UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549
                                    FORM 10-K


                                   (MARK ONE)

            [X]   ANNUAL REPORT  PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
                  SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
                  For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2002

                                       OR

            [ ]   TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
                  SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
                           For the transition period from
                                                          -----------------

                          Commission File Number 1-5426
                          -----------------------------


                             THOMAS INDUSTRIES INC.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             (Exact name of Registrant as specified in its Charter)

       DELAWARE                                       61-0505332
------------------------               ----------------------------------------
(State of incorporation)               (I.R.S. Employer Identification Number)

4360 BROWNSBORO ROAD, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY                            40207
------------------------------------------                          ------------
 (Address of principal executive offices)                           (Zip Code)

                                  502/893-4600
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              (Registrant's telephone number, including area code)

             SECURITIES REGISTERED PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(b) OF THE
                        SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934:

      Title of Each Class            Name of Each Exchange on which Registered
-------------------------------      -------------------------------------------
Common Stock, $1 Par Value                    New York Stock Exchange
Preferred Stock Purchase Rights               New York Stock Exchange

        SECURITIES REGISTERED PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(g) OF THE ACT: NONE

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required
to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during
the  preceding 12 months (or for such  shorter  period that the  registrant  was
required  to file  such  reports),  and  (2) has  been  subject  to such  filing
requirements for the past 90 days. Yes  X   No
                                       ---     ---

Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent  filers  pursuant to Item 405
of Regulation S-K is not contained herein and will not be contained, to the best
of  Registrant's  knowledge,  in  definitive  proxy  or  information  statements
incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this
Form 10-K. [X]






Indicate  by check mark  whether  the  registrant  is an  accelerated  filer (as
defined in Exchange Act Rule 12b-2) Yes  X   No
                                        ---    ---
As of February 28, 2003, 17,144,420 shares of the registrant's Common Stock were
outstanding  (net of treasury  shares and  including  directors'  and  executive
officers' shares).

The  aggregate  market value of the voting stock held by  non-affiliates  of the
Registrant  at June 30, 2002,  was  approximately  $425,100,000.  The  aggregate
market value was  computed by using the closing  price of the common stock as of
that date on the New York Stock  Exchange.  (For  purposes of  calculating  this
amount only, all directors and executive  officers of the  registrant  have been
treated as affiliates.)

Portions of the Proxy  Statement for the Annual Meeting of Shareholders on April
17, 2003, are incorporated by reference in Part III of this report.

Portions of the Annual Report to Shareholders for fiscal year ended December 31,
2002, are incorporated by reference in Parts I and II of this report.





PART I.

ITEM 1.  BUSINESS

  a.     General Development of Business.
         -------------------------------

         The company that was  eventually  to become known as Thomas  Industries
         Inc.  ("Thomas"or  the  "Company")  was founded in 1928 as the Electric
         Sprayit Company. Electric Sprayit manufactured paint spraying machines,
         blowers, and air compressors in Chicago,  Illinois. In 1948, Mr. Lee B.
         Thomas and a group of investors acquired Moe Brothers  Manufacturing of
         Fort  Atkinson,  Wisconsin,  a  manufacturer  of  residential  lighting
         products. In 1953, Moe Lighting and The Electric Sprayit Company merged
         to become Thomas Industries Inc.

         Although its roots are in lighting products and air compressors, Thomas
         began  to  diversify  further  in  the  1960's  and  1970's,  acquiring
         different types of consumer  products along with tools,  hardware,  and
         specialty products.  A new strategic focus that began in the 1980's was
         finalized in 1994 and led the Company to divest its non-core businesses
         and concentrate on Lighting and Pumps and Compressors.

         Significant  additions to the Lighting  business included the Lumec and
         Day-Brite  Lighting  acquisitions in 1987 and 1989. On August 30, 1998,
         Thomas  and The  Genlyte  Group  ("Genlyte")  formed a  lighting  joint
         venture that combined  substantially  all of the assets and liabilities
         of Genlyte and  substantially  all of the  lighting  assets and related
         liabilities  of Thomas  to  create  Genlyte  Thomas  Group  LLC  (GTG),
         estimated to be the third largest manufacturer of lighting fixtures and
         controls  in North  America.  Thomas  owns a 32%  interest in the joint
         venture,  and Genlyte owns a 68%  interest.  Since the formation of the
         joint venture, GTG has made several acquisitions to fill product voids,
         including Fibre Light, Ledalight, Translite, Chloride and Vari-Lite.

         Significant  additions to the Pump and Compressor business include ASF,
         Pneumotive, Brey, WISA, Welch and Oberdorfer, which were made from 1987
         through 1999. On August 29, 2002, the Company  purchased  substantially
         all the  assets  and  liabilities  of  Werner  Rietschle  Holding  GmbH
         ("Rietschle"),  a privately held company based in Schopfheim,  Germany.
         Rietschle is a world leader in vacuum and  pressure  technology,  which
         includes dry-running and oil-lubricated  pumps,  blowers,  compressors,
         and pressure/vacuum  pumps utilizing rotary vane, screw, roots and claw
         technologies.  With the newly-launched  Rietschle Thomas brand,  Thomas
         intends to pursue  further  opportunities  in markets such as printing,
         packaging,  woodworking and many other  applications that fit Rietschle
         technologies, including fuel cells.

         Website Access to Company Reports
         We   make    available    free   of   charge   through   our   website,
         www.thomasind.com, our annual report on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on
         Form  10-Q,  current  reports on Form 8-K and all  amendments  to those
         reports  as soon as  reasonably  practicable  after  such  material  is
         electronically filed with the Securities and Exchange  Commission.  Our
         internet website and the






ITEM 1.  (Continued)

         information  contained therein or incorporated therein are not intended
         to be incorporated into this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

  b.     Financial Information about Segments.
         ------------------------------------

         The information  required by this item is set forth in Exhibit 13 under
         the  heading  "Notes  to  Consolidated   Financial  Statements,"  which
         information is contained in the Company's Annual Report to Shareholders
         and incorporated herein by reference

  c.     Narrative Description of Business.
         ---------------------------------

         Pump and Compressor Segment
         ---------------------------

         Since  the  formation  of the  lighting  joint  venture,  Thomas is now
         focused  on its Pump  and  Compressor  business.  Thomas  is a  leading
         supplier  of  pumps  and   compressors   to  the   original   equipment
         manufacturer  (OEM) market in such  applications as medical  equipment,
         gasoline vapor and refrigerant recovery,  automotive and transportation
         applications,  printing,  packaging, tape drives, laboratory equipment,
         and many other  applications for consumer,  commercial,  and industrial
         uses. The Company designs,  manufactures,  markets,  sells and services
         these products through worldwide operations.  Pump and Compressor Group
         headquarters   are  as  follows:   North   American   Group--Sheboygan,
         Wisconsin;   European   Group--Puchheim,   Germany;  and  Asia  Pacific
         Group--Hong Kong, China.

         The  Company has four  manufacturing  operations  in the United  States
         which manufacture rotary vane, linear,  piston, and diaphragm pumps and
         compressors,  and various liquid pump technologies.  These products are
         directly  sold  worldwide to OEM's,  as well as through fluid power and
         industrial distributors.

         Four German operations manufacture a complementary line of rotary vane,
         piston, linear, diaphragm, gear, side channel, radial, claw, screw, and
         rotary  lobe  pump and  compressors,  as well as  various  liquid  pump
         technologies,  air-centers and centralized systems.  These products are
         distributed worldwide.

         The  Company  also  maintains  sales and  service  offices in  Germany,
         U.S.A.,  Switzerland,  Ireland,  England, Italy,  Switzerland,  Sweden,
         France, Denmark, Netherlands,  China, Japan, Taiwan, Mexico, Korea, New
         Zealand, Australia and Brazil. In many of these countries systems sales
         and  production  for end users for  industrial,  chemical and hospitals
         also takes place. The Corporate Office is in Louisville, Kentucky.

         The Company  offers a wide  selection of standard air  compressors  and
         vacuum  pumps and will modify or design its  products to meet  exacting
         OEM applications. For the OEM market, the Company's pump and compressor
         products are now marketed  under the Rietschle  Thomas name  worldwide.
         Other  products are  marketed  under the brand names Welch (high vacuum
         systems for laboratory and chemical markets), Air-Pac (pnueumatic




ITEM 1.  (Continued)

         construction   equipment),   Vakuumatic  (leakage  detection  systems),
         Medi-Pump (respiratory products), and Oberdorfer (liquid pumps).

         The medical  equipment  market,  which includes  oxygen  concentrators,
         nebulizers, aspirators, and other devices, is important to the Company.
         Excluding  Rietschle,  company  sales to medical  equipment  OEM's were
         approximately $67 million in 2002, $69 million in 2001, and $65 million
         in 2000. Oxygen  concentrator OEM's represent a significant  portion of
         the  Company's  sales in the  medical  equipment  market.  The  Company
         believes it has the leading market share in the oxygen concentrator OEM
         market worldwide.

         No single  customer of the Company  accounted for 10 percent or more of
         the Company's net sales in 2002.

         Excluding the Rietschle  acquisition,  the backlog of unshipped  orders
         was $47 million at December 31,  2002,  and $38 million at December 31,
         2001. The increase in backlog included $3.6 million of orders from Asia
         Pacific  locations,   which  previously  had  not  been  tracking  this
         activity, as well as an additional $5 million,  which primarily related
         to increased  activity in the automotive  market. Not included above is
         another  $15 million of backlog at  December  31,  2002  related to our
         newly acquired Rietschle business.  The Company believes  substantially
         all of such  orders  are firm,  although  some  orders  are  subject to
         cancellation.  Substantially  all of these  orders are  expected  to be
         filled in 2003.

         The Company  believes  that it has adequate  sources of  materials  and
         supplies for its business.

         There is no significant seasonal impact on the business of the Company.

         Lighting Segment
         ----------------

         On August 30, 1998,  Thomas and Genlyte formed a lighting joint venture
         that  combined  substantially  all of the  assets  and  liabilities  of
         Genlyte  and  substantially  all of the  lighting  assets  and  related
         liabilities of Thomas to create GTG,  estimated to be the third largest
         lighting  fixture  manufacturer  in North  America.  Thomas  owns a 32%
         interest in the joint venture and Genlyte owns a 68% interest.

         GTG designs,  manufactures,  markets, and sells lighting fixtures for a
         wide  variety  of  applications  in  the  commercial,  industrial,  and
         residential  markets.  GTG  operates in these three  industry  segments
         through  the  following  divisions:  Lightolier,  Day-Brite,  Crescent,
         Capri/Omega,  Choride  Systems,  Controls,  Hadco,  Gardco,  Wide-Lite,
         Stonco and Thomas  Residential  in the United  States and  Mexico;  and
         Canlyte, Thomas Lighting Canada, Lumec, and Ledalite in Canada.

         GTG's  products  primarily  utilize  incandescent,   fluorescent,   and
         high-intensity discharge (HID) light sources and are marketed primarily
         to  distributors  who resell the products  for use in new  residential,
         commercial, and industrial construction as well as in remodeling



ITEM 1.  (Continued)

         existing structures.  Because GTG does not principally sell directly to
         the  end  user  of  its  products,  it's  management  cannot  determine
         precisely  the  percentage  of its  revenues  derived  from the sale of
         products installed in each type of building,  nor the percentage of its
         products sold for new construction versus remodeling. GTG's sales, like
         those of the lighting fixture industry in general, are partly dependent
         on the level of activity in new construction and remodeling.

         GTG designs,  manufactures,  markets,  and sells the following types of
         products:

              Indoor  fixtures -  Incandescent,  fluorescent,  and HID  lighting
              fixtures  and  lighting   controls  for  commercial,   industrial,
              institutional,  medical,  sports,  entertainment,  and residential
              markets, and task lighting for all markets.

              Outdoor fixtures - HID,  fluorescent,  and  incandescent  lighting
              fixtures   and    accessories    for    commercial,    industrial,
              institutional, sports, and residential markets.

         GTG's products are marketed by independent  sales  representatives  and
         GTG  direct  sales  personnel  who  sell  to  distributors,  electrical
         wholesalers,  mass merchandisers,  and national accounts.  In addition,
         GTG's products are promoted through architects, engineers, contractors,
         and building owners. GTG's products are principally sold throughout the
         United States, Canada, and Mexico.

         Thomas'  investment  in GTG is accounted for using the equity method of
         accounting.  Under the terms of the LLC Agreement, any time on or after
         January 31,  2002,  Thomas has the right (a "put  right"),  but not the
         obligation, to require the Joint Venture (GTG) to purchase all, but not
         less than all, of Thomas'  ownership  interest in GTG at the applicable
         purchase  price.  The purchase price shall be equal to the "Fair Market
         Value" of GTG  multiplied by Thomas'  ownership  percentage in GTG. The
         "Fair  Market  Value"  means  the value of the  total  interests in GTG
         computed as a going concern, including the control premium.

         Also  under the terms of the LLC  Agreement,  on or after the the final
         settlement  or  disposition  of  Genlyte's  case  related  to the Keene
         Creditors Trust lawsuit  against  Genlyte and others,  either Thomas or
         Genlyte has the right, but not the obligation to buy the other parties'
         interest in GTG (the "Offer Right"). If Thomas and Genlyte cannot agree
         on the  terms,  then GTG or the  business  of GTG  shall be sold to the
         highest  bidder.  Either  party  may  participate  in  bidding  for the
         purchase of GTG or the business of GTG. On March 14, 2003, the Southern
         District of New York Federal  District Court dismissed the Genlyte case
         noted above.  The Creditors Trust has not indicated its intentions with
         respect  to  appeal;  however,  the  Federal  Rules of Civil  Procedure
         provide  for  appeal as a matter  of right  with  respect  to any final
         judgment. The time for filing a Notice of Appeal by the Creditors Trust
         shall expire on the 30th day following  entry of the Court's  judgment,
         absent some other  procedural  action  being taken by any party,  which
         could  suspend  or delay  the  running  of the time for a filing by the
         Creditors Trust of a Notice of Appeal. Therefore, as of March 28, 2003,
         no final  settlement or disposition  has occurred and neither party has
         the ability to exercise this right.




