Better-than-expected housing data bolstered Wall Street, while the Bank of Japan's decision to follow policy makers in the US and Europe by providing further stimulus for its languishing economy helped underpin the mood.
Existing houses sales climbed 7.8 per cent to a 4.82 million annual rate in August, according to the National Association of Realtors. Meanwhile, construction of single-family houses rose 5.5 per cent to a 535,000 rate, the Commerce Department.
Both data represent the strongest showings in a little over two years.
"The nascent housing recovery has deepened," Ellen Zentner, a senior US economist at Nomura Securities International in New York, told Bloomberg News. "Ultimately, this improvement will lead to a rise in residential wealth, which tends to lift consumer confidence and spending."
To be sure, the overall number was more subdued as housing starts rose 2.3 per cent to a 750,000 annual rate in August.