available), Mr.
Greenberg's  total  compensation  for 2003,  which includes base salary,  annual
incentive compensation and long-term compensation (except the special restricted
stock award), was at approximately the 50th percentile of the reported 2002 data
for  the  comparator  companies.   His  long-term  compensation  (including  any
long-term  incentive plan payouts and stock  options,  but excluding the special
restricted  stock  award)  was  at  approximately  the  55th  percentile  of the
comparator companies.

CONCLUSION

     The  Committee  believes  that  MMC's  executive  compensation  program  is
designed  and  administered  to  attract  exceptional  talent  and  to  motivate
executives  to remain  with MMC and to  perform  in an  exceptional  manner.  By
ensuring that such persons are leading MMC's business units and operations,  the
long-term  interests of stockholders will be served. The Committee believes that
its  actions  in 2003 were  consistent  with this  intent  and  faithful  to the
compensation principles outlined above.

                     SUBMITTED BY THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
                          OF THE MMC BOARD OF DIRECTORS

           Lewis W. Bernard                           Oscar Fanjul

           Robert F. Erburu                    The Rt. Hon. Lord Lang of
                                                       Monkton, DL


                                       25



STOCK PERFORMANCE GRAPH

     The following  graph compares MMC's  cumulative  total  stockholder  return
(rounded to the nearest  whole  dollar) on its stock,  the Standard & Poor's 500
Stock Index and a  company-constructed  composite industry index,  consisting of
Aon Corporation, Arthur J. Gallagher & Co., Franklin Resources, Inc. and T. Rowe
Price Group,  Inc.,  over the  five-year  period from  December 31, 1998 through
December 31, 2003.

                              [Line Chart Omitted]




                              1998      1999     2000     2001     2002     2003

MMC                            100       168      209      195      172      184
S&P 500                        100       121      110       97       76       97
Composite Industry Index       100       108      119      116       90      132


     Assumes  $100  invested  at the  closing  price on  December  31, 1998 with
dividends reinvested on the date of payment without commissions. This table does
not forecast future performance of MMC common stock.

                                       26



           TRANSACTIONS WITH MANAGEMENT AND OTHERS; OTHER INFORMATION

     From time to time,  in the ordinary  course of business  and on  commercial
terms,  MMC and its  subsidiaries may provide services to, or in connection with
transactions  involving,  investment funds and their portfolio companies managed
or advised by MMC Capital,  in which various executive officers and directors of
MMC have direct or indirect interests. Such services include:


   o acting as an insurance or  reinsurance  broker;

   o consulting;

   o transaction advisory services; or

   o investment management.

     A portion of the fees  received  by MMC  Capital or its  subsidiaries  from
portfolio  companies for transaction,  management or other advisory  services is
dedicated to the LTIP pool described in footnote 4 to "Compensation of Executive
Officers --Summary Compensation Table".

     The aggregate amount received for all such services rendered in 2003 by MMC
and its subsidiaries was approximately $38.5 million.  This amount predominantly
consists of insurance brokerage and related payments made by portfolio companies
to MMC subsidiaries  relating to insurance and reinsurance  placements with such
insurers in the normal course of business.


             SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

     Section  16(a)  of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of  1934  requires  MMC's
directors and executive  officers,  and persons who own more than ten percent of
the common  stock of MMC,  to file with the SEC and the New York Stock  Exchange
initial  reports of  beneficial  ownership  and reports of changes in beneficial
ownership of MMC stock.  Such  persons are also  required by SEC  regulation  to
furnish  MMC  with  copies  of all  Section  16(a)  forms  they  file.  To MMC's
knowledge,  based solely on a review of the copies of such reports  furnished to
MMC and written representations that no other reports were required, during 2003
all Section  16(a)  filing  requirements  applicable  to such  individuals  were
complied with except for one report covering one transaction  filed late by each
of Mr.  Cabiallavetta  and Ms.  Simmons.  In  addition,  for  prior  years,  one
transaction  was filed late by each of Mr. Olsen (1999) and Ms.  Simmons  (2001)
and two transactions were filed late by Mr. Smith (2001 and 2002).

                                       27



ITEM 2

                      RATIFICATION OF SELECTION OF AUDITORS

     The Audit  Committee has recommended the selection of Deloitte & Touche LLP
as  independent  auditors  for the 2004  fiscal  year,  subject  to  stockholder
ratification. Deloitte & Touche will audit our consolidated financial statements
for fiscal 2004 and perform  other  services.  Deloitte & Touche  acted as MMC's
independent  auditors for the year ended  December 31, 2003. A Deloitte & Touche
representative  will be present at the meeting,  and will have an opportunity to
make a statement and to answer your questions.