ITEM 1.  (Continued)

         In the event of a Change of Control  (i) of Thomas,  GTG has the right,
         but not the  obligation,  to purchase  Thomas'  interest for a purchase
         price  equal to the Fair  Market  Value of GTG  multiplied  by  Thomas'
         ownership interest in GTG or (ii) of Genlyte, Thomas has the right, but
         not the  obligation,  to sell its  interest to the Joint  Venture for a
         purchase  price equal to Fair Market Value of GTG multiplied by Thomas'
         ownership  interest  in GTG.  The  definition  of "Change  of  Control"
         includes  the  acquisition  by any  person  of 25% or more  of  Thomas'
         outstanding common stock.

         In the event of a Deadlock (as defined below),  Thomas may exercise its
         Put Right in  accordance  with the LLC Agreement or Genlyte may, in its
         sole  discretion,  cause the entire Joint Venture or business of GTG to
         be sold.  A "Deadlock"  shall be deemed to exist if (i) the  Management
         Board of GTG fails to agree on a matter for which  Special  Approval is
         required  in   accordance   with  the  LLC   Agreement  and  (ii)  such
         disagreement   continues  for  90  days.  The  definition  of  "Special
         Approval"includes the approval of at least a majority of the management
         board  representatives,  including,  in all  instances,  approval by at
         least one representative appointed by Thomas.

  d.     Other
         -----

         The Company has a $120 million committed  revolving line of credit with
         its banks through  August 28, 2005, of which $78 million was being used
         at December  31,  2002.  The Company  also had  uncommitted  short-term
         borrowing  arrangements being used by some of its foreign offices which
         totaled $1.5 million at December 31, 2002. The Company  expects to fund
         working  capital  requirements  from a  combination  of available  cash
         balances,   internally   generated   funds,   and  from  the  borrowing
         arrangements mentioned above.

         The Company has various  patents and  trademarks  but does not consider
         its business to be materially  dependent upon any individual  patent or
         trademark.  The majority of patents and  trademarks  resulted  from the
         Rietschle acquisition.

         The Company  competes  across all of its product  lines with many large
         and  varied  manufacturers,  both  domestic  and  foreign.  Some of our
         competitors are publicly-held companies and some are private companies.
         The Company competes on the basis of quality, performance, service, and
         price.  Thomas  believes  that it is able to maintain  its  competitive
         position  because  of the  quality  and  breadth  of its  products  and
         services and its global presence.

         During  2002,  the Company  spent  $11,789,000  on research  activities
         relating to the  development  of new  products and the  improvement  of
         existing    products.    Substantially   all   of   this   amount   was
         Company-sponsored  activity. During 2001, the Company spent $10,369,000
         on these activities and during 2000, $9,721,000.





ITEM 1.  (Continued)

         Continued  compliance  with present and  reasonably  expected  federal,
         state, and local environmental  regulations is not expected to have any
         material effect upon capital expenditures, earnings, or the competitive
         position of the Company and its subsidiaries.

         The Company employed  approximately  2,260 people at December 31, 2002,
         of which 1,170 relate to Rietschle's operations.

  e.     Financial Information about Geographic Areas.
         --------------------------------------------

         See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, as set forth in Exhibit
         13, which  information is contained in the Company's 2002 Annual Report
         to Shareholders,  and incorporated  herein by reference,  for financial
         information about foreign and domestic operations.

  f.     Executive Officers of the Registrant.
         ------------------------------------

                                                                     Year
                               Office or Position                First Elected
           Name                   with Company             Age   as an Officer
           ----                   ------------             ---   -------------

    Timothy C. Brown        Chairman of the Board,          52        1984
           (A)              President, Chief Executive
                            Officer, and Director

    Phillip J. Stuecker     Vice President of Finance,      51        1984
           (B)              Chief Financial Officer,
                            and Secretary

    Bernard R. Berntson     Vice President; General         63        1992
           (C)              Manager, North American
                            Pump and Compressor Group

    Peter H. Bissinger      Vice President; General         57        1992
           (D)              Manager, European
                            Pump and Compressor Group

    Dieter W. Rietschle     General Manager, TIWR           56        2002
           (E)              Holding GmbH & Co. KG

(A)           Timothy C. Brown was elected  Chairman of the Board on April 20,
              1995,  in  addition  to his other  duties of  President  and Chief
              Executive   Officer.   Prior  to  this,  Mr.  Brown  held  various
              management  positions  in the Company  including  Chief  Operating
              Officer,  Executive Vice  President,  and Vice President and Group
              Manager of the Specialty Products Group.

(B)           Phillip J. Stuecker was elected Vice  President of Finance,  Chief
              Financial  Officer,  and  Secretary on October 23, 1989.  Prior to
              this,  Mr.  Stuecker  held  various  management  positions  in the
              Company including Vice President and Treasurer.





ITEM 1.  (Continued)

(C)           Bernard R. Berntson was elected an officer effective  December 14,
              1992. Mr. Berntson had held the position of General Manager of the
              North American Pump and Compressor  Group since 1987. Mr. Berntson
              has retired effective March 1, 2003.

(D)           Peter H. Bissinger was elected an officer  effective  December 14,
              1992, in addition to his position of President of ASF Thomas GmbH,
              a wholly owned  subsidiary of the Company.  Mr. Bissinger had held
              the position of President of ASF Thomas GmbH since 1979.

(E)           Dieter  W.  Rietschle  was  appointed  a General  Manager  of TIWR
              Holding GmbH and Co. KG, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company,
              effective  August 30, 2002. This was the date Mr. Rietschle joined
              the Company as a result of the acquisition of substantially all of
              the assets of Werner  Rietschle  Holding GmbH. Prior to this date,
              Mr.  Rietschle  was General  Manager of Werner  Rietschle  Holding
              GmbH. On December 10, 2002, Mr.  Rietschle was appointed  director
              of the  Company  in  accordance  with the  terms of the  Rietschle
              acquisition agreement.

ITEM 2.  PROPERTIES

    The Corporate  offices of the Company are located in  Louisville,  Kentucky.
    Due to the large number of individual  locations  and the diverse  nature of
    the operating  facilities,  specific description of the properties owned and
    leased by the Company is not necessary to an  understanding of the Company's
    business.  All  of  the  buildings  are  of  steel,  masonry,  and  concrete
    construction, are in generally good condition, provide adequate and suitable
    space for the  operations at each location,  and are of sufficient  capacity
    for present and foreseeable future needs.

    The following listing summarizes the Company's properties.

                               Number
                           of Facilities    Combined
         Segment           Owned   Leased  Square Feet     Nature of Facilities
         -------           -----   ------  -----------     --------------------

         Pump and Compressor  7       6     924,000      Manufacturing plants
                              7      46     308,000      Distribution and
                                                         service centers

         Corporate            --      1       6,900      Corporate headquarters
                               2     --     160,000      Leased to third parties





ITEM 3.  LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

    In  the  normal  course  of  business,  the  Company  is a  party  to  legal
    proceedings and claims. When costs can be reasonably estimated,  appropriate
    liabilities  for such  matters  are  recorded.  While  management  currently
    believes  the amount of ultimate  liability,  if any,  with respect to these
    actions  will not  materially  affect  the  financial  position,  results of
    operations,  or  liquidity  of the  Company,  the  ultimate  outcome  of any
    litigation is uncertain.  Were an unfavorable  outcome to occur,  the impact
    could be material to the Company.

ITEM 4.  SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS

    None

PART II.

ITEM 5.  MARKET FOR THE REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND RELATED SHAREHOLDER
         MATTERS

    The  information  required by this item is set forth in Exhibit 13 under the
    headings   "Common  Stock  Market  Prices  and  Dividends,"  and  "Notes  to
    Consolidated  Financial  Statements,"  which information is contained in the
    Company's  2002 Annual Report to  Shareholders  and  incorporated  herein by
    reference.

ITEM 6.  SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

    The  information  required by this item is set forth in Exhibit 13 under the
    heading  "Five-Year Summary of Operations and Statistics," which information
    is  contained  in the  Company's  2002  Annual  Report to  Shareholders  and
    incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 7.  MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND
         RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

    The  information  required by this item is set forth in Exhibit 13 under the
    heading  "Management's  Discussion  and Analysis of Financial  Condition and
    Results of Operations," which information is contained in the Company's 2002
    Annual Report to Shareholders and incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 7a. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK

    The  Company's  long-term  debt  bears  interest  at fixed  rates,  with the
    exception of the $1.25 million Industrial Revenue Bond and the $78.0 million
    revolving line of credit  facility that accrue  interest at variable  rates,
    which can be fixed for six month  intervals.  Short-term  borrowings of $1.5
    million at December 31, 2002,  are priced at variable  interest  rates.  The
    Company's  results of operations  and cash flows,  therefore,  would only be
    affected by interest rate changes to its variable rate debt. At December 31,
    2002,  $80.7  million was  outstanding.  A 100 basis  point  movement in the
    interest  rate on the variable rate debt of $80.7 million would result in an
    $807,000  annualized effect on interest expense and cash flows ($516,000 net
    of tax).



ITEM 7a.  (Continued)

    The Company also has short-term investments,  including cash equivalents, of
    $13.5 million as of December 31, 2002 that bear interest at variable  rates.
    A 100  basis  point  movement  in  the  interest  rate  would  result  in an
    approximate  $135,000  annualized  effect on interest  income and cash flows
    ($86,000 net of tax).

    The fair value of the Company's long-term debt is estimated based on current
    interest rates offered to the Company for similar  instruments.  A 100 basis
    point movement in the interest rate would result in an approximate  $260,000
    annualized effect on the fair value of long-term debt ($166,000 net of tax).

    The Company has significant operations consisting of sales and manufacturing
    activities  in  foreign  countries.  As a result,  the  Company's  financial
    results  could be  significantly  affected  by  factors  such as  changes in
    currency  exchange  rates or  changing  economic  conditions  in the foreign
    markets in which the  Company  manufactures  or  distributes  its  products.
    Currency  exposures for our Pump and Compressor  Segment are concentrated in
    Germany  but exist to a lesser  extent in other  parts of  Europe,  Asia and
    South  America.  Our  Lighting  Segment  currency  exposure is  primarily in
    Canada.

ITEM 8.  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

    The consolidated  financial  statements and notes to consolidated  financial
    statements of the registrant and its  subsidiaries  are set forth in Exhibit
    13 under the  headings  "Consolidated  Financial  Statements"  and "Notes to
    Consolidated  Financial  Statements,"  which information is contained in the
    Company's  2002 Annual Report to  Shareholders  and  incorporated  herein by
    reference.  The Report of Independent  Auditors is also set forth in Exhibit
    13 and is hereby  incorporated herein by reference.  In addition,  financial
    statements of GTG are included in this Form 10-K on pages F-1 to F-23.

ITEM 9.  CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND
         FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

    On May 21, 2002, on the recommendation of the Audit Committee,  the Board of
    Directors   appointed   Ernst  &  Young  LLP  ("Ernst  &  Young  ")  as  the
    Corporation's  independent  auditors  for the 2002  fiscal  year,  replacing
    Arthur Andersen LLP ("Arthur Andersen").

    Arthur  Andersen's  report on the financial  statements  for the fiscal year
    preceding  dismissal  contained no adverse  opinion or disclaimer of opinion
    and were  not  qualified  or  modified  as to  uncertainty,  audit  scope or
    accounting  principles.  During the fiscal year and interim period preceding
    the  dismissal,  there were no  disagreements  with  Arthur  Andersen on any
    matter  of  accounting   principles  or   practices,   financial   statement
    disclosure, or audit scope or procedure.




PART III.

ITEM 10.  DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT

a.       Directors of the Company
         ------------------------

         The  information  required  by this item is set  forth in  registrant's
         Proxy  Statement for the Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  to be held on
         April 17, 2003, under the headings "Election of Directors" and "Section
         16(a), Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance," which information is
         incorporated herein by reference.

b.       Executive Officers of the Company
         ---------------------------------

         Reference is made to "Executive  Officers of the Registrant" in Part I,
         Item 1.f.

ITEM 11.  EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

    The  information  required by this item is set forth in  registrant's  Proxy
    Statement  for the Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  to be held on April 17,
    2003, under the headings "Executive  Compensation,"  "Compensation Committee
    Interlocks  and  Insider  Participation,"  and "Board of  Directors,"  which
    information is incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 12.  SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

    The  information  required by this item is set forth in  registrant's  Proxy
    Statement  for the Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  to be held on April 17,
    2003,  under  the  heading  "Securities   Beneficially  Owned  by  Principal
    Shareholders and Management,"  which  information is incorporated  herein by
    reference.

    Additionally,  the following table is included regarding equity compensation
    plan information:








   EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                (a)                          (b)                          (c)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                 
Plan Category                   Number of securities to be   Weighted-average exercise    Number    of     securities
                                issued  upon  exercise  of   price    of   outstanding    remaining   available   for
                                outstanding       options,   options,  warrants    and    future    issuance    under
                                warrants and rights          rights                       equity  compensation  plans
                                                                                          (excluding       securities
                                                                                          reflected in column (a))
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Equity    compensation   plans
approved by security holders
                                    1,616,359                      $19.34                      453,900
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Equity  compensation plans not
approved by security holders
                                       0                             0                            0
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total                               1,616,359                      $19.34                      453,900
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



ITEM 13.  CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

   The primary  information  required by this item is set forth in  registrant's
   Proxy  Statement for the Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  to be held on April
   17, 2003,  under the  headings  "Securities  Beneficially  Owned by Principal
   Shareholders   and   Management",   "Election   of   Directors",   "Executive
   Compensation",  "Board of Directors" and "Compensation  Committee  Interlocks
   and Insider  Participation,"  which  information  is  incorporated  herein by
   reference.

