Existing users please login

 

Home / Markets / Industries / Technology

Diebold Up To Date With SEC Filings, Raises Outlook

 
Wallace Witkowski
MarketWatch Pulse
     

    SAN FRANCSICO -- Diebold Inc. said late Tuesday it filed all of its late financial reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission and raised its earnings outlook for 2008. Diebold raised its full-year earnings range to $1.52 to $1.62 a share, compared with a previous range of $1.37 to $1.47 a share. Excluding one time items, the outlook is $2.40 to $2.45 a share, compared with a previous outlook of $2.25 to $2.30 a share. Analysts surveyed by FactSet Research estimate full-year earnings of $2.14 a share.

    Copyright © 2008 MarketWatch, Inc.

     

    Fox Business Video


     

    FOX Translator

    Detach

    No data currently available.

    No data currently available.

    SYMBOL

     
    Marriage Penalty

    Sure, we know some of you are saying the term "marriage penalty" is redundant. In fact, of all the costs associated with getting married (have you seen the cost of a wedding cake lately?), the marriage penalty can be the worst.

    Here's how it works: Mr. and Mrs. Right walk down the aisle in wedded bliss and suddenly they¿re a two-income household. If both make roughly the same amount of money, they can be pushed into a higher tax bracket. That's bad, since the higher the bracket, the higher the tax. So, if both were single, they'd end up writing two smaller checks to the tax man that, if combined, would add up to less than the giant check they write in a state of wedded bliss.

    Is that fair? We're not touching that, but there is a flip side that few people talk about. The marriage penalty only kicks in if both members of the couple make close to the same amount of money. If there's a big disparity in pay, there's actually a tax advantage. Call it the marriage bonus.

    And, it¿s important to remember that there are other financial benefits, such as lower life-insurance rates or health care premiums, that can make up for the extra tax couples pay. So don't let Uncle Sam stop you from saying, "I do."