     The  affirmative  vote of a majority of the shares of MMC stock  present or
represented  and  entitled  to vote at the  meeting  is  required  to ratify the
appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP.  Unless  otherwise  directed in the proxy,
the  persons  named in the proxy will vote FOR the  ratification  of  Deloitte &
Touche LLP. The board recommends you vote FOR this proposal.


FEES OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

     For the fiscal years ended  December  31, 2003 and 2002,  fees for services
provided by Deloitte & Touche LLP, the member firms of  Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu
and their respective affiliates were as follows:

                         FEES                              2003          2002
------------------------------------------------------  ----------    ----------

  AUDIT FEES for the audit of MMC's annual financial
  statements and reviews of the financial statements
  included in MMC's quarterly reports on Form 10-Q,
  and including services in connection with
  statutory and regulatory filings or engagements ..... $9,675,000    $8,796,000
                                                        ----------    ----------

  AUDIT-RELATED FEES, including fees for audits of
  employee benefit plans, computer and control
  related audit services, agreed-upon procedures,
  merger and acquisition assistance and other
  accounting research services .......................  $3,680,000    $2,727,000

  TAX FEES for tax consulting and compliance
  services not related to the audit ..................  $1,395,000    $2,055,000

  ALL OTHER FEES including administrative services
  related to regulatory compliance and other
  non-audit services. In 2002 also includes market
  research services and fees related to Marsh Inc.
  financial system implementation services
  contracted for in 2001 and concluded in 2002 .......  $       --    $5,722,000

     The Audit  Committee has adopted a policy  regarding  pre-approval of audit
and  non-audit  services  provided  by  Deloitte  &  Touche  LLP to MMC  and its
subsidiaries.  A copy of this  policy is  attached  to this proxy  statement  as
Appendix B.

                                       28



                             AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

     The  primary  function  of the Audit  Committee  is to assist  the board of
directors in its oversight of MMC's financial  reporting process.  The Committee
operates  pursuant  to a  charter  approved  by the  MMC  board.  Management  is
responsible  for MMC's  financial  statements  and  overall  reporting  process,
including  the  system  of  internal  controls.  The  independent  auditors  are
responsible  for  conducting  annual  audits  and  quarterly  reviews  of  MMC's
financial  statements  and  expressing  an opinion as to the  conformity  of the
annual financial statements with generally accepted accounting principles.

     In the  performance of its oversight  function,  the Committee has reviewed
and  discussed  the audited  financial  statements  as of and for the year ended
December 31, 2003 with  management and the independent  auditors.  The Committee
has also  discussed  with the  independent  auditors the matters  required to be
discussed by Statement on Auditing  Standards No. 61,  COMMUNICATION  WITH AUDIT
COMMITTEES.  Finally, the Committee has received the written disclosures and the
letter from the independent  auditors  required by Independence  Standards Board
Standard No. 1, INDEPENDENCE  DISCUSSIONS WITH AUDIT COMMITTEES,  has considered
whether the provision of other non-audit services by the independent auditors to
the Company is compatible with  maintaining the auditor's  independence  and has
discussed with the auditors the auditors' independence.

     It is not the duty or  responsibility  of the Committee to conduct auditing
or   accounting   reviews  or   procedures.   In  performing   their   oversight
responsibility,  members of the Committee rely without independent  verification
on  the  information  provided  to  them  and  on the  representations  made  by
management and the independent accountants.  Accordingly,  the Audit Committee's
oversight does not provide an independent basis to determine that management has
maintained   appropriate   accounting  and  financial  reporting  principles  or
appropriate  internal controls and procedures designed to assure compliance with
accounting standards and applicable laws and regulations. Furthermore, the Audit
Committee's considerations and discussions do not assure that the audit of MMC's
financial  statements has been carried out in accordance with generally accepted
auditing standards or that the financial  statements are presented in accordance
with generally accepted accounting principles.

     Based upon the review and discussions described in this report, and subject
to the limitations on the role and responsibilities of the Committee referred to
above and in the  charter,  the  Committee  recommended  to the  board  that the
audited  financial  statements  referred to above be  included  in MMC's  Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the year ended  December  31,  2003 to be filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission.

                        SUBMITTED BY THE AUDIT COMMITTEE
                          OF THE MMC BOARD OF DIRECTORS

                 Oscar Fanjul                    David A. Olsen
               Stephen R. Hardis               Morton O. Schapiro
               Gwendolyn S. King                  Adele Simmons

                                       29



                   SUBMISSION OF FUTURE STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

     Stockholders  who wish to present a  proposal  and have it  considered  for
inclusion in MMC's proxy  materials for the 2005 Annual Meeting of  Stockholders
of MMC must submit such  proposal in writing to MMC in care of the  Secretary of
MMC on or before December 2, 2004.