ITEM 14.  CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

   Our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer have concluded, based
   on their  evaluation  within 90 days of the filing date of this report,  that
   our disclosure controls and procedures are effective in all material respects
   in ensuring that information  required to be disclosed in the reports that we
   file or  submit  under  the  Securities  Exchange  Act of  1934 is  recorded,
   processed,  summarized and reported, within the time periods specified in the
   Securities  and  Exchange  Commission's  rules and forms.  There have been no
   significant  changes in our internal  controls or in other factors that could
   significantly  affect these  controls  subsequent to the date of the previous
   mentioned evaluation.








PART IV.

ITEM 15.  EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES, AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K

  a.     (1) Financial Statements
             --------------------

             The   following   consolidated   financial   statements  of  Thomas
             Industries  Inc.,  included in the Company's  2002 Annual Report to
             Shareholders, are included in Part II, Item 8:

                  Consolidated  Balance  Sheets --  December  31,  2002 and 2001
                  Consolidated Statements of Income -- Years ended December 31,
                    2002, 2001, and 2000
                  Consolidated Statements of Shareholders' Equity -- Years ended
                    December 31, 2002, 2001, and 2000
                  Consolidated  Statements of Cash Flows -- Years ended December
                    31, 2002, 2001, and 2000
                  Notes  to  Consolidated Financial Statements  --  December 31,
                    2002

         (2) Financial Statement Schedule
             ----------------------------

                  Schedule II -- Valuation and Qualifying Accounts

                  All  other  schedules  for  which  provision  is  made  in the
                  applicable   accounting   regulation  of  the  Securities  and
                  Exchange   Commission  are  not  required  under  the  related
                  instructions or are  inapplicable  and,  therefore,  have been
                  omitted.

         (3) Listing of Exhibits
             --------------------

                  Exhibit No.                         Exhibit
                  -----------                         -------

                      2(a)              Agreement   for   Purchase   of   Equity
                                        Interests     and    Shares     (English
                                        translation)  dated August 29, 2002,  by
                                        and among Thomas Industries Inc., Werner
                                        Rietschle  Holding  GmbH,  TIWR  Holding
                                        GmbH & Co. KG, TIWR Netherlands Holdings
                                        C.V., TIWR U.K. Limited,  TI France SAS,
                                        Thomas  Industries  Australia  Pty. Ltd.
                                        and TI  Luxembourg  S.A.R.L.,  filed  as
                                        Exhibit 2.1 to Form 8-K filed  September
                                        12,   2002,   herein   incorporated   by
                                        reference.

                      3(a)              Restated Certificate  of  Incorporation,
                                        as  amended,  filed  as Exhibit  3(a) to
                                        Form 10-Q filed  November  13,  2002,
                                        herein incorporated by reference.

                      3(b)              Bylaws,  as amended  December  10, 2002,
                                        filed herewith.

                      4(a)(1)           Thomas Industries Holdings, Inc., Thomas
                                        Industries  Inc. Note Agreement  Amended
                                        and  Restated  as of  November  6, 1998,
                                        filed herewith.




   ITEM 15. (Continued)

                  Exhibit No.                         Exhibit
                  -----------                         -------

                      4(a)(2)           Thomas Industries Holdings, Inc., Thomas
                                        Industries Inc. First Amendment dated as
                                        of  July  30,  2002  to  Note  Agreement
                                        Amended  and  Restated as of November 6,
                                        1998.

                                        Copies of debt instruments for which the
                                        related   debt  is  less   than  10%  of
                                        consolidated   total   assets   will  be
                                        furnished   to   the   Commission   upon
                                        request.

                     4(b)               Amended and  Restated  Rights  Agreement
                                        filed as  Exhibit  4(b) to  registrant's
                                        report on Form  10-Q  dated  August  14,
                                        2000, hereby incorporated by reference.

                     4(c)               First  Amendment  to  Rights   Agreement
                                        filed as  Exhibit  4(c) to  registrant's
                                        report  on Form  10-K  dated  March  26,
                                        2001, hereby incorporated by reference.

                     10(a)              Employment  Agreements  with  Timothy C.
                                        Brown and  Phillip J. Stuecker  filed as
                                        Exhibit 3(j) to registrant's  report  on
                                        Form  10-Q  dated   November  11,  1988,
                                        hereby incorporated by reference.

                     10(b)              Trust Agreement, filed as Exhibit  10(1)
                                        to  registrant's  report  on  Form  10-Q
                                        dated   November   11,   1988,    hereby
                                        incorporated by reference.

                     10(c)              Form   of   Indemnity    Agreement   and
                                        Amendment  thereto  entered  into by the
                                        Company   and  each  of  its   Executive
                                        Officers  filed as  Exhibits  10 (g) and
                                        (h) to registrant's  report on Form 10-K
                                        dated    March    23,    1988,    hereby
                                        incorporated by reference.

                     10(d)              Severance  pay  policy  of the  Company,
                                        effective October 1, 1988,  covering all
                                        Executive  Officers,  filed  as  Exhibit
                                        10(d)  to  registrant's  report  on Form
                                        10-K  dated  March  23,   1989,   hereby
                                        incorporated by reference. registrant's




ITEM 15.  (Continued)

                  Exhibit No.                         Exhibit
                  -----------                         -------

                     10(e)              Nonemployee  Director  Stock Option Plan
                                        as Amended  and  Restated as of February
                                        5,  1997,  filed  as  Exhibit  10(h)  to
                                        registrant's  report on Form 10-K  dated
                                        March 20, 1997,  hereby  incorporated by
                                        reference.

                     10(f)              1995 Incentive Stock Plan as Amended and
                                        Restated as of April 15, 1999,  filed as
                                        Exhibit 10(h) to registrant's  report on
                                        Form  10-Q  dated   November  12,  1999,
                                        hereby incorporated by reference.

                     10(g)              Employment  Agreement  with  Timothy  C.
                                        Brown dated  January 29, 1997,  filed as
                                        Exhibit 10(j) to registrant's  report on
                                        Form 10-K dated March 20,  1997,  hereby
                                        incorporated by reference.

                     10(g)(1)           Service  Agreement with Dieter Rietschle
                                        (English  translation)  dated  September
                                        20, 2002, filed herewith.

                     10(g)(2)           Employment    Agreement    with    Peter
                                        Bissinger  (English  translation)  dated
                                        January 1, 2003, filed herewith.

                     10(h)              Master  Transaction   Agreement  by  and
                                        between Thomas  Industries  Inc. and The
                                        Genlyte Group  Incorporated  dated April
                                        28,  1998,   filed  as  Exhibit  2.1  to
                                        registrant's  report  on Form 8-K  dated
                                        July 24, 1998,  hereby  incorporated  by
                                        reference.

                     10(i)              Limited  Liability  Company Agreement of
                                        GT Lighting,  LLC, dated April 28, 1998,
                                        filed  as  Exhibit  2.2 to  registrant's
                                        report on Form 8-K dated July 24,  1998,
                                        hereby incorporated by reference.

                     10(j)              Capitalization    Agreement   among   GT
                                        Lighting,  LLC,  and  Thomas  Industries
                                        Inc.,   Tupelo  Holdings  Inc.,   Thomas
                                        Industries    Holdings   Inc.,    Gardco
                                        Manufacturing,   Inc.,  Capri  Lighting,
                                        inc.,  Thomas  Imports,   Inc.,  and  TI
                                        Industries  Corporation  dated April 28,
                                        1998,    filed   as   Exhibit   2.3   to
                                        registrant's  report  on Form 8-K  dated
                                        July 24, 1998,  hereby  incorporated  by
                                        reference.

                     10(k)              Capitalization   Agreement   between  GT
                                        Lighting,  LLC,  and The  Genlyte  Group
                                        Incorporated dated April 28, 1998, filed
                                        as Exhibit 2.4 to registrant's  Form 8-K
                                        dated July 24, 1998, hereby incorporated
                                        by reference.




ITEM 15.  (Continued)

                  Exhibit No.                         Exhibit
                  -----------                         -------

                     10(l)              Credit  Agreement  dated August 28, 2002
                                        among Thomas  Industries Inc., Bank One,
                                        Kentucky,  N.A.,  National  City Bank of
                                        Kentucky,  Sun Trust  Bank,  HVB  Banque
                                        Luxembourg  Societe  Anonyme,  and Wells
                                        Fargo  Bank,   N.A.,   as  Lenders  (the
                                        "Lenders"); Bank One, Kentucky, N.A., as
                                        Administrative  Agent for itself and the
                                        other  Lenders;  National  City  Bank of
                                        Kentucky as Syndication Agent; Sun Trust
                                        Bank and HVB Banque  Luxembourg  Societe
                                        Anonyme as Co-Documentation  Agents; and
                                        Banc One Capital  Markets,  Inc. as Lead
                                        Arranger and Sole Book Runner,  filed as
                                        Exhibit 10.1 to Form 10-Q filed November
                                        13,   2002,   herein   incorporated   by
                                        reference.

                      13                Certain  portions of the Company's  2002
                                        Annual   Report   to   Shareholders   as
                                        specified  in  Parts  I and  II,  hereby
                                        incorporated by reference in this Annual
                                        Report on Form 10-K, filed herewith.

                     16                 Letter  regarding  change in  certifying
                                        accountant of the registrant from Arthur
                                        Andersen LLP dated May 21,  2002,  filed
                                        as Exhibit 16.1 to the registrant's Form
                                        8-K   dated   May   21,   2002,   hereby
                                        incorporated by reference.

                     21                 Subsidiaries  of  the  Registrant, filed
                                        herewith.

                     23(a)              Consent  of  Ernst  &  Young  LLP, filed
                                        herewith.

                     23(b)              Information regarding  consent of Arthur
                                        Andersen LLP, filed herewith.

                     23(c)              Consent  of  Ernst  &  Young  LLP, filed
                                        herewith.

                     23(d)              Information regarding  consent of Arthur
                                        Andersen LLP, filed herewith.

                     99.1               Certifications   Pursuant  to  18  U.S.C
                                        Section  1350,  as adopted  pursuant  to
                                        Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
                                        2002, filed herewith.

  b.     Reports on Form 8-K
         -------------------

               A form 8-K/A was filed November 12, 2002 related to the Rietschle
               acquisition,  which amended the Form 8-K filed September 12, 2002
               to include  financial  statements  of  Rietschle  and certain pro
               forma financial information.




  c.     Exhibits
         --------

               The exhibits filed as part of this Annual Report on Form 10-K are
               as specified in Item 14(a)(3) herein.





                           S  I  G  N  A  T  U  R  E S


Pursuant to the  requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities  Exchange
Act of 1934,  the  registrant  has duly  caused  this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

                                    THOMAS INDUSTRIES INC.


Date: March 28, 2003                  By  /s/ Timonthy C. Brown
                                        ----------------------------------------
                                        Timothy C. Brown, Chairman of the Board


Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report
has been signed below by the following  persons on behalf of the  registrant and
in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

         Signature                          Title                     Date
         ---------                          -----                     ----


/s/ Timothy C. Brown
----------------------------------   Chairman of the Board;           3/28/03
Timothy C. Brown                     President; Chief Executive
                                     Officer; Director
                                     (Principal Executive Officer)

/s/ Phillip J. Stuecker
----------------------------------   Vice President of Finance;       3/28/03
Phillip J. Stuecker                  Chief Financial Officer;
                                     Secretary
                                     (Principal Financial Officer)

/s/ Roger P. Whitton
----------------------------------   Controller                       3/28/03
Roger P. Whitton                     (Principal Accounting Officer)



/s/ Wallace H. Dunbar
----------------------------------   Director                         3/28/03
Wallace H. Dunbar



/s/ H. Joseph Ferguson
----------------------------------   Director                         3/28/03
H. Joseph Ferguson



/s/ Lawrence E. Gloyd
----------------------------------   Director                         3/28/03
Lawrence E. Gloyd






Signatures (Continued)

              Signature                     Title                     Date
              ---------                     -----                     ----



/s/ William M. Jordan
----------------------------------   Director                         3/28/03
William M. Jordan



/s/ Franklin J. Lunding, Jr.
----------------------------------   Director                         3/28/03
Franklin J. Lunding, Jr.



/s/ Anthony A. Massaro
----------------------------------   Director                         3/28/03
Anthony A. Massaro



/s/ Dieter W. Rietschle
----------------------------------   Director                         3/28/03
Dieter W. Rietschle


                                 CERTIFICATIONS
                                 --------------

I, Timothy C. Brown, certify that:

         1. I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-K of Thomas Industries
Inc.;

         2. Based on my  knowledge,  this  annual  report  does not  contain any
untrue  statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact  necessary
to make the  statements  made,  in light of the  circumstances  under which such
statements  were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this
annual report;

         3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial
information  included  in this annual  report,  fairly  present in all  material
respects the financial  condition,  results of operations  and cash flows of the
registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this annual report;

         4. The registrant's  other certifying officer and I are responsible for
establishing and maintaining  disclosure  controls and procedures (as defined in
Exchange Act Rules 13a-14 and 15d-14) for the registrant and we have:

                  a) designed such disclosure  controls and procedures to ensure
         that material  information  relating to the  registrant,  including its
         consolidated  subsidiaries,  is made known to us by others within those
         entities, particularly during the period in which this annual report is
         being prepared;

                  b) evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's  disclosure
         controls and procedures as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing
         date of this annual report (the "Evaluation Date"); and

                  c) presented in this annual report our  conclusions  about the
         effectiveness  of the disclosure  controls and procedures  based on our
         evaluation as of the Evaluation Date;

         5. The  registrant's  other  certifying  officer and I have  disclosed,
based on our most recent evaluation,  to the registrant's auditors and the audit
committee  of  registrant's  board  of  directors  (or  persons  performing  the
equivalent function):

                  a) all significant  deficiencies in the design or operation of
         internal controls which could adversely affect the registrant's ability
         to  record,  process,  summarize  and  report  financial  data and have
         identified  for the  registrant's  auditors any material  weaknesses in
         internal controls; and

                  b)  any  fraud,   whether  or  not  material,   that  involves
         management  or  other  employees  who  have a  significant  role in the
         registrant's internal controls; and

         6. The registrant's  other  certifying  officer and I have indicated in
this annual  report  whether or not there were  significant  changes in internal
controls or in other factors that could  significantly  affect internal controls
subsequent to the date of our most recent  evaluation,  including any corrective
actions with regard to significant deficiencies and material weaknesses.

