Wall Street stocks finished higher on Thursday, lifting the Dow to a fresh record, following solid US retail sales and central bank moves to hold interest rates steady.
Equities overcame a mid-session swoon, pushing higher again as the 10-year US Treasury yield fell below four percent for the first time since August.
The Dow Jones ended at 37,248, up 0.4 percent, its second straight record close.
The S&P 500 gained 0.3 percent to 4,719, while the Nasdaq advanced 0.2 percent to 14,761.
Stocks continued to cheer the Federal Reserve's policy decision on Wednesday, which included a forecast for interest rate cuts in 2024.
Steve Sosnick of Interactive Brokers questioned whether the Fed's pivot reflects increased worries of a recession.
But Adam Sarhan of 50 Park Investments offered a more optimistic outlook, saying, "it appears, at least for now, that the Fed has won its fight against inflation and the market is cheering that victory."
Retail sales in the United States rose unexpectedly in November, with consumer spending holding up despite higher interest rates.
Meanwhile, the European Central Bank and Bank of England both kept interest rates unchanged, following the US Federal Reserve's move on Wednesday to hold rates steady also while inflation recedes.
Among individual companies, Adobe dropped 6.4 percent after projecting lower than expected revenues next year.
But Moderna surged 9.3 percent as the company's chief executive, Stephane Bancel, said an experimental vaccine against melanoma could be available in as little as two years. The statement helped allay worries the pharma company was a "one-hit wonder" after its Covid-19 vaccine success. (AFP)