     Stockholders who wish to present a proposal at the 2005 Annual Meeting that
has not been  included in MMC's  proxy  materials  must submit such  proposal in
writing to MMC in care of the  Secretary of MMC. Any such  proposal  received by
the Secretary of MMC on or after February 19, 2005 shall be considered  untimely
under the provisions of MMC's by-laws governing the presentation of proposals by
stockholders.  In  addition,  the  by-laws of MMC contain  further  requirements
relating to the timing and content of the notice which stockholders must provide
to the  Secretary  for any  nomination  or matter to be properly  presented at a
stockholders meeting. Such proposals should be addressed to:

     Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.
     1166 Avenue of the Americas
     New York, New York
     10036-2774
     Attn: Mr. Leon J. Lichter,
           Corporate Secretary

                                       30



                                                                      APPENDIX A

                        MARSH & MCLENNAN COMPANIES, INC.
                             AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER
                               (January 15, 2004)

PURPOSE OF COMMITTEE

The purpose of the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors of Marsh & McLennan
Companies,  Inc.  ("MMC") is to assist  the Board in  fulfilling  its  oversight
responsibilities   with  respect  to  (i)  the  integrity  of  MMC's   financial
statements,  (ii) the  qualifications,  independence  and  performance  of MMC's
independent  auditors,  (iii) the  performance of MMC's internal audit function,
(iv) compliance by MMC with legal and regulatory  requirements and (v) the other
responsibilities  set out herein.

While  the  Committee  has the  responsibilities  and  powers  set forth in this
Charter,  it is not the duty of the  Committee  to plan or conduct  audits or to
determine  that MMC's  financial  statements  and  disclosures  are complete and
accurate and are in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and
applicable rules and regulations.  These are the  responsibilities of management
and the independent  auditors.  Furthermore,  while the Committee is responsible
for reviewing  MMC's policies and practices with respect to risk  assessment and
management,  it is the  responsibility of the Chief Executive Officer and senior
management to assess and manage MMC's exposure to risk.

The Committee shall report to the Board on a regular basis.

COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP

The  Committee  shall be  comprised of three or more  directors.  Members of the
Committee shall be recommended by the MMC Directors and Governance Committee and
be elected by the full Board.  As  determined  in the  business  judgment of the
Board,  each  member  of  the  Committee  shall  satisfy  the  independence  and
experience  requirements  of the New York Stock Exchange and any other legal and
regulatory  requirements  and at least one  member of the  Committee  shall have
accounting or related financial  management expertise as defined by the New York
Stock Exchange.

RESOURCES AND AUTHORITY OF THE COMMITTEE

The Committee  shall have the resources and authority  appropriate  to discharge
its duties and  responsibilities,  including  full access to MMC  employees  and
officers and internal or external advisors or consultants.  If, in the course of
fulfilling  its duties,  the  Committee  wishes to consult with  outside  legal,
accounting or other  advisors,  the Committee may retain these advisors  without
seeking Board approval.

COMMITTEE STRUCTURE AND OPERATIONS

The  Board  shall  designate  one  member of the  Committee  as its  chair.  The
Committee  may meet in  person or  telephonically  or act by  unanimous  written
consent.  The Committee  chair, in consultation  with Committee  members,  shall
determine the schedule of meetings of the Committee  (which meetings shall occur
at least  quarterly).  Further meetings shall occur, or matters be submitted for
action by unanimous  written consent,  when deemed necessary or desirable by the
Committee,  its  chair  or  the  Chairman  of  MMC.  The  Committee  is to  meet
periodically in separate sessions with the chief financial officer (and/or other
management personnel),  with internal audit and with the independent auditors as
the Committee deems necessary.

The Committee  chair,  who may consult with internal audit,  management or other
Committee   members,   develops  the  agenda  for  Committee   meetings.   Where
practicable,  materials should be distributed to Committee members prior to each
Committee meeting.

DELEGATION TO SUBCOMMITTEE

The Committee  may delegate all or a portion of its duties and  responsibilities
to a subcommittee or subcommittees of the Committee.

                                      A-1



ATTENDANCE

The Committee  chair may invite such members of management,  representatives  of
the independent auditors and internal audit and other persons to the Committee's
meetings as he or she may deem desirable or appropriate.

COMMITTEE DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES

A.   Oversight of Independent Auditors and Audit Process:

     1.   The  Committee  shall have the sole  authority  to select  (subject to
          shareholder  ratification),   compensate,  retain  and  oversee  MMC's
          independent  auditors  (including   resolution  of  any  disagreements
          between  management  and  the  independent  auditors  regarding  MMC's
          financial  reporting).  The independent auditors shall report directly
          to the Committee.