Date:  March 28, 2003
                                               /s/ Timothy C. Brown
                                               ---------------------------------
                                               Timothy C. Brown
                                               Chairman, President and CEO





                                 CERTIFICATIONS
                                 --------------

I, Phillip J. Stuecker, certify that:

         1. I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-K of Thomas Industries
Inc.;

         2. Based on my  knowledge,  this  annual  report  does not  contain any
untrue  statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact  necessary
to make the  statements  made,  in light of the  circumstances  under which such
statements  were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this
annual report;

         3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial
information  included  in this annual  report,  fairly  present in all  material
respects the financial  condition,  results of operations  and cash flows of the
registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this annual report;

         4. The registrant's  other certifying officer and I are responsible for
establishing and maintaining  disclosure  controls and procedures (as defined in
Exchange Act Rules 13a-14 and 15d-14) for the registrant and we have:

                  a) designed such disclosure  controls and procedures to ensure
         that material  information  relating to the  registrant,  including its
         consolidated  subsidiaries,  is made known to us by others within those
         entities, particularly during the period in which this annual report is
         being prepared;

                  b) evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's  disclosure
         controls and procedures as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing
         date of this annual report (the "Evaluation Date"); and

                  c) presented in this annual report our  conclusions  about the
         effectiveness  of the disclosure  controls and procedures  based on our
         evaluation as of the Evaluation Date;

         5. The  registrant's  other  certifying  officer and I have  disclosed,
based on our most recent evaluation,  to the registrant's auditors and the audit
committee  of  registrant's  board  of  directors  (or  persons  performing  the
equivalent function):

                  a) all significant  deficiencies in the design or operation of
         internal controls which could adversely affect the registrant's ability
         to  record,  process,  summarize  and  report  financial  data and have
         identified  for the  registrant's  auditors any material  weaknesses in
         internal controls; and

                  b)  any  fraud,   whether  or  not  material,   that  involves
         management  or  other  employees  who  have a  significant  role in the
         registrant's internal controls; and

         6. The registrant's  other  certifying  officer and I have indicated in
this annual  report  whether or not there were  significant  changes in internal
controls or in other factors that could  significantly  affect internal controls
subsequent to the date of our most recent  evaluation,  including any corrective
actions with regard to significant deficiencies and material weaknesses.

Date:  March 28, 2003
                                      /s/ Phillip J. Stuecker
                                      ------------------------------------------
                                      Phillip J. Stuecker
                                      Vice President and Chief Financial Officer



On August 30,  1998,  Thomas and Genlyte  formed a lighting  joint  venture that
combined  substantially  all  of the  assets  and  liabilities  of  Genlyte  and
substantially  all of the lighting  assets and related  liabilities of Thomas to
create  Genlyte  Thomas  Group LLC ("GTG"),  estimated  to be the third  largest
lighting  fixture  manufacturer in North America.  Thomas owns a 32% interest in
the joint venture, and Genlyte owns a 68% interest.

Following are audited  financial  statements of GTG for the years ended December
31, 2002, 2001, and 2000.







                                      F - 1



REPORT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

To the Members of Genlyte Thomas Group LLC:

We have audited the  accompanying  consolidated  balance sheet of Genlyte Thomas
Group LLC and Subsidiaries (the Company) as of December 31, 2002 and the related
consolidated  statements of income,  members' equity and cash flows for the year
then ended.  These financial  statements are the responsibility of the Company's
management.  Our  responsibility  is to express  an  opinion on these  financial
statements  based on our audit.  The  financial  statements of the Company as of
December 31, 2001 and for each of the two years in the period ended December 31,
2001 were audited by other auditors who have ceased  operations and whose report
dated January 18, 2002 expressed an unqualified opinion on those statements.

We conducted our audit in accordance with auditing standards  generally accepted
in the United States. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit
to obtain reasonable  assurance about whether the financial  statements are free
of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence
supporting  the amounts and  disclosures in the financial  statements.  An audit
also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates
made by  management,  as well as  evaluating  the  overall  financial  statement
presentation.  We believe  that our audit  provides a  reasonable  basis for our
opinion.

In our opinion,  the 2002 financial statements referred to above present fairly,
in all material respects,  the consolidated financial position of Genlyte Thomas
Group LLC and Subsidiaries at December 31, 2002, and the consolidated results of
their  operations  and their cash flows for the year then ended,  in  conformity
with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States.

As discussed in Note 2, in 2002 the Company changed its method of accounting for
goodwill and other intangible assets.

As discussed above,  the financial  statements of the Company as of December 31,
2001 and for each of the two years in the period  ended  December  31, 2001 were
audited by other  auditors who have ceased  operations.  As discussed in Note 2,
these  financial  statements  have been  revised  to  include  the  transitional
disclosures required by Statement of Financial Accounting Standards  (Statement)
No.  142,  "Goodwill  and Other  Intangible  Assets",  which was  adopted by the
Company  as of  January  1,  2002.  Our audit  procedures  with  respect  to the
disclosures  in Note 2 with  respect to 2001 and 2000  included (a) agreeing the
previously reported net income to the previously issued financial statements and
the  adjustments  to  reported  net  income  representing  amortization  expense
(including  any related tax  effects)  recognized  in those  periods  related to
goodwill to the Company's  underlying records obtained from management,  and (b)
testing the mathematical  accuracy of the  reconciliation of adjusted net income
to reported net income.  In our opinion,  the  disclosures  for 2001 and 2000 in
Note 2 are appropriate.  However, we were not engaged to audit, review, or apply
any  procedures to the 2001 and 2000  financial  statements of the Company other
than with respect to such adjustments related to Note 2, and accordingly,  we do
not  express  an opinion  or any other  form of  assurance  on the 2001 and 2000
financial statements taken as a whole.


/s/ Ernst & Young, LLP

Louisville, Kentucky
   January 22, 2003







                                      F - 2



THIS REPORT HAS NOT BEEN REISSUED BY ARTHUR  ANDERSEN LLP AS ARTHUR ANDERSEN LLP
CEASED OPERATIONS IN AUGUST 2002.

THE FOLLOWING  REPORT IS A COPY OF THE  PREVIOUSLY  ISSUED  ARTHUR  ANDERSEN LLP
REPORT.

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

To the Members of Genlyte Thomas Group LLC:

We have audited the accompanying  consolidated  balance sheets of Genlyte Thomas
Group LLC (a Delaware limited liability  company) and Subsidiaries (the Company)
as of December 31, 2001 and 2000,  and the related  consolidated  statements  of
income,  members'  equity,  and cash  flows for each of the  three  years in the
period  ended   December  31,  2001.   These   financial   statements   are  the
responsibility of the Company's management.  Our responsibility is to express an
opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted
in the United States. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit
to obtain reasonable  assurance about whether the financial  statements are free
of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence
supporting  the amounts and  disclosures in the financial  statements.  An audit
also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates
made by  management,  as well as  evaluating  the  overall  financial  statement
presentation.  We believe  that our audits  provide a  reasonable  basis for our
opinion.

In our opinion,  the financial  statements  referred to above present fairly, in
all material  respects,  the financial  position of Genlyte Thomas Group LLC and
Subsidiaries  as of  December  31,  2001  and  2000,  and the  results  of their
operations  and their cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended
December 31, 2001, in conformity with accounting  principles  generally accepted
in the United States.


/s/ Arthur Andersen LLP


Louisville, Kentucky
    January 18, 2002







                                      F - 3






                    GENLYTE THOMAS GROUP LLC AND SUBSIDIARIES
                        CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
                             (Amounts in thousands)



                                                               For the years ended December 31,
                                                           ---------------------------------------------
                                                            2002              2001              2000
                                                           ---------------------------------------------

                                                                                    
Net sales                                                  $970,304         $ 985,176        $ 1,007,706
     Cost of sales                                          630,433           636,582            651,304
                                                           ---------------------------------------------
Gross profit                                                339,871           348,594            356,402
     Selling and administrative expenses                    239,730           248,005            257,583
     Amortization of goodwill                                     -             5,211              4,388
     Amortization of other intangible assets                    851               796                228
                                                           ---------------------------------------------
Operating profit                                             99,290            94,582             94,203
     Interest expense, net of interest income                   606             3,699              4,184
     Minority interest                                          240               (54)              (140)
                                                           ---------------------------------------------
Income before income taxes                                   98,444            90,937             90,159
     Income tax provision                                     7,804             6,064              6,622
                                                           ---------------------------------------------
Net income                                                 $ 90,640          $ 84,873           $ 83,537
                                                           =============================================

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

                                       F-4







                      GENLYTE THOMAS GROUP LLC AND SUBSIDIARIES
                             CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                               (Amounts in thousands)


                                                                         As of December 31,
                                                                        --------------------------
                                                                        2002             2001
                                                                        --------------------------
                                                                                    
Assets:
Current Assets:
     Cash and cash equivalents                                           $ 111,539        $ 59,691
     Accounts receivable, less allowances for doubtful
         accounts of  $10,616 and $10,111, respectively                    148,279         141,658
     Inventories                                                           136,470         132,932
     Other current assets                                                    8,850           8,763
                                                                        --------------------------
Total current assets                                                       405,138         343,044
Property, plant and equipment, at cost:
     Land and land improvements                                              7,447           6,490
     Buildings and leasehold improvements                                   81,764          83,318
     Machinery and equipment                                               276,353         273,154
                                                                        --------------------------
Total property, plant and equipment                                        365,564         362,962
     Less: Accumulated depreciation and amortization                       257,988         252,515
                                                                        --------------------------
Net property, plant and equipment                                          107,576         110,447
Goodwill, net of accumulated amortization                                  134,231         135,417
Other intangible assets, net of accumulated amortization                    22,195          22,280
Other assets                                                                 3,841           7,933
                                                                        --------------------------
Total Assets                                                             $ 672,981       $ 619,121
                                                                        ===========================
Liabilities & Members' Equity:
Current Liabilities:
     Current maturities of long-term debt                                  $ 4,100         $ 3,284
     Accounts payable                                                       87,201          82,150
     Related-party payables                                                 30,483          19,705
     Accrued expenses                                                       65,427          65,406
                                                                        --------------------------
Total current liabilities                                                  187,211         170,545
Long-term debt                                                              33,028          36,989
Deferred income taxes                                                        4,459           3,991
Accrued pension                                                             25,406          15,925
Minority interest                                                              677            (194)
Other long-term liabilities                                                  6,225           5,862
                                                                        --------------------------
Total liabilities                                                          257,006         233,118
Commitments and contingencies  (See notes (12) and (13))
Members' Equity:
     Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)                         (26,965)         (9,076)
     Other members' equity                                                 442,940         395,079
                                                                        --------------------------
Total members' equity                                                      415,975         386,003
                                                                        --------------------------
Total Liabilities & Members' Equity                                      $ 672,981       $ 619,121
                                                                        ==========================

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.




                                       F-5





                    GENLYTE THOMAS GROUP LLC AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF MEMBERS' EQUITY
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2002, 2001, AND 2000
                             (Amounts in thousands)






                                                               Accumulated
                                                                  Other            Other           Total
                                                               Comprehensive       Members'        Members'
                                                               Income (Loss)       Equity          Equity
                                                               --------------------------------------------
                                                                                    
Members' equity, December 31, 1999                                $ 3,158       $ 306,010    $ 309,168

Net income                                                              -          83,537          83,537
Increase in minimum pension liability                                (277)              -            (277)
Foreign currency translation adjustments                           (2,006)              -          (2,006)
                                                               --------------------------------------------
Total comprehensive income                                         (2,283)         83,537          81,254

Distributions to members                                                -         (43,116)        (43,116)
                                                               --------------------------------------------
Members' equity, December 31, 2000                                    875         346,431         347,306

Net income                                                              -          84,873          84,873
Increase in minimum pension liability                              (6,424)              -          (6,424)
Foreign currency translation adjustments                           (3,527)              -          (3,527)
                                                               --------------------------------------------
Total comprehensive income                                         (9,951)         84,873          74,922

Distributions to members                                                -         (36,225)        (36,225)
                                                               --------------------------------------------
Members' equity, December 31, 2001                                 (9,076)        395,079         386,003

Net income                                                              -          90,640          90,640
Increase in minimum pension liability, before tax                 (18,450)              -         (18,450)
    Related tax effect                                                541               -             541
                                                               --------------------------------------------
Increase in minimum pension liability, after tax                  (17,909)         90,640          72,731
Foreign currency translation adjustments                               20               -              20
                                                               --------------------------------------------
Total comprehensive income                                        (17,889)         90,640          72,751

Contribution from Thomas                                                -             299             299
Distributions to members                                                -         (43,078)        (43,078)
                                                               --------------------------------------------
Members' equity, December 31, 2002                              $ (26,965)      $ 442,940       $ 415,975
                                                               ============================================


The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.



