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2011-02-02 05:45:07
US shares closed at their highest level in more than two years on Tuesday, as
upbeat corporate earnings and strong US manufacturing data added to confidence
in the US recovery.
Wall Street's Dow Jones index closed above 12,000 points on Tuesday for the
first time since mid-2008.
And the Standard & Poor's 500 index - a broader measure of US shares - closed
at its highest level since August 2008.
But unemployment and house market woes continue to hang over the US economy.
US shares have climbed rapidly since March 2009, when the Dow Jones index stood
at 6,547 points - its lowest level in twelve years.
Observers say that surging corporate profits and resilient of consumer spending
had played a part, while intervention by the US central bank, the Federal
Reserve, to buy bonds, had made stocks a more appealing investment.
These factors had helped to ease concerns about possible economic implications
from political turmoil in Egypt, and the continuing rise in the price of oil,
with Brent crude going above $102 ( 63), analysts said.
'Area of strength'
And on Tuesday a survey from the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) found
factory output had increased at its fastest pace in seven years last month.
"Manufacturing seems to clearly be an area of strength, and it is the
combination of manufacturing picking up and the consumer picking up, that's
most of the economy." said Eric Kuby, chief investment officer at North Star
Investment Management in Chicago.
Meanwhile, companies including Pfizer and United Parcel Service helped the
market rally on Tuesday, seeing large jumps in their share price on
better-than-expected quarterly profits.
The Dow Jones index closed up 148.2 points, 1.3% at 12,040.2, while the S&P 500
index added 1.7% percent to 1,307.6 points and the tech-heavy Nasdaq index
added 1.9% at 2,751.2 points.
If Americans began to believe in the stock market again, it could accelerate
the economic recovery, said David Kelly, chief market strategist at JP Morgan
Funds.
"The lack of confidence has acted as a sedative across the economy," he added.
"The Dow at 12,000 could boost the psychology of the American investor and be a
more powerful stimulant than anything else in driving the next stage of this
bull market."
Investors who saw their stock portfolios increasing in value would be more
likely to spend cash, which in turn would boost the economy, he said.
Last week, figures showed that US economic growth accelerated in the last three
months of 2010 to an annualised rate of 3.2%, up from a rate of 2.6% in the
previous quarter.
While the US economy is expanding again, there are concerns about the jobs
market, with the unemployment rate at 9.4%.
And some have expressed concern over whether gains in consumer demand will be
enough to offset further cutbacks in government spending and the weak housing
market.s suggested consumer spending in the US grew at its fastest pace in
three years during 2010. Spending grew by 3.5% from 2009 the Commerce
Department said, the best showing since a 5.2% rise in 2007 - before the
country went into recession.