     2.   The Committee shall review and discuss with the  independent  auditors
          the scope,  staffing and general extent of the audit.  The Committee's
          review shall include an explanation  from the independent  auditors of
          the factors considered by the auditors in determining the audit scope,
          including  the major risk  factors.  The  independent  auditors  shall
          confirm to the Committee that no  inappropriate  limitations have been
          placed on the scope or nature of their audit procedures.

     3.   The Committee shall pre-approve all services, both audit and permitted
          non-audit,  to be  performed  for  MMC  by  the  independent  auditors
          pursuant to  pre-approval  policies and procedures  established by the
          Committee. In this regard, the Committee may delegate its authority to
          pre-approve such services to one or more Committee  members,  provided
          that any such  approvals  are  presented to the full  Committee at the
          next scheduled Audit Committee meeting.

     4.   The Committee shall evaluate the independent auditors' qualifications,
          performance  and  independence,  including  the  consideration  of the
          independent  auditors'  quality  controls and whether the provision of
          permitted  non-audit  services  is  compatible  with  maintaining  the
          independent auditors'  independence.  The Committee's conclusions with
          respect to the  independent  auditors  shall be  presented to the full
          Board on at least an annual  basis.  As part of such  evaluation,  the
          Committee shall  specifically  review and evaluate the  qualifications
          and  rotation of the lead audit  partner and shall  review a report or
          reports prepared at least annually by the independent auditors:

          a.   describing their internal quality control procedures, and

          b.   describing any material issues raised by (i) the most recent peer
               or  internal  quality  control  review of the firm or (ii) by any
               inquiry  or   investigation   by   governmental  or  professional
               authorities, within the preceding five years, with respect to one
               or more  audits  carried  out by the firm and any steps  taken to
               deal with any such issues.

     5.   The  Committee  shall  review a report or  reports  prepared  at least
          annually by the  independent  auditors  describing  all  relationships
          between the independent  auditors and MMC and providing  confirmations
          with  respect  to  the   requirements   of  all   applicable   auditor
          independence  rules.  The Committee shall discuss with the independent
          auditors any disclosed  relationships  that may impact the objectivity
          and  independence  of the  independent  auditors  and,  if  necessary,
          recommend appropriate action in response to the report.

     6.   The Committee  shall discuss with  management and internal audit their
          views of the independent auditors' performance.

     7.   The  Committee  shall set policies for the hiring of current or former
          employees of the independent auditors.

     8.   The Committee  shall discuss with the  independent  auditors any audit
          problems or difficulties and management's response thereto, and review
          matters   relating  to  the  conduct  of  the  audit  required  to  be
          communicated  by  the  independent  auditors  by  applicable  auditing
          standards, including:

          a.   any schedule of unadjusted differences,

                                      A-2



          b.   the  independent  auditors'  judgment  about the quality of MMC's
               accounting principles,

          c.   any  restrictions  on  the  scope  of  activities  or  access  to
               requested information, and

          d.   any significant disagreements with management.

     9.   The Committee shall review and discuss with the  independent  auditors
          their  views  about the  quality  of MMC's  financial  and  accounting
          personnel.

B.   Oversight of Financial Statements and Related Matters:

     1.   The Committee shall review and discuss as appropriate with management,
          internal audit and the independent  auditors,  in separate meetings if
          necessary:

          a.   The  annual  audited   financial   statements,   including  MMC's
               disclosures  under  "Management's   Discussion  and  Analysis  of
               Financial  Condition and Results of Operations," and recommend to
               the Board  whether the  audited  financial  statements  should be
               included in MMC's Form 10-K Report,

          b.   the quarterly financial  statements,  including MMC's disclosures
               under   "Management's   Discussion   and  Analysis  of  Financial
               Condition  and  Results  of  Operations,"  prior to the filing of
               MMC's Form 10-Q Reports, including the results of the independent
               auditors' review of the quarterly financial statements,

          c.   MMC's policies  generally with respect to earnings press releases
               and with respect to financial  information and earnings  guidance
               provided to analysts and rating agencies,  including in each case
               the type and  presentation  of  information  to be disclosed  and
               paying  particular  attention  to the use of  non-GAAP  financial
               information.  The  Committee or its chair may review any of MMC's
               earnings  press  releases  as the  Committee  or the chair  deems
               appropriate,

          d.   MMC's  critical  accounting  policies and practices and any major
               issues regarding  accounting  principles and financial  statement
               presentations,   including  any  significant   changes  in  MMC's
               selection or application of accounting principles,

          e.   any  analyses  or  other  written   communications   prepared  by
               management,   internal  audit  and/or  the  independent  auditors
               setting  forth   significant   financial   reporting  issues  and
               judgments  made  in  connection   with  the  preparation  of  the
               financial  statements,  including  analyses  of  the  effects  of
               alternative GAAP methods on the financial statements,

          f.   the effect of any off-balance sheet structures and regulatory and
               accounting  initiatives,  including  any  SEC  investigations  or
               proceedings, on MMC's financial statements, and

          g.   disclosures  made to the Audit Committee by MMC's Chief Executive
               Officer  and Chief  Financial  Officer in  connection  with their
               certification  process  for the Form 10-K and Form  10-Q  reports
               about (i) any significant deficiencies in the design or operation
               of internal controls over financial  reporting and (ii) any fraud
               involving  management  or other  employees who have a significant
               role in MMC's internal controls over financial reporting.