                                      F-6





                 GENLYTE THOMAS GROUP LLC & SUBSIDIARIES
                  CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                         (Amounts in thousands)




                                                                                For the years ended December 31,
                                                                              -----------------------------------------
                                                                                 2002            2001            2000
                                                                              -----------------------------------------

                                                                                                      
Cash Flows From Operating Activities:
Net income                                                                     $ 90,640        $ 84,873        $ 83,537
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided
     by operating activities:
     Depreciation and amortization                                               23,169          28,172          25,664
     Net loss (gain) from disposals of property, plant and equipment              1,010            (807)            (77)
     Provision for doubtful accounts receivable                                   2,170             424            (718)
     Provision (benefit) for deferred income taxes                                 (134)           (150)          1,575
     Changes in assets and liabilities, net of effect of acquisitions:
        (Increase) decrease in:
           Accounts receivable                                                   (7,640)          1,520          18,899
           Related-party receivables                                                  -           1,204          (1,204)
           Inventories                                                            2,069          19,419         (10,726)
           Other current assets                                                      24          (1,199)            204
           Intangible and other assets                                            8,195           5,017             481
        Increase (decrease) in:
           Accounts payable                                                       4,261         (15,517)          7,894
           Related-party payables                                                10,598          12,683          (1,740)
           Accrued expenses                                                        (560)         (5,671)         (5,721)
           Deferred income taxes, long-term                                         581            (130)          1,439
           Minority interest                                                        874             (54)           (140)
           Other long-term liabilities                                           (8,059)         (3,486)            (49)
     All other, net                                                                (977)            (79)            566
                                                                              -----------------------------------------
Net cash provided by operating activities                                       126,221         126,219         119,884
                                                                              -----------------------------------------
Cash Flows From Investing Activities:
Acquisitions of businesses, net of cash received                                (10,641)         (2,900)        (59,145)
Purchases of property, plant and equipment                                      (18,912)        (20,250)        (28,423)
Proceeds from sales of property, plant and equipment                              1,807           1,597           1,347
                                                                              -----------------------------------------
Net cash used in investing activities                                           (27,746)        (21,553)        (86,221)
                                                                              -----------------------------------------
Cash Flows From Financing Activities:
Proceeds from long-term debt                                                          -          14,000          47,600
Reductions of long-term debt                                                     (3,318)        (43,040)        (35,029)
Distributions to members                                                        (43,078)        (36,225)        (43,116)
                                                                              -----------------------------------------
Net cash used in financing activities                                           (46,396)        (65,265)        (30,545)
                                                                              -----------------------------------------
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents                       (231)         (3,527)         (2,006)
                                                                              -----------------------------------------
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents                                        51,848          35,874           1,112
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year                                   59,691          23,817          22,705
                                                                              -----------------------------------------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year                                      $ 111,539        $ 59,691        $ 23,817
                                                                              =========================================



The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.




                                      F-7






                    Genlyte Thomas Group LLC and Subsidiaries
                   Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
                             (Dollars in thousands)


(1)      DESCRIPTION OF BUSINESS
Genlyte Thomas Group LLC ("GTG" or the "Company"),  a Delaware limited liability
company,  is a United States based multinational  company.  The Company designs,
manufactures,  and sells  lighting  fixtures  and controls for a wide variety of
applications in the  commercial,  residential,  and industrial  markets in North
America.  The  Company's  products are marketed  primarily to  distributors  who
resell  the  products  for  use  in  commercial,   residential,  and  industrial
construction  and  remodeling.  The  Company  is  the  result  of  the  business
combination discussed in note (3) "Formation of Genlyte Thomas Group LLC."

(2) SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
PRINCIPLES OF CONSOLIDATION:  The accompanying consolidated financial statements
include  the  accounts  of GTG and all  majority-owned  subsidiaries,  and  also
include other entities that are jointly owned by The Genlyte Group  Incorporated
("Genlyte")  and Thomas  Industries  Inc.  ("Thomas"),  all of which entities in
total operationally  comprise GTG.  Intercompany  accounts and transactions have
been  eliminated.  Investments in affiliates owned less than 50%, and over which
the Company exercises significant influence,  are accounted for using the equity
method,  under  which  the  Company's  share of these  affiliates'  earnings  is
included in income as earned.

USE OF ESTIMATES:  The  preparation of financial  statements in conformity  with
accounting   principles   generally  accepted  in  the  United  States  requires
management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of
assets and  liabilities  and disclosure of contingent  assets and liabilities at
the date of the financial  statements  and the reported  amounts of revenues and
expenses  during the  reporting  period.  Actual  amounts  could differ from the
estimates.

REVENUE  RECOGNITION:  The Company  records  sales  revenue  when  products  are
shipped,  which is when legal  title  passes to the  customer  and the risks and
rewards of ownership  have  transferred.  A provision for estimated  returns and
allowances is recorded as a sales deduction.

CUSTOMER REBATES: In 2001, the Company began classifying all customer rebates as
sales  deductions.  Prior to 2001, the Company had been classifying most rebates
paid to customers as sales  deductions,  but certain  rebates were classified as
selling and administrative expenses. The effect in 2001 was to reclassify $3,007
to net sales (decrease) from selling and administrative expenses (decrease). The
2000  statement of income has not been  reclassified  to conform to the 2001 and
2002 classification, because the amount, $3,125, is not considered material.

SHIPPING AND HANDLING COSTS: In compliance with Emerging Issues Task Force issue
00-10,  "Accounting  for  Shipping  and  Handling  Fees and  Costs," the Company
includes in net sales all amounts  billed to  customers  that relate to shipping
and  handling.  Shipping and handling  costs billed to customers and included in
net sales were $7,372 in 2002, $7,502 in 2001, and $7,664 in 2000.  Shipping and
handling costs included in selling and  administrative  expenses were $45,724 in
2002, $50,552 in 2001, and $52,805 in 2000.

STOCK-BASED   COMPENSATION   COSTS:  At  December  31,  2002,  Genlyte  had  two
stock-based compensation (stock option) plans, which are described more fully in
note (14) "Stock Options."  Genlyte accounts for those plans using the intrinsic
value method of APB Opinion No. 25,  "Accounting  for Stock Issued to Employees"
("APB 25") and related interpretations. As a consolidated subsidiary of Genlyte,
GTG is also  required  to apply  APB 25 to  stock-based  compensation  for stock
options granted by Genlyte to employees of GTG. Therefore, GTG also accounts for
those plans using the intrinsic value method.  Because all options granted under
those plans had an exercise  price equal to the market  value of the  underlying
common stock on the date of grant,  no  stock-based  compensation  cost has been
recognized in the consolidated statements of income.

                                      F - 8



Had stock-based  compensation  cost for the plans been determined using the fair
value  recognition  provisions  of Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards
("SFAS") No. 123,  "Accounting for Stock-Based  Compensation," the effect on the
Company's net income for the years ended December 31 would have been as follows:




                                                               2002        2001         2000
         ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           
         Net income, as reported                           $ 90,640    $ 84,873     $ 83,537
         Stock-based compensation cost using
            fair value method                                 3,123       2,042          751
                                                      ---------------------------------------
         Net income, pro forma                             $ 87,517    $ 82,831     $ 82,786
                                                      =======================================



ACCOUNTING FOR STOCK-BASED  COMPENSATION INCURRED BY INVESTORS:  Thomas has also
granted stock options to certain employees of GTG.  According to Emerging Issues
Task Force issue 00-12,  "Accounting by an Investor for Stock-Based Compensation
Granted to Employees of an Equity Method Investee," an investee should recognize
the costs of the stock-based compensation incurred by an investor on its behalf,
and a corresponding capital contribution.  Therefore,  in 2002, the Company (the
investee)  recorded  $299 of  stock-based  compensation  expense in selling  and
administrative  expenses and the same amount as a contribution  from Thomas (the
investor) in the consolidated statement of members' equity.

ADVERTISING  COSTS:  The  Company  expenses  advertising  costs  principally  as
incurred.  Certain  catalog,  literature,  and display costs are amortized  over
their useful lives, from 6 to 24 months. Total advertising expenses,  classified
as selling and  administrative  expenses,  were $8,538 in 2002, $10,373 in 2001,
and $12,221 in 2000.

RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT  COSTS:  Research and development costs are expensed as
incurred.  These expenses,  classified as selling and  administrative  expenses,
were $8,521 in 2002, $9,359 in 2001, and $8,510 in 2000.

CASH  EQUIVALENTS:  The Company  considers all highly liquid  investments with a
maturity  of  three  months  or  less  from  the  date  of  purchase  to be cash
equivalents.

ALLOWANCE FOR DOUBTFUL ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE: The Company maintains allowances for
doubtful accounts receivable for estimated uncollectible invoices resulting from
the customer's inability to pay (bankruptcy,  out of business,  etc.) as well as
the  customer's  refusal to pay (returned  products,  billing  errors,  disputed
amounts, etc.).  Management's estimated allowances are based on the aging of the
invoices,  historical  collections,  amounts  disputed  by  customers,  and  the
customer's financial status.

CONCENTRATION  OF CREDIT RISK:  Assets that  potentially  subject the Company to
concentration  of  credit  risk  are  cash and  cash  equivalents  and  accounts
receivable. The Company invests its cash primarily in high-quality institutional
money  market  funds with  maturities  of less than three  months and limits the
amount of credit exposure to any one financial institution. The Company provides
credit  to most  of its  customers  in the  ordinary  course  of  business,  and
collateral or other security may be required in certain situations.  The Company
conducts  ongoing credit  evaluations of its customers and maintains  allowances
for  potential  credit  losses.  Concentration  of credit  risk with  respect to
accounts  receivable is limited due to the wide variety of customers and markets
to which the  Company  sells.  As of  December  31,  2002,  management  does not
consider the Company to have any significant concentration of credit risk.

INVENTORIES:  Inventories  are stated at the lower of cost or market and include
materials,  labor,  and  overhead.  Inventories  at December 31 consisted of the
following:
                                                       2002          2001
         -----------------------------------------------------------------
         Raw materials                             $ 53,428      $ 51,595
         Work in process                             15,104        13,582
         Finished goods                              67,938        67,755
                                             -----------------------------
         Total inventories                        $ 136,470     $ 132,932
                                             =============================


                                      F - 9



Inventories  valued using the last-in,  first-out  ("LIFO")  method  represented
approximately   83%  of  total  inventories  at  December  31,  2002  and  2001.
Inventories  not valued at LIFO (primarily  inventories of Canadian  operations)
are valued using the first-in, first-out ("FIFO") method. On a FIFO basis, which
approximates  current cost,  inventories would have been $2,337 and $2,616 lower
than reported at December 31, 2002 and 2001, respectively.

During  each of the last three  years,  certain  inventory  quantity  reductions
caused partial  liquidations  of LIFO inventory  layers (in some cases including
the base), the effects of which increased 2002 pre-tax income by $114, increased
2001 pre-tax income by $1,047, and decreased 2000 pre-tax income by $591.

PROPERTY,  PLANT  AND  EQUIPMENT:  The  Company  provides  for  depreciation  of
property,  plant and  equipment,  which  also  includes  amortization  of assets
recorded  under  capital  leases,  on a  straight-line  basis over the estimated
useful  lives  of the  assets.  Useful  lives  vary  among  the  items  in  each
classification, but generally fall within the following ranges:

         Land improvements                         10 - 25 years
         Buildings and leasehold improvements      10 - 40 years
         Machinery and equipment                    3 - 10 years

Leasehold improvements are amortized over the terms of the respective leases, or
over their  estimated  useful  lives,  whichever  is shorter.  Depreciation  and
amortization of property,  plant and equipment,  including assets recorded under
capital  leases,  was  $22,318 in 2002,  $22,165 in 2001,  and  $21,048 in 2000.
Accelerated  methods  of  depreciation  are used for income  tax  purposes,  and
appropriate  provisions are made for the related  deferred  income taxes for the
foreign subsidiaries.

When the Company sells or otherwise  disposes of property,  plant and equipment,
the asset cost and accumulated  depreciation are removed from the accounts,  and
any resulting gain or loss is recorded in selling and administrative expenses in
the consolidated statements of income.

Maintenance and repairs are expensed as incurred. Renewals and improvements that
extend the useful life of an asset are  capitalized and depreciated or amortized
over the remaining useful lives of the respective assets.

TRANSLATION   OF  FOREIGN   CURRENCIES:   Balance  sheet   accounts  of  foreign
subsidiaries are translated into U.S. dollars at the rates of exchange in effect
as of the balance sheet date. The  cumulative  effects of such  adjustments  are
charged to the foreign currency translation  adjustment component of accumulated
other  comprehensive  income (loss) in members' equity.  Income and expenses are
translated at the average exchange rates  prevailing  during the year. Net gains
or (losses) resulting from foreign currency transactions of $151 in 2002, $88 in
2001, and ($80) in 2000 are included in selling and administrative expenses.

COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENTS: As of December 31, 2002, the Company had 2,569
employees,  or  50.6%  of the  total  employees,  who were  members  of  various
collective  bargaining  agreements.   Several  of  these  collective  bargaining
agreements,  covering 799 employees, which is 31.1% of the collective bargaining
employees and 15.8% of the total employees, will expire in 2003. Management does
not  expect the  expiration  and  renegotiation  of these  agreements  to have a
significant impact on 2003 production.

FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL  INSTRUMENTS:  The carrying  amounts of cash equivalents
and long-term debt approximate  fair value because of their short-term  maturity
and/or variable market-driven interest rates.

ADOPTION OF NEW  ACCOUNTING  STANDARD  REGARDING  GOODWILL AND OTHER  INTANGIBLE
ASSETS:  On  January  1,  2002,  the  Company  adopted  Statement  of  Financial
Accounting  Standards ("SFAS") No. 142, "Goodwill and Other Intangible  Assets."
Under SFAS No. 142,  goodwill and intangible assets with indefinite useful lives
are no longer amortized, but instead are subject to an assessment for impairment
on a reporting unit basis by applying a fair-value-based test annually, and more
frequently if circumstances indicate a possible impairment.

                                     F - 10




If a  reporting  unit's  net book  value is more  than its fair  value,  and the
reporting  unit's net book value of its  goodwill  and  intangible  assets  with
indefinite  lives exceeds the fair value of those assets,  an impairment loss is
recognized  in an amount  equal to the excess net book value of the goodwill and
intangible  assets.  Separate  intangible  assets that are not deemed to have an
indefinite life continue to be amortized over their useful lives.

The Company tested the goodwill of all of its reporting units, which are a level
below the reportable  segments  disclosed in note (17) "Segment  Reporting," for
impairment  during  the fourth  quarter of 2002 using a present  value of future
cash flows valuation method. This process did not result in any impairment to be
recorded.

