The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan final index of consumer sentiment rose to 69.9 from 64.1 at the end of November, surpassing the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey which called for 68 after a preliminary reading of 67.7.
Few seemed bothered by the fact that US gross domestic product grew at a 1.8 per cent rate in the third quarter, falling short of the 2 per cent median growth projection in a Bloomberg survey.
Orlando said increased inventory liquidation in the GDP report showed end-of-market demand remained strong in the fourth quarter.
"The double-dip fear the bears were talking about in the second half of the year is off the table at this point and investors are seeing domestic fundamentals are in pretty good shape," Orlando said.
Commodities did well today, too, with copper gaining 1.2 per cent and US crude oil climbing 1.1 per cent.
While the mood was positive for stocks in Europe as the Stoxx 600 Index closed with a 1.1 per cent gain for the day, there's plenty of caution left as investors wonder how the euro zone's debt crisis will play out in the new year.
The euro was last less than 0.1 per cent stronger at US$1.3052. Italian bonds fell, sending 10-year bond yields 13 basis points higher to 6.94 per cent and yields on equivalent Spanish paper were up 13 basis points at 5.449 per cent, according to Reuters.
European debt concerns "continue to remain on the back burner with no significant new developments," Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist at BNY Mellon in New York, told Reuters. "It's no surprise the market continues to wait for political leaders to make political decisions on the future of the euro zone."
In Italy, senators have given their approval to austerity tax increases and pension reforms as they aim to avoid bankruptcy for the euro zone's third-biggest economy.
Meanwhile, Britain's economy surprised by expanding 0.6 per cent in the third quarter, official data revealed but the country still faces possible recession in the new year.
The Office for National Statistics revised higher its estimate for gross domestic product growth between July and September compared with the second quarter. Analysts had expected no change to the earlier forecast putting British GPD growth at 0.5 per cent in the third quarter, according to Reuters.