     2.   The Committee shall review with MMC's  management,  internal audit and
          the independent  auditors MMC's  significant  accounting and financial
          reporting  controls,  any  major  issues as to the  adequacy  of MMC's
          internal  controls and  procedures  and any special  steps  adopted in
          light of material deficiencies. The Committee shall obtain annually in
          writing from the independent  auditors their letter as to the adequacy
          of internal controls.

     3.   The Committee  shall review MMC's  policies and practices with respect
          to risk  assessment and risk  management,  including  discussing  with
          management  MMC's major  financial  risk  exposures and the steps that
          have been taken to monitor and control such exposures.

                                      A-3



C.   Oversight of Internal Audit Function:

     1.   The  Committee  shall  evaluate  at least  annually  the  performance,
          responsibilities, budget and staffing of MMC's internal audit function
          and review the internal audit plan. The Committee shall also review of
          the   appointment   and  replacement  of  the  senior  internal  audit
          executive.    Separately,    the    Committee    shall    review   the
          responsibilities, budget and staffing of MMC's internal audit function
          with the independent auditors.

     2.   The  Committee  shall  receive  and  review  regular  reports of major
          findings  by  internal  audit and how  management  is  addressing  the
          conditions  reported.

D.   Oversight of Compliance and Regulatory Matters:

     1.   The  Committee  shall review MMC's Code of Ethics for Chief  Executive
          and Senior  Financial  Officers and MMC's Code of Business Conduct and
          Ethics  periodically  (including  compliance  therewith) and report on
          such  compliance to the Board.  The Committee shall be responsible for
          overseeing  waivers  of  such  Codes  for  MMC  Directors  and  senior
          executive officers.

     2.   The Committee shall establish procedures for:

          a.   the receipt,  retention and  treatment of complaints  received by
               MMC  regarding   accounting,   internal  accounting  controls  or
               auditing matters, and

          b.   the  confidential,  anonymous  submission  by  MMC  employees  of
               concerns regarding  questionable  accounting or auditing matters.

     3.   The Committee  shall receive and review reports  concerning  legal and
          regulatory   matters,    including   significant   regulatory   agency
          examinations  that  may  have  a  material  impact  on  the  financial
          statements.

E.  Other  Matters:

     The Committee shall have any other appropriate  duties or  responsibilities
     expressly delegated to the Committee by the Board.

COMMITTEE REPORT

The  Committee  shall prepare the audit  committee  report that  Securities  and
Exchange Commission rules require to be included in MMC's proxy statement.

PERFORMANCE EVALUATION

The Committee  shall annually (i) evaluate its own  performance  and (ii) review
and assess the adequacy of this charter.


                                      A-4



                                                                      APPENDIX B

                        MARSH & McLENNAN COMPANIES, INC.

                             AUDIT COMMITTEE POLICY
          PRE-APPROVAL OF SERVICES PROVIDED BY THE INDEPENDENT AUDITOR

                                NOVEMBER 19, 2003

POLICY

     The  Audit  Committee  of  Marsh  &  McLennan   Companies,   Inc.  and  its
subsidiaries   (the  "Company")  and  management  of  the  Company  have  always
recognized  the  importance  of  maintaining  the  independence  of  the  public
accountant (the "Auditor").  Management also recognizes that the Audit Committee
is  responsible  for  the  selection,   compensation,   review  of  performance,
pre-approval of specific services,  and oversight of the Auditor. This policy of
the Audit Committee provides the guidelines necessary to adhere to the Company's
commitment  to  auditor   independence   and  comply  with  all  relevant  laws,
regulations,  and guidelines  relating to auditor  independence.  This policy is
based on three principles of independence  with respect to services  provided by
the Auditor: the Auditor is not permitted to function in the role of management,
audit its own work, or serve in an advocacy role for the Company.

     This policy sets forth  categories  of  prohibited  non-audit  services and
permitted  services along with the specific steps to be followed to obtain Audit
Committee pre-approval for permitted services.