Prior to the  adoption  of SFAS No.  142,  the  Company  had $4,922 of  goodwill
acquired prior to 1971 that was not amortized and $165,928 of goodwill  acquired
after 1970 that was amortized on a straight-line basis over periods ranging from
10 to 40 years.  Had the Company  accounted for goodwill in accordance with SFAS
No. 142 in 2001 and 2000,  net income for the years ended December 31 would have
been as follows:



                                                            2002         2001           2000
         ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           
         Reported net income                            $ 90,640       $84,873      $ 83,537
         Add back: Goodwill amortization *                     -         4,991         4,059
                                                      ---------------------------------------
         Adjusted net income                            $ 90,640      $89,864       $ 87,596
                                                      =======================================

         * Goodwill amortization is after tax effects.




The  changes in the net  carrying  amounts of  goodwill  by segment for the year
ended December 31, 2002 were as follows:


                                                                                             Industrial
                                                         Commercial       Residential         and Other        Total
         --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                  
         Balance as of January 1, 2002                     $ 108,511         $ 22,576          $ 4,330        $ 135,417
         Acquisition of business                               2,891                -                -            2,891
         Adjustments to goodwill acquired
            previously                                        (3,504)            (858)               -           (4,362)
         Effect of exchange rate change on
            Canadian goodwill                                    285                -                -              285
                                                   --------------------------------------------------------------------
         Balance as of December 31, 2002                   $ 108,183         $ 21,718          $ 4,330        $ 134,231
                                                   ====================================================================



Summarized information about the Company's other intangible assets follows:



                                                        As of December 31, 2002           As of December 31, 2001
         -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                           Gross                               Gross
                                                          Carrying        Accumulated         Carrying      Accumulated
                                                            Amount       Amortization           Amount     Amortization
                                                   -------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    
         Amortized intangible assets:
         License agreement                                 $12,500             $ 938         $ 12,500           $ 521
         Non-competition agreements                         10,950               798           10,500             438
         Patents and other                                     532               126              313              74
                                                   -------------------------------------------------------------------
         Total                                             $23,982            $1,862         $ 23,313          $1,0330
                                                   ===================================================================
         Unamortized intangible assets:
         Trademarks                                         $   75                             $    -
                                                   ===================================================================



The Company  amortizes the license  agreement  over its  contractual  life of 30
years, the non-competition agreements over their contractual lives of two and 30
years,  and  patents  and other over two to 15 years.  Amortization  expense for
intangible assets (other than goodwill) was $851 in 2002, $796 in 2001, and $228
in 2000. Estimated  amortization expense for intangible assets for the next five
full years is $902 for 2003,  $893 for 2004,  $872 for 2005,  $872 for 2006, and
$867 for 2007.
                                     F - 11



ADOPTION OF NEW FASB  INTERPRETATION  REGARDING  ACCOUNTING  AND  DISCLOSURE  BY
GUARANTORS: Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") Interpretation No. 45,
"Guarantor's  Accounting and Disclosure  Requirements for Guarantees,  Including
Indirect Guarantees of Indebtedness of Others" (the "Interpretation") was issued
in November  2002.  The  Interpretation  contains  recognition  and  measurement
provisions that require certain guarantees to be recorded as a liability, at the
inception of the guarantee,  at fair value.  Current  accounting  practice is to
record a liability  only when a loss is probable and reasonably  estimable.  The
Interpretation   also  requires  a  guarantor  to  make  new  disclosures.   The
recognition and measurement provisions are effective for guarantees issued after
December 31, 2002.  Management  is currently  analyzing  the  provisions  of the
Interpretation, but does not expect its adoption to have a significant impact on
the Company's financial condition or results of operations.

The disclosure  requirements of the Interpretation  became effective on December
31, 2002.  For the  Company,  the  required  disclosures  relate only to product
warranties.  The Company offers a limited warranty that its products are free of
defects in workmanship and materials. The specific terms and conditions may vary
somewhat by product line, but generally cover defects  returned within one, two,
three,  or five  years  from date of  shipment.  The  Company  records  warranty
liabilities to cover repair or replacement of defective returned  products.  The
Company periodically  assesses the adequacy of its recorded warranty liabilities
and adjusts the amounts as necessary.

Changes in the  Company's  warranty  liabilities,  which are included in accrued
expenses in the accompanying consolidated balance sheets, during the years ended
December 31 were as follows:

                                                            2002         2001
         ---------------------------------------------------------------------
         Balance, beginning of year                       $1,247       $1,283
         Additions applicable to business acquired           250            -
         Additions charged to expense                      3,743        4,065
         Deductions for repairs and replacements           3,357        4,101
                                                       -----------------------
         Balance, end of year                             $1,883       $1,247
                                                       =======================

OTHER NEW ACCOUNTING STANDARDS: On January 1, 2002, the Company adopted SFAS No.
144,  "Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets." SFAS No.
144 requires that long-lived assets to be disposed of by sale be measured at the
lower of net book  value or fair value less cost to sell,  whether  reported  in
continuing operations or in discontinued  operations.  SFAS No. 144 also expands
the reporting of discontinued operations to include components of an entity that
have  been or will be  disposed  of  rather  than  limiting  such  reporting  to
discontinued segments of a business. The adoption of SFAS No. 144 did not have a
material  impact on the Company's  financial  condition or results of operations
during 2002. However,  future plans to dispose of long-lived assets could result
in charges against operations to write down long-lived asset values.

In June 2002,  the FASB issued SFAS No. 146,  "Accounting  for Costs  Associated
With Exit or  Disposal  Activities,"  which is  effective  for exit or  disposal
activities  that are initiated  after December 31, 2002.  SFAS No. 146 nullifies
EITF  Issue  94-3,  "Liability  Recognition  for  Certain  Employee  Termination
Benefits and Other Costs to Exit an Activity  (including  Certain Costs Incurred
in a  Restructuring)."  SFAS  No.  146  requires  that  a  liability  for a cost
associated  with an exit or disposal  activity be  recognized at fair value when
the  liability is incurred.  A commitment  to an exit or disposal plan no longer
will be sufficient  basis for recording a liability  for those  activities.  The
adoption of SFAS No. 146 in 2003 is not expected to have an  immediate  material
impact on the Company's financial  condition or results of operations,  however,
the Company may have  future exit or disposal  activities  to which SFAS No. 146
would apply.

In December  2002,  the FASB issued SFAS No. 148,  "Accounting  for  Stock-Based
Compensation  - Transition  and  Disclosure - an Amendment of FASB Statement No.
123," which was effective on December 31, 2002.



                                     F - 12



SFAS No. 148 provides  alternative  methods of transition for a voluntary change
to the fair value based method of accounting for  stock-based  compensation.  In
addition,  it amends  the  disclosure  requirements  of SFAS No.  123 to require
prominent   disclosures   about  the  method  of  accounting   for   stock-based
compensation  and the effect of the method on reported  results.  The provisions
regarding  alternative methods of transition do not apply to the Company,  which
accounts for  stock-based  compensation  using the intrinsic  value method.  The
disclosure provisions have been adopted. See note (2), "Stock-Based Compensation
Costs."

RECLASSIFICATIONS:  Certain prior year amounts have been reclassified to conform
to the current  year  presentation.  These  changes had no impact on  previously
reported net income or members' equity.

(3) FORMATION OF GENLYTE THOMAS GROUP LLC
On August 30, 1998, The Genlyte Group  Incorporated  and Thomas  Industries Inc.
completed the combination of the business of Genlyte with the lighting  business
of Thomas ("Thomas Lighting"),  in the form of a limited liability company named
Genlyte  Thomas  Group  LLC  ("GTG").  GTG  manufactures,  sells,  markets,  and
distributes  commercial,  residential,  and  industrial  lighting  fixtures  and
controls. Genlyte contributed substantially all of its assets and liabilities to
GTG and received a 68% interest in GTG. Thomas contributed  substantially all of
the assets and certain related liabilities of Thomas Lighting and received a 32%
interest in GTG.  The  percentage  interests in GTG issued to Genlyte and Thomas
were based on arms-length  negotiations  between the parties with the assistance
of their financial advisers.

Subject to the  provisions in the Genlyte  Thomas Group LLC Agreement  (the "LLC
Agreement")   regarding  mandatory   distributions   described  below,  and  the
requirement of special approval in certain  instances,  distributions to Genlyte
and Thomas (the "Members"),  respectively, will be made at such time and in such
amounts as determined by the GTG  Management  Board and shall be made in cash or
other property in proportion to the Members'  respective  percentage  interests.
Notwithstanding  anything  to the  contrary  provided in the LLC  Agreement,  no
distribution under the LLC Agreement shall be permitted to the extent prohibited
by Delaware law.

The LLC  Agreement  requires that GTG make the  following  distributions  to the
Members:

(i) a distribution  to each Member,  based on its percentage  interest,  for tax
liabilities  attributable to its participation as a Member of GTG based upon the
effective tax rate of the Member having the highest tax rate;

(ii) subject to the  provisions of Delaware law and the terms of the primary GTG
credit facility,  distributions  (exclusive of the tax  distributions  set forth
above) to each of the Members so that Thomas  receives at least an  aggregate of
$3,000 and Genlyte  receives at least an  aggregate  of $6,375 per year.  During
2002, GTG made distributions of $5,000 to Thomas and $10,625 to Genlyte.  During
2001 and 2000, GTG made  distributions of $3,000 to Thomas and $6,375 to Genlyte
each year.

Also under the terms of the LLC  Agreement,  at any time on or after January 31,
2002, Thomas has the right (a "Put Right"),  but not the obligation,  to require
GTG to purchase  all,  but not less than all, of  Thomas's  32%  interest at the
appraised  value of such interest.  The appraised value shall be the fair market
value of GTG as a going  concern,  taking into  account a control  premium,  and
determined by an appraisal  process to be  undertaken  by recognized  investment
banking  firms  chosen  initially  by the  Members.  If GTG  cannot  secure  the
necessary  financing  with respect to Thomas's  exercise of its Put Right,  then
Thomas has the right to cause GTG to be sold.

At any time after Thomas exercises its Put Right,  Genlyte has the right, in its
sole  discretion and without the need of approval of Thomas,  to cause GTG to be
sold by giving notice to the GTG Management Board, and the Management Board must
then  proceed  to sell GTG  subject  to a  fairness  opinion  from a  recognized
investment  banking firm.  Genlyte also has the right to cause GTG to assign the
rights to purchase Thomas's  interest to Genlyte.  Genlyte also has the right to
cause GTG to incur  indebtedness  or to undertake an initial public  offering to
finance or effect financing of the payment of the purchase price.

                                     F - 13



Also under the terms of the LLC Agreement, on or after the later to occur of (1)
the final  settlement  or  disposition  of Genlyte's  litigation  with the Keene
Corporation's  Creditors  Trust or (2) January 31, 2002,  either  Member has the
right, but not the obligation,  to offer to buy the other Member's interest (the
"Offer Right"). If the Members cannot agree on the terms, then GTG shall be sold
to the highest  bidder.  Either  Member may  participate  in the bidding for the
purchase of GTG.  As of December  31,  2002,  neither  Member had the ability to
exercise the Offer Right as the final  settlement  or  disposition  of Genlyte's
litigation with the Keene Corporation's Creditors Trust had not yet occurred.

Complete  details of the Put Right,  Offer Right,  and appraisal  process can be
found in the proxy statement  pertaining to the formation of GTG, filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission by Genlyte on July 23, 1998.

(4) ACQUISITION OF VARI-LITE IN 2002
On  November  18,  2002,  the  Company   acquired  the   manufacturing   assets,
intellectual  property,  and sales division of Vari-Lite Inc.  ("Vari-Lite"),  a
subsidiary of Dallas,  Texas based Vari-Lite  International Inc., a designer and
manufacturer  of  highly   advanced   automated   lighting   equipment  for  the
entertainment  industry.  The purchase price of $10,641,  plus the assumption of
$1,021 of liabilities, was funded from cash on hand.

The  Vari-Lite  acquisition  was  accounted  for  using the  purchase  method of
accounting.  The preliminary  determination  of the excess of the purchase price
over the fair market value of net assets  acquired  (goodwill)  of $2,891 is not
being amortized,  in accordance with SFAS No. 142. The determination of the fair
market  value as  reflected  in the balance  sheet is subject to change,  with a
final  determination  no later than one year  after the  acquisition  date.  The
operating results of Vari-Lite have been included in the Company's  consolidated
financial  statements  since the date of acquisition.  The pro forma results and
other disclosures  required by SFAS No. 141, "Business  Combinations,"  have not
been presented because the acquisition of Vari-Lite is not considered a material
acquisition.

(5) ACQUISITION OF ENTERTAINMENT TECHNOLOGY IN 2001
On August 31, 2001, the Company acquired the assets of Entertainment Technology,
Incorporated ("ET"), a subsidiary of privately held Rosco Laboratories,  Inc. of
Stamford, Connecticut. ET was a manufacturer of entertainment lighting equipment
and controls.  Products include the Intelligent  Power System line of theatrical
dimming  equipment  and the family of Horizon  lighting  controls.  The purchase
price of $2,900,  plus the  assumption of $734 of  liabilities,  was funded from
cash on hand.

The ET  acquisition  was accounted for using the purchase  method of accounting.
The  excess of the  purchase  price  over the fair  market  value of net  assets
acquired  (goodwill) of $1,827 is not being  amortized,  in accordance with SFAS
No.  142.  The  operating  results  of ET have been  included  in the  Company's
consolidated  financial statements since the date of acquisition.  The pro forma
results and other  disclosures  required by SFAS No. 141 have not been presented
because the acquisition of ET is not considered a material acquisition.

(6) ACQUISITIONS OF TRANSLITE SONOMA AND CHLORIDE SYSTEMS IN 2000
On September  14,  2000,  the Company  acquired  Translite  Limited  ("Translite
Sonoma"),  a San Carlos,  California based manufacturer of low-voltage cable and
track lighting systems and decorative  architectural glass lighting.  Earlier in
2000,  Translite  Limited had  expanded  its  operations  by merging with Sonoma
Lighting  Limited,  which had been a  manufacturer  of decorative  architectural
glass lighting.  The Company  purchased all of the outstanding  capital stock of
Translite  Limited  for  $6,427,  borrowing  $5,000  from the  revolving  credit
facility and funding the remainder from cash on hand.






