Wall Street moved higher overnight amid promising data on China's economy, fuelling hopes that the world's second-largest economy is gathering steam again.
China offered better-than-expected data on both industrial output and retail sales, welcomed by a market that is on tenterhooks about US budget talks aimed at avoiding the US$600 billion in tax increases and spending cuts scheduled to kick in on January 1.
"China hit that trough and is starting to see an acceleration of growth," Tom Wirth, who helps manage US$1.6 billion as senior investment officer for Chemung Canal Trust, in Elmira, New York, told Bloomberg News.
Meanwhile, no details were offered on yesterday's meeting between US President Barack Obama and Republican House Speaker John Boehner about an agreement to avoid the so-called fiscal cliff - and a potential recession for the world's largest economy.
A study by the US National Intelligence Council, however, predicted that China's economy will take over the top spot from the US before 2030.