CONTROL OBJECTIVE-PROHIBITED SERVICES

     The Company  shall not retain the  Auditor to provide any of the  following
prohibited services, as defined in Regulation S-X of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934, and any other  services that the SEC or the Public  Company  Accounting
Oversight Board determines is impermissible.

   o Bookkeeping  or  other  services  related  to  the  accounting  records  or
     financial statements of the Company;(1)

   o Financial information systems design and implementation;(1)

   o Appraisal or valuation services, fairness opinions, or contribution-in-kind
     reports;(1)

   o Actuarial services;(1)

   o Internal audit outsourcing services;(1)

   o Management functions and human resources services;

   o Broker or dealer, investment advisor or investment banking services;

   o Legal services; and

   o Expert services, or support thereof, unrelated to the audit.

     In addition, the Company shall not retain the Auditor to provide any of the
following  services or any other services  determined to be impermissible by the
Audit Committee:

   o Tax services for senior officers of the Company; and


   o Tax services involving a transaction  initially  recommended by the Auditor
     where the primary  business purpose of the transaction is tax avoidance and
     the tax treatment is not clearly supported by relevant tax regulations.

----------
(1)  Service is prohibited  unless it is reasonable to conclude that the results
     will not be subject to audit attest procedures.

                                      B-1



CONTROL OBJECTIVE-PERMITTED SERVICES

     Ensure that the Company obtains Audit Committee  pre-approval  for services
to be provided by the Auditor.

PROCEDURES AND GUIDELINES FOR ENGAGING THE AUDITOR

     In lieu of  Audit  Committee  pre-approval  on an  engagement-by-engagement
basis, four categories of service, Audit Services,  Audit-Related  Services, Tax
Services  and  Other  Services  (as  described  in  more  detail   below),   are
pre-approved  subject to annual  budget  approvals by the Audit  Committee.  The
annual  budgets for Audit,  Audit-Related,  Tax and Other Services shall include
reasonable detail as to the types of services contemplated.  Each budget will be
submitted  to the  Audit  Committee  and  approval  of such  budget by the Audit
Committee must be received before the start of any such services for such annual
period. Services not contemplated during the budget process must be presented to
the  Audit  Committee  for  pre-approval  in  accordance  with the  pre-approval
procedures described hereafter.

     AUDIT SERVICES ARE DEFINED AS:

   o All services  performed to comply with U. S.  generally  accepted  auditing
     standards ("GAAS");

   o Services  generally  only the Auditor  can  reasonably  provide.

A list of permissible Audit Services is attached as Exhibit 1.

     AUDIT-RELATED SERVICES

   o Services,  that are of an assurance nature,  traditionally performed by the
     Auditor  due to  their  knowledge  of the  Company.

A list of  permissible Audit-Related Services is attached as Exhibit 1.

     TAX SERVICES ARE DEFINED AS:

   o Services  performed by the  Auditor's  tax practice  except those  services
     directly related to the financial  statements audit or otherwise  expressly
     prohibited above.

A list of permissible Tax Services is attached as Exhibit 2.

     OTHER SERVICES ARE DEFINED AS:

   o Attest services not related to the audit (i.e.,  operational audit services
     such as SAS70).

PRE-APPROVAL PROCESS FOR UNBUDGETED SERVICES

     Any previously unbudgeted Audit, Audit-Related, Tax and Other Services, can
be provided by the Auditor  with prior  notification  and  approval by the Audit
Committee as to the nature of the service and related fees for each engagement.

     The  Vice   President-Audit  and  Control  will  submit  requests  for  any
previously  unbudgeted  Services  to be  provided  by the  Auditor  to the Audit
Committee  for review and will  notify the  requestor  of the Audit  Committee's
decision  thereafter.  Requests  should be supported  by detailed  documentation
including an explanation of the business purpose of the proposed engagement, the
cost and an explanation of the vendor selection process.

     The Auditor and management must ensure that all Audit,  Audit-Related,  Tax
and Other Services are permissible  under applicable legal  requirements and are
pre-approved by the Audit Committee.

     When an engagement approval is required prior to the next scheduled meeting
of the Audit  Committee,  the Audit Committee chair may grant such approval.  If
the Audit Committee  chair is unavailable,  approval may be granted by any other
member of the Audit Committee. Any such approvals shall be disclosed at the next
meeting of the Audit Committee.

                                      B-2



     At least annually,  the Audit Committee will review the suitability of this
policy and review the fee budget  process as  presented  by the  Company's  Vice
President-Audit  and Control for Audit,  Audit-Related and Other Services and by
the Company's Vice President-Taxes for Tax Services.

     At least  semi-annually,  the Company's Vice President and Controller  will
provide a report  showing  amounts  billed  by the  Auditor  compared  to budget
approvals for each of the Audit, Audit-Related, Tax and Other Services.