                                     F - 14



On October 1, 2000,  the Company  acquired the assets of the emergency  lighting
business of Chloride Power Electronics  Incorporated  ("Chloride  Systems") from
the Chloride  Group,  PLC, in London,  England.  The purchase  included the U.S.
Chloride Systems and LightGuard  emergency  lighting brands.  The purchase price
was $52,324 in cash plus the assumption of approximately  $2,800 in liabilities.
The revolving  credit  facility was used to borrow  $35,000 and cash on hand was
used to pay the remaining $17,324.

The Translite Sonoma and Chloride Systems  acquisitions were accounted for using
the purchase  method of  accounting.  The excess of the purchase  price over the
fair market value of net assets  acquired  (goodwill)  was $6,952 for  Translite
Sonoma and $23,365 for  Chloride  Systems.  The fair market  value of net assets
acquired from Chloride Systems included $23,000 in intangible assets for license
and non-competition agreements, which are being amortized over 30 years.

The  operating  results of  Translite  Sonoma  and  Chloride  Systems  have been
included in the Company's consolidated financial statements since the respective
dates  of  acquisition.   On  an  unaudited  pro  forma  basis,  assuming  these
acquisitions had occurred at the beginning of 2000, the Company's  results would
have been:

                                                      Actual        Pro Forma
                                                        2000             2000
         ---------------------------------------------------------------------
         Net sales                               $ 1,007,706      $ 1,035,139
         Net income                                   83,537           83,349

The pro forma results do not purport to state exactly what the Company's results
of operations  would have been had the  acquisitions in fact been consummated as
of the assumed date and for the period presented.

(7) INCOME TAXES
The results of  operations  are included in the tax return of the Members,  and,
accordingly,  no provision has been  recognized by the Company for U.S.  federal
income taxes payable by the Members.  The  Company's  foreign  subsidiaries  are
taxable  corporations,  and current  and  deferred  taxes are  provided on their
income.  The income tax provision  also includes  U.S.  income taxes  (primarily
state income taxes) of $781 in 2002,  $710 in 2001, and $984 in 2000.  Cash paid
for income taxes was $7,401 in 2002, $6,003 in 2001, and $6,964 in 2000.

(8) ACCRUED EXPENSES
Accrued expenses at December 31 consisted of the following:
                                                                2002        2001
         -----------------------------------------------------------------------
         Employee related costs and benefits                 $32,120     $27,881
         Advertising and sales promotion                       7,613       8,635
         Income and other taxes payable                        4,530       4,144
         Other accrued expenses                               21,164      24,746
                                                            --------------------
         Total accrued expenses                              $65,427     $65,406
                                                            ====================

(9) LONG-TERM DEBT
Long-term debt at December 31 consisted of the following:
                                                                2002        2001
         -----------------------------------------------------------------------
         Canadian dollar notes                              $ 13,312    $ 16,009
         Industrial revenue bonds                             23,100      23,100
         Capital leases and other                                716       1,164
                                                            --------------------
         Total debt                                           37,128      40,273
         Less: current maturities                              4,100       3,284
                                                            --------------------
         Total long-term debt                               $ 33,028    $ 36,989
                                                            ====================

The Company has a $150,000  revolving  credit  agreement (the  "Facility")  with
various banks that matures in August 2003. Under the most restrictive  borrowing
covenant,  which is the fixed charge  coverage  ratio,  the Company  could incur
approximately  $33,000 in additional  interest charges and still comply with the
covenant.

                                     F - 15




There were no borrowings under the Facility as of December 31, 2002 and 2001. At
December 31,  2002,  the Company had  outstanding  $45,566 of letters of credit,
which  reduce the amount  available to borrow  under the  Facility.  Outstanding
borrowings  bear  interest at the option of the Company based on the bank's base
rate or the LIBOR rate plus a spread as determined by total indebtedness.  Based
upon December 31, 2002  indebtedness,  the spread was 0.375%. The commitment fee
on the unused portion of the Facility was 0.125%.

The amount  outstanding  under the  Facility is  secured,  if  requested  by the
banking  group,  by liens on  domestic  accounts  receivable,  inventories,  and
machinery and equipment,  as well as the investments in certain  subsidiaries of
the Company.  The net book value of assets  subject to lien at December 31, 2002
was $336,761.

The Company has $13,312 of borrowings  through its Canadian  subsidiary  Genlyte
Thomas Group Nova Scotia ULC. These borrowings will be repaid in installments in
each of the next two years. Interest rates on these borrowings can be either the
Canadian  prime rate or the  Canadian  LIBOR  rate plus a spread of 0.5%.  As of
December 31, 2002, the weighted average interest rate was 2.9%. These borrowings
are backed by the letters of credit mentioned above.

The Company has $23,100 of variable  rate demand  Industrial  Revenue Bonds that
mature  during 2009 to 2020.  As of December  31,  2002,  the  weighted  average
interest rate on these bonds was 1.7%.  These bonds are backed by the letters of
credit mentioned above.

Interest  expense  totaled  $1,869 in 2002,  $4,192 in 2001, and $5,146 in 2000.
Offsetting these amounts in the consolidated  statements of income were interest
income of $1,263 in 2002, $493 in 2001, and $962 in 2000. Cash paid for interest
on debt was $1,406 in 2002, $4,158 in 2001, and $3,596 in 2000.
The annual maturities of long-term debt are summarized as follows:

         Year ending December 31,
         --------------------------------------------
         2003                              $    4,100
         2004                                   9,763
         2005                                     165
         2006                                       -
         2007                                       -
         Thereafter                            23,100
                                            ---------
         Total debt                         $  37,128
                                            =========

(10) RETIREMENT PLANS
The  Company  has  defined  benefit  plans that cover  certain of its  full-time
employees.  The  Company  uses  September  30 as the  measurement  date  for the
retirement  plan  disclosure.  The Company's  policy for funded plans is to make
contributions  equal to or  greater  than  the  requirements  prescribed  by the
Employee  Retirement Income Security Act. The plans' assets consist primarily of
stocks  and bonds.  Pension  costs for all  Company  defined  benefit  plans are
actuarially  computed.  The Company also has other defined  contribution  plans,
including those covering certain former Genlyte and Thomas employees.













                                     F - 16



The amounts  included in the  accompanying  consolidated  balance sheets for the
U.S. and Canadian defined benefit plans, based on the funded status at September
30 of each year, follow:



                                                                             U.S. Plans                Canadian Plans
                                                                              2002         2001        2002       2001
       -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    
       CHANGE IN BENEFIT OBLIGATIONS
       Benefit obligations, beginning                                       $ 86,021    $ 78,626    $  5,493    $  4,658
       Service cost                                                            1,783       1,782         185         159
       Interest cost                                                           6,066       5,893         403         377
       Benefits paid                                                          (5,282)     (4,990)       (216)       (205)
       Member contributions                                                     --          --            76         142
       Plan amendments                                                          --           505        --           210
       Actuarial loss                                                          7,788       4,205         461         430
       Foreign currency exchange rate change                                    --          --             3        (278)
       Benefit obligations, ending                                          $ 96,376    $ 86,021    $  6,405    $  5,493
                                                                            ============================================

       CHANGE IN PLAN ASSETS
       Plan assets at fair value, beginning                                 $ 71,089    $ 79,084    $  5,642    $  6,403
       Actual loss on plan assets                                             (4,780)     (6,734)       (427)       (699)
       Employer contributions                                                  8,028       3,729         415         299
       Member contributions                                                     --          --            76         142
       Benefits paid                                                          (5,282)     (4,990)       (216)       (205)
       Foreign currency exchange rate change
                                                                                --          --             5        (298)
                                                                            --------------------------------------------
       Plan assets at fair value, ending                                    $ 69,055    $ 71,089    $  5,495    $  5,642
                                                                            ============================================

       FUNDED STATUS OF THE PLANS
       Plan assets in excess of (less than) benefit
          obligations                                                       $(27,321)   $(14,932)   $   (910)   $    149
       Unrecognized transition obligation                                       --            (4)        (20)        (26)
       Unrecognized actuarial loss                                            26,076       7,351       1,860         532
       Unrecognized prior service cost                                         2,552       2,923         266         284
       Contributions subsequent to measurement
          date                                                                    67         222         105          53
                                                                            --------------------------------------------
       Net pension asset (liability)                                        $  1,374    $ (4,440)   $  1,301    $    992
                                                                            ============================================

                                                                               U.S. Plans             Canadian Plans
                                                                               2002         2001      2002        2001
       -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       BALANCE SHEET ASSET (LIABILITY)
       Accrued pension (liability)                                          $(24,743)   $(15,925)   $   (663)     $    -
       Prepaid pension cost                                                        -       2,019           -         992
       Intangible asset                                                        2,658       2,765         272           -
       Accumulated other comprehensive income                                 23,459       6,701       1,692           -
                                                                            --------------------------------------------
       Net asset (liability) recognized                                    $   1,374    $ (4,440)   $  1,301      $  992
                                                                             ============================================

       WEIGHTED AVERAGE ASSUMPTIONS
       Discount rate                                                            6.62%       7.30%       6.62%       7.10%
       Rate of compensation increase                                            3.00%       4.00%       3.00%       4.00%
       Expected return on plan assets                                           8.50%       9.00%       7.75%       7.75%





                                     F - 17





                                                                                           U.S. Plans
                                                                                   2002            2001           2000
         ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                   
         COMPONENTS OF NET PERIODIC BENEFIT COSTS
         Service cost                                                          $ 1,783     $     1,782      $    1,348
         Interest cost                                                           6,066           5,893           5,412
         Expected return on plan assets                                         (6,424)         (6,585)         (5,898)
         Amortization of transition amounts                                         (8)             10             102
         Amortization of prior service cost                                        370             342             220
         Recognized actuarial (gain) loss                                          272            (197)           (295)
         Net gain due to curtailment and settlement                                  -               -            (580)
                                                                            ------------------------------------------
         Net pension expense of defined benefit plans                            2,059           1,245             309
         Defined contribution plans                                              3,514           3,185           2,665
         Multi-employer plans for certain union employees                          180             289             327
                                                                            ------------------------------------------
         Total benefit costs                                                   $ 5,753     $     4,719      $    3,301
                                                                            ==========================================

                                                                                            Canadian Plans
                                                                                   2002            2001           2000
         -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         COMPONENTS OF NET PERIODIC BENEFIT COSTS
         Service cost                                                          $   185     $       159      $      169
         Interest cost                                                             403             377             359
         Expected return on plan assets                                           (448)           (484)           (427)
         Amortization of transition amounts                                         (3)             (3)             (3)
         Amortization of prior service cost                                         19              13               7
         Recognized actuarial (gain) loss                                            6             (14)            (10)
                                                                            ------------------------------------------
         Net pension expense of defined benefit plans                              162              48              95
         Defined contribution plans                                                318             284             196
                                                                            ------------------------------------------
         Total benefit costs                                                  $    480           $ 332          $  291
                                                                            ==========================================




A summary  of the plans in which  benefit  obligations  or  accumulated  benefit
obligations exceed fair value of assets follows:

                                                   U.S.  Plans    Canadian Plans
                                                 2002     2001      2002    2001
         -----------------------------------------------------------------------

         Benefit obligation                     $96,376  $79,594   $6,405     -
         Accumulated benefit obligation          93,866   76,677        -     -
         Plan assets at fair value               69,055   63,687    5,495     -

Effective  January 1, 2000 the Company froze the defined benefit plan of certain
U.S. salaried  employees.  This resulted in a curtailment  credit of $603, which
was a reduction of net pension expense in 2000. These employees are eligible for
Company matching on their 401(k) contributions as well as being a participant in
the Company's Retirement Savings and Investment defined contribution plan.

(11) POST-RETIREMENT BENEFIT PLANS
The Company  provides  post-retirement  medical and life insurance  benefits for
certain retirees and employees, and accrues the cost of such benefits during the
remaining  expected  lives  of such  retirees  and  the  service  lives  of such
employees.






                                     F - 18




The amounts  included in the  accompanying  consolidated  balance sheets for the
post-retirement  benefit  plans,  based on the funded  status at September 30 of
each year, follow:

                                                         2002            2001
         -----------------------------------------------------------------------
         CHANGE IN BENEFIT OBLIGATIONS
         Benefit obligations, beginning                 $ 5,030        $ 4,019
         Service cost                                        53             46
         Interest cost                                      458            358
         Benefits paid                                     (542)          (403)
         Actuarial loss                                   1,892          1,010
                                                      --------------------------
         Benefit obligations, ending                    $ 6,891         $5,030
                                                      ==========================
         FUNDED STATUS OF THE PLANS
         Plan assets less than benefit obligations     $ (6,891)      $ (5,030)
         Unrecognized actuarial loss                      3,247          1,512
                                                      --------------------------
         Accrued liability                             $ (3,644)      $ (3,518)
                                                      ==========================

         Employer contributions                        $    542       $    403
         Benefits paid                                 $   (542)      $   (403)

                                                        2002     2001     2000
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------
         COMPONENTS OF NET PERIODIC BENEFIT COSTS
         Service cost                                $   53   $   46    $   36
         Interest cost                                  458      358       303
         Recognized actuarial loss                      158       62        10
                                                    --------------------------
         Net expense of post-retirement plans        $  669   $  466    $  349
                                                    ==========================

The assumed  discount  rate used in measuring  the  obligations  was 6.62% as of
September 30, 2002 and 7.30% as of September 30, 2001.  The assumed  health care
cost   trend   rate  for  2002  was   12%,   declining   to  5.5%  in  2006.   A
one-percentage-point  increase or decrease in the assumed health care cost trend
rate for each year would  increase or decrease the  obligation  at September 30,
2002 by  approximately  $540, and the 2002  post-retirement  benefit  expense by
approximately $45.

