|      Stocks rose on Thursday    as robust action by the Bank of Japan and    supportive remarks by U.S. officials indicated that equity markets would    continue to be propped up, though gains were checked by weak data on the labor market. Jobless claims    unexpectedly jumped last week, the latest in a series of data points to    disappoint, raising questions about growth and the labor market's recovery. Claims jumped to 385,000    in the latest week, confounding expectations that claims would drop by 7,000    to 350,000. On Wednesday, a read on private sector employment also    disappointed, spurring concerns about Friday's jobs report, which is expected    to show that 200,000 jobs were added in March, down from the previous month. "I wouldn't have    expected claims to be such a heavy wet blanket, but in the short term, we've    had a couple of disappointments," said Mike Shea, managing partner and    trader at Direct Access Partners LLC in New York. The Bank of Japan shocked    markets with a radical overhaul of its monetary policy, adopting a new    balance sheet target and pledging to double its government bond holdings in    two years. Japanese shares    <.n225> soared 2.2 percent while the iShares MSCI Japan Index ETF    jumped 3.9 percent to $10.88. U.S. shares of Toyota Motor rose 4.5 percent to    $105.40.</ .n225> On Wednesday, St. Louis    Fed President James Bullard said the Fed had room to keep buying bonds to    support the U.S. economic recovery. Earlier Thursday, Dennis Lockhart,    president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, suggested the Fed's program    would continue for at least a few more months. The Dow Jones industrial    average <.dji> was up 52.30 points, or 0.36 percent, at 14,602.65. The    Standard & Poor's 500 Index <.spx> was up 5.89 points, or 0.38    percent, at 1,559.58. The Nasdaq Composite Index <.ixic> was up 1.59    points, or 0.05 percent, at 3,220.20.</.ixic></.spx></.dji> The benchmark S&P    continues to struggle to reach a new all-time intraday peak. The current    record of 1,576.09 is about 1.4 percent away, though the index has climbed    recently to within 3 points of it. Market declines have been    used as buying opportunities of late, but many investors are calling for a    more pronounced pullback. Wednesday's decline was the biggest daily drop for    the S&P since February. "If Friday's report    is better than expected, then the sentiment could turn back into positive    territory, but if it is confirmation that things are softening, that could be    the beginning of a pullback," said Art Hogan, managing director of Lazard    Capital Markets in New York. First-quarter earnings    growth forecasts have been lowered since the start of the year, with S&P    500 company earnings expected to have risen 1.6 percent from a year ago,    according to Thomson Reuters data. A January 1 forecast put earnings growth    at 4.3 percent. Best Buy Co Inc