LIMITED EXCEPTION TO PRE-APPROVAL REQUIREMENTS

     Pre-approval  requirements  can  be  waived  by  the  Audit  Committee  for
non-audit services provided that such services: 1) do not aggregate to more than
5% of total  fees paid by the  Company to the  Auditor  in the fiscal  year when
services are provided,  2) were not recognized as non-audit services at the time
of the  engagement,  and 3) are promptly  brought to the  attention of the Audit
Committee and approved prior to the completion of the audit.


                                      B-3



                                                                       Exhibit 1

                       LIST OF PERMISSIBLE AUDIT SERVICES

o U.S. GAAS audits of financial statements;

o Quarterly reviews;

o Consultation on accounting issues;

o Assistance with implementation of new accounting standards;

o Review of SEC filings (i.e., 10K, 10Q, proxy statement, etc.);

o Comfort letters, letters to underwriters related to financing;

o Statutory audits for subsidiaries or affiliates of the Company;

o Compliance  letters,  agreed-upon  procedures,  review and reports  based upon
  audited financial statements;

o Use of specialists  integral to expressing  opinions on financial  statements;
  and

o Review of tax accruals in financial statement;

o Attest  Services  required  by statute  or  regulation  (i.e.,  Sarbanes-Oxley
  section 404).

                   LIST OF PERMISSIBLE AUDIT-RELATED SERVICES

o Due diligence  service related to potential  mergers and acquisitions or other
  business transactions;(1)

o Employee benefit plan audits;

o Accounting consultations and audits in connection with acquisitions;

o Internal control reviews;

o Attest  services  related to  financial  reporting  not required by statute or
  regulations (i.e. SAS 70, Frag 21); and

o Forensic and investigative services related to financial statement matters;

o Sarbanes-Oxley section 404 implementation advice.

----------
(1)  Use of our Auditor is not preapproved if our Auditor also audits the target
     company. Specific Audit Committee approval must be obtained.

                                      B-4



                                                                       Exhibit 2

                        LIST OF PERMISSIBLE TAX SERVICES

COMPLIANCE

o Review,  assistance and preparation services with respect to the Company's tax
  returns including: -U.S., Federal, state and local, and international

CONSULTING

o Tax opinions on business transactions;

o Requests for rulings or technical advice from taxing authorities;

o U.S. federal, state and local tax planning and advice;

o International tax planning and advice;

o Assistance  with tax  controversy  services  including  tax audits and appeals
  (excluding litigation services);

o Employee benefit plan tax services;

o Transfer pricing services for non-financial reporting purposes; and

o Tax-only valuations.

COMPLIANCE AND CONSULTING

o International employee assignment tax services (prohibited for senior officers
  of the Company)

OTHER

o Licensing or purchase of income tax preparation software.(1)

----------
(1)  Service  is  prohibited  if it  involves  the design or  implementation  of
     hardware or software  system that  aggregates  source data  underlying  the
     financial  statement or generates  information  that is  significant to the
     audit of the Company's financial  statements (i.e., the income tax accruals
     or related financial statement disclosures).

                                      B-5



                      [This Page Intentionally Left Blank]






Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.
1166 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10036-2774
www.mmc.com





[GRAPHIC OMITTED]
MARSH & McLENNAN COMPANIES, INC.
C/O PROXY SERVICES
P.O. BOX 9162
FARMINGDALE, NY 11735

                      VOTE BY TELEPHONE OR INTERNET OR MAIL
                         24 HOURS A DAY -- 7 DAYS A WEEK
                            IT'S FAST AND CONVENIENT

VOTE BY INTERNET - www.proxyvote.com

Use the  Internet  to  transmit  your  voting  instructions  and for  electronic
delivery  of  information  up until 11:59 P.M.  Eastern  Time the day before the
cut-off date or meeting  date.  Have your proxy card in hand when you access the
web site and follow the  instructions  to obtain  your  records and to create an
electronic voting instruction form.

VOTE BY PHONE - 1-800-690-6903

Use any touch-tone telephone to transmit your voting instructions up until 11:59
P.M.  Eastern  Time the day before the cut-off date or meeting  date.  Have your
proxy card in hand when you call and then follow the instructions.

VOTE BY MAIL

Mark, sign and date your proxy card and return it in the  postage-paid  envelope
we've  provided  or  return  to Marsh &  McLennan  Companies,  Inc.,  c/o  Proxy
Services, P.O. Box 9162, Farmingdale, NY 11735.

                   PLEASE RETURN THIS CARD PROMPTLY USING THE
                              ACCOMPANYING ENVELOPE



TO VOTE, MARK BLOCKS BELOW
IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS FOLLOWS:     MMCLN1   KEEP THIS PORTION FOR YOUR RECORDS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             DETACH AND RETURN THIS PORTION ONLY

              THIS PROXY CARD IS VALID ONLY WHEN SIGNED AND DATED.