 (12) LEASE COMMITMENTS
The Company rents office space,  equipment,  and computers under  non-cancelable
operating  leases,  some of which  include  renewal  options  and/or  escalation
clauses. Rental expenses for operating leases amounted to $7,883 in 2002, $9,128
in 2001,  and $7,764 in 2000.  Offsetting  the  rental  expenses  were  sublease
rentals of $354 in 2002, $303 in 2001, and $139 in 2000.

Two divisions of the Company also rent  manufacturing and computer equipment and
software under agreements that are classified as capital leases. Future required
minimum lease payments are as follows:

                                                        Operating      Capital
         Year ending December 31,                          Leases       Leases
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------
         2003                                             $ 7,665         $180
         2004                                               5,408          135
         2005                                               3,511          124
         2006                                               2,807            -
         2007                                               1,880            -
         Thereafter                                         6,499            -
                                                         --------      -------
         Total minimum lease payments                    $ 27,770          439
                                                         ========
         Less amount representing interest                                  48
                                                                       --------
         Present value of minimum lease payments                          $391
                                                                       ========
                                     F - 19



Total  minimum  lease  payments on  operating  leases  have not been  reduced by
minimum  sublease  rentals  of  $827  due in  the  future  under  non-cancelable
subleases.

In  2000,  the  Company  entered  into a $1.3  million  bridge  synthetic  lease
agreement to finance the land for a manufacturing facility in San Marcos, Texas.
As of December 31, 2001,  approximately $1.2 million had been advanced under the
bridge  agreement.  The Company had been negotiating a synthetic lease agreement
for $20 million to finance  construction  of a 300,000 square foot  facility.  A
synthetic lease is accounted for as an operating lease. During 2002, the Company
terminated  negotiation on the synthetic  lease and paid $1.3 million in cash to
purchase the land.  However,  construction  is being  delayed at the election of
management,  pending  improvement  in the economic  outlook and  forecast  sales
volume.

(13) CONTINGENCIES
In the normal  course of business,  the Company is a party to legal  proceedings
and claims. When costs can be reasonably estimated,  appropriate  liabilities or
reserves for such matters are recorded.  While management currently believes the
amount of ultimate  liability,  if any,  with respect to these  actions will not
materially affect the financial condition,  results of operations,  or liquidity
of the Company,  the ultimate  outcome of any  litigation is uncertain.  Were an
unfavorable outcome to occur, the impact could be material to the Company.

Additionally,  the Company is a defendant and/or potentially  responsible party,
with other  companies,  in  actions  and  proceedings  under  state and  Federal
environmental laws, including the Federal Comprehensive  Environmental  Response
Compensation and Liability Act, as amended. Management does not believe that the
disposition of any lawsuits  and/or  proceedings  will have a material effect on
the Company's financial condition, results of operations, or liquidity.

(14) STOCK OPTIONS
The Genlyte 1998 Stock Option Plan (the "Plan") was  established for the benefit
of key  employees of GTG and  directors of Genlyte.  The Plan  replaced the 1988
stock option  plan,  options  under which are  currently  outstanding.  The Plan
provides  that an aggregate of 2,000,000  shares of Genlyte  common stock may be
granted as nonqualified  stock options,  provided that no options may be granted
if the number of shares of  Genlyte  common  stock  that may be issued  upon the
exercise of outstanding  options would exceed the lesser of 1,700,000  shares of
Genlyte  common  stock or 10% of the  issued and  outstanding  shares of Genlyte
common stock.

The option  exercise prices are established by the Board of Directors of Genlyte
and cannot be less than the higher of the book value or the fair market value of
a share of common stock on the date of grant.  Options become exercisable at the
rate of 50% per year  commencing  two years  after the date of grant and  expire
after seven years (five years for 1988 Plan).









                                     F - 20



Transactions under the 1998 and 1988 Stock Option Plans are summarized below:

                                                                  Weighted
                                                                  Average
                                                Number of         Exercise Price
                                                Shares            Per Share
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding December 31, 1999                      759,910          $ 15.86
         Granted                                    97,700            20.32
         Exercised                                (145,175)            9.66
         Canceled                                  (24,023)           16.67
                                                 -------------------------------
Outstanding December 31, 2000                      688,412            17.79
         Granted                                   211,000            27.52
         Exercised                                (183,650)           13.71
         Canceled                                  (50,127)           19.82
                                                 -------------------------------
Outstanding December 31, 2001                      665,635            21.93
         Granted                                   275,500            31.13
         Exercised                                (228,860)           19.24
         Canceled                                  (27,050)           20.58
                                                 -------------------------------
Outstanding December 31, 2002                      685,225            26.64
                                                 ===============================

Exercisable at End of Year
         December 31, 2000                         306,764            15.21
         December 31, 2001                         294,885            19.29
         December 31, 2002                         173,825          $ 19.65

Additional  information about stock options  outstanding as of December 31, 2002
is summarized below:




                                                  Options Outstanding                        Options Exercisable
                                       ---------------------------------------------     ----------------------------
                                                            Weighted
                                                             Average       Weighted                           Weighted
                                                           Remaining        Average                            Average
                                          Number of      Contractual       Exercise          Number of        Exercise
         Range of Exercise Prices            Shares     Life (Years)          Price             Shares           Price
         -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                              
         $14.95 to $22.26                201,125            3.2            $ 19.51           170,075         $ 19.53
         $22.27 to $29.56                186,100            5.9              26.93             3,750           25.18
         $29.57 to $33.21                293,000            6.1              31.12               -               -
         $40.51                            5,000            6.5              40.51               -               -
                                       -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                         685,225            5.2            $ 26.64           173,825         $ 19.65
                                       ===============================================================================



GTG accounts for these Genlyte stock options using the intrinsic value method of
APB 25 and related  interpretations.  Because  options  granted have an exercise
price equal to the market  value of the  underlying  common stock on the date of
grant,  no  stock-based  compensation  is  recognized.   Pro  forma  information
regarding net income,  as if stock-based  compensation  cost had been determined
using the fair value recognition provisions of SFAS No. 123, is provided in note
(2)  "Summary of  Significant  Accounting  Policies -  Stock-Based  Compensation
Costs." The weighted average fair values used in the calculations of stock-based
compensation  cost for  options  granted  in 2002,  2001,and  2000 were  $12.33,
$11.90, and $10.02, respectively.






                                     F - 21





The fair  value of these  options  was  estimated  at the date of grant  using a
Black-Scholes option-pricing model with the following assumptions:
                                          2002            2001           2000
         Risk-free interest rate          4.10%           4.84%          6.49%
         Expected life, in years          6.0             6.0            6.0
         Expected volatility             32.6%           35.1%          40.2%
         Expected dividends                -               -              -

The  Black-Scholes  pricing model was  developed for use in estimating  the fair
value  of  traded  options  that  have no  vesting  restriction  and  are  fully
transferable.  Option  valuation  models require the input of highly  subjective
assumptions,  including the expected stock price  volatility.  Because Genlyte's
stock options have  characteristics  different from those of traded options, and
changes  in the  subjective  assumptions  can  materially  affect the fair value
estimate,  in  management's  opinion,  the  existing  models do not  necessarily
provide a  reliable  single  measurement  of the fair value of  Genlyte's  stock
options.

(15) ACCUMULATED OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)
Accumulated  other  comprehensive  income (loss) at December 31 consisted of the
following:



                                                                      2002              2001             2000
         -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                             
         Minimum pension liability, after tax                     $ (24,610)           $(6,701)       (277)
         Foreign currency translation adjustments                    (2,355)            (2,375)      1,152
                                                                 -----------------------------------------------
         Total accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)      $ (26,965)          $ (9,076)       $875
                                                                 ===============================================




(16) RELATED-PARTY TRANSACTIONS
The Company in the normal course of business has  transactions  with Genlyte and
Thomas.  These  transactions  consist  primarily  of  reimbursement  for  shared
corporate  expenses such as rent, office services,  professional  services,  and
shared  personnel,  and interest  payments  due on a loan of $22,287  payable to
Thomas,   which  was  paid  off  in  November  2001.  In  addition,   while  the
distributions  to Members  discussed in note (3)  "Formation  of Genlyte  Thomas
Group LLC" are paid to Thomas entirely in cash, such  distributions are not paid
to Genlyte  entirely in cash.  Portions are still owed and have been recorded as
related-party  payables  to  Genlyte  or  Genlyte  Canadian  Holdings,   LLC,  a
wholly-owned  subsidiary of Genlyte.  These  payables bear interest at a rate of
1.8% at December 31, 2002.

Related-party payables at December 31 consisted of the following:

                                                                2002        2001
         -----------------------------------------------------------------------
         Payable to Genlyte                                  $18,335     $ 4,628
         Payable to Genlyte Canadian Holdings, LLC            11,828      15,040
         Payable to the Schreder Group                           181           -
         Payable to Thomas                                       139          37
                                                         -----------------------
             Total related-party payables                   $ 30,483     $19,705
                                                         =======================

For the years ended  December 31 the  Company  had the  following  related-party
transactions:

                                                      2002     2001      2000
         -----------------------------------------------------------------------
         Payments to Thomas for:
             Reimbursement of corporate expenses    $    230     $ 387     $ 515
              Interest under the loan agreement            -     1,012     1,543
         Payments from Genlyte for:
             Reimbursement of corporate expenses         110       111       103
         Royalties payable to the Schreder Group         181        -         -



                                     F - 22



(17) SEGMENT REPORTING
The Company's  reportable operating segments include the Commercial Segment, the
Residential  Segment,  and the Industrial and Other Segment.  Intersegment sales
are eliminated in consolidation  and therefore not presented in the table below.
Corporate assets and expenses are allocated to the segments.  Information  about
the  Company's  operating  segments  as of and for the years  ended  December 31
follows:




                                                                                              Industrial
         2002                                              Commercial      Residential         And Other           Total
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                   
         Net sales                                           $710,168         $132,378          $127,758       $ 970,304
         Operating profit                                      71,586           16,320            11,384          99,290
         Assets                                               495,075           97,138            80,768         672,981
         Depreciation and amortization                         16,882            2,862             3,425          23,169
         Expenditures for plant and equipment                  13,396            1,787             3,729          18,912

                                                                                              Industrial
         2001                                              Commercial      Residential         and Other           Total
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Net sales                                          $ 712,662         $134,269          $138,245       $ 985,176
         Operating profit                                      69,405           13,219            11,958          94,582
         Assets                                               454,569           89,605            74,947         619,121
         Depreciation and amortization                         20,564            3,692             3,916          28,172
         Expenditures for plant and equipment                  15,634            1,663             2,953          20,250

                                                                                              Industrial
         2000                                              Commercial      Residential         and Other           Total
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Net sales                                           $724,350         $137,838          $145,518     $ 1,007,706
         Operating profit                                      69,114           11,083            14,006          94,203
         Assets                                               437,678           89,419            87,295         614,392
         Depreciation and amortization                         18,197            3,739             3,728          25,664
         Expenditures for plant and equipment                  20,389            3,424             4,610          28,423



(18) GEOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION
The Company has operations  throughout North America.  Foreign net sales are all
from Canadian  operations.  Long-lived  assets are  primarily in Canada,  with a
minor  amount  in  Mexico.   Information  about  the  Company's   operations  by
geographical area as of and for the years ended December 31 follows:




         2002                                                                 U.S.           Foreign               Total
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                      
         Net sales                                                        $814,219          $156,085           $ 970,304
         Operating profit                                                   78,288            21,002              99,290
         Long-lived assets                                                 212,932            54,000             266,932

         2001                                                                 U.S.           Foreign               Total
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Net sales                                                        $836,754          $148,422           $ 985,176
         Operating profit                                                   77,740            16,842              94,582
         Long-lived assets                                                 215,759            55,150             270,909

         2000                                                                 U.S.           Foreign               Total
         ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Net sales                                                        $870,209          $137,497          $1,007,706
         Operating profit                                                   78,011            16,192              94,203
         Long-lived assets                                                 219,749            58,348             278,097







                                     F - 23



                                  EXHIBIT INDEX


Exhibit No.           Exhibit
-----------           -------

    3(b)              Bylaws, as amended December 10, 2002, filed herewith.

   4(a)(1)            Thomas Industries  Holdings,  Inc., Thomas Industries Inc.
                      Note  Agreement  Amended  and  Restated  as of November 6,
                      1998, filed herewith.

   4(a)(2)            Thomas Industries  Holdings,  Inc., Thomas Industries Inc.
                      First  Amendment  dated  as  of  July  30,  2002  to  Note
                      Agreement Amended and Restated as of November 6, 1998.

                      Copies of debt  instruments  for which the related debt is
                      less  than  10%  of  consolidated  total  assets  will  be
                      furnished to the Commission upon request.

   10(g)(1)           Service   Agreement   with   Dieter   Rietschle   (English
                      translation) dated September 20, 2002, filed herewith.

   10(g)(2)           Employment   Agreement  with  Peter   Bissinger   (English
                      translation) dated January 1, 2003, filed herewith.

    13                Certain  portions of the  Company's  2002 Annual Report to
                      Shareholders  as  specified  in  Parts  I and  II,  hereby
                      incorporated  by reference  in this Annual  Report on Form
                      10-K, filed herewith.

   21                 Subsidiaries of the Registrant, filed herewith.

   23(a)              Consent of Ernst & Young LLP, filed herewith.

   23(b)              Information  regarding  consent  of Arthur  Andersen  LLP,
                      filed herewith.

   23(c)              Consent of Ernst & Young LLP, filed herewith.

   23(d)              Information  regarding  consent  of Arthur  Andersen  LLP,
                      filed herewith.

   99.1               Certifications  Pursuant  to 18  U.S.C  Section  1350,  as
                      adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the  Sarbanes-Oxley Act
                      of 2002, filed herewith.



Copies of the exhibits in Part IV, Item 15, which were filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission, will be furnished postpaid by the Registrant upon
receipt of the following sums of money:


                  Exhibit No.                         Fee per Copy
                  -----------                         ------------

                        13                                      --

                        21                                     .30

                        23 (a)                                 .30

                        23 (b)                                 .30

                        23 (c)                                 .30

                        23 (d)                                 .30