================================================================================
MARSH & McLENNAN COMPANIES, INC.
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE
  "FOR" THE LISTED NOMINEES.

  1.   Election of Directors

       Nominees:

       01) Lewis W. Bernard             FOR      WITHHOLD  FOR ALL
       02) Mathis  Cabiallavetta        ALL         ALL    EXCEPT
       03) Zachary W. Carter
       04) Robert F. Erburu             [_]        [_]       [_]
       05) Oscar Fanjul
       06) Ray J. Groves                To withhold authority to vote,
                                        mark "For All Except" and write the
                                        nominee's number on the line below

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


THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE
"FOR" PROPOSAL 2.                                     FOR      AGAINST   ABSTAIN


2.   Ratification of Deloitte & Touche LLP
     as independent auditors for 2004.                [_]        [_]       [_]

Your  telephone or Internet vote  authorizes  the
named  proxies  to vote  the  shares  in the same
manner as if you marked, signed and returned your
Proxy Form. If you have  submitted  your proxy by
telephone  or the  Internet  there is no need for
you to mail back your Proxy Form.

THIS PROXY WHEN  PROPERLY  EXECUTED WILL BE VOTED
IN THE MANNER DIRECTED  HEREIN.  IF NO DIRECTIONS
ARE  MADE,  THEY WILL BE VOTED FOR ITEMS 1 AND 2.
IN  THEIR   DISCRETION   THE  PROXY  HOLDERS  ARE
AUTHORIZED  TO VOTE UPON ANY OTHER  MATTERS  THAT
MAY  PROPERLY  COME  BEFORE  THE  MEETING  OR ANY
POSTPONEMENT THEREOF.

For address changes and/or comments, please check
this  box  and  write  them  on  the  back  where
indicated.                                            [_]

If you are  voting  by  telephone,  in  order  to
select    the    option    to   view    materials
electronically  via the Internet in the future or
attend  the  meeting  you must  select  option #2
(vote on directors and proposals individually) on
the telephone prompt.



Please  indicate  if you  wish  to  view  meeting     YES         NO
materials  in the future  electronically  via the
Internet  rather than receiving a hard copy. Note
that you will  continue  to  receive a proxy card
for voting purposes only.                             [_]        [_]

Please  indicate  if  you  plan  to  attend  this
meeting.                                              [_]        [_]

Please sign  exactly as your name or names appear
above.  For joint  accounts,  each  owner  should
sign. If signing for a corporation or partnership
or as  agent,  attorney  or  fiduciary,  indicate
capacity in which you are signing.


-------------------------------------------------
                                    |
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Signature [PLEASE SIGN WITHIN BOX]       Date


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                                    |
=================================================
 Signature (Joint Owners)                Date




================================================================================


       PROXY                                                        PROXY

                        MARSH & McLENNAN COMPANIES, INC.

           THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
                           FOR THE 2004 ANNUAL MEETING

FOR ALL STOCKHOLDERS

         The  undersigned  hereby  appoints  Jeffrey W. Greenberg and William L.
Rosoff proxies (each with power to act alone and with the power of substitution)
of the undersigned to vote all shares which the undersigned would be entitled to
vote at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Marsh & McLennan  Companies,  Inc.
to be held on Thursday,  May 20, 2004 at 10:00 a.m.  (New York City time) in the
auditorium,  2nd Floor,  1221 Avenue of the Americas,  New York, New York and at
any adjournment thereof.

FOR STOCKHOLDERS WHO ARE ALSO  PARTICIPANTS IN MARSH & McLENNAN  COMPANIES STOCK
INVESTMENT PLAN AND THE PUTNAM INVESTMENTS PROFIT SHARING RETIREMENT PLAN:

         This card also constitutes the confidential  voting instructions of the
participants  in the Marsh & McLennan  Companies  Stock  Investment Plan and The
Putnam Investments Profit Sharing Retirement Plan. By signing and returning this
card, the undersigned  directs the Trustees under each Plan to vote in person or
by proxy all shares of stock of Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. (the "Company")
allocated  to the  undersigned  under said Plans upon all  matters at the Annual
Meeting of  Stockholders  of the Company on May 20, 2004 and at any  adjournment
thereof.  Provided this card is received by May 14, 2004,  voting rights will be
exercised  by the  Trustees as directed or, if not  specifically  directed,  FOR
items 1 and 2 and, in their discretion, upon any other matters that may properly
come  before  the  meeting or any  postponement  thereof.  Under the Plans,  the
Trustees shall vote all other shares in the same  proportion as those shares for
which it has received a signed  instruction  card.  Participants  in these plans
cannot vote at the  meeting  and may only vote their  shares as provided in this
paragraph.

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               (If you noted any Address Changes/Comments above,
              please mark corresponding box on the reverse side.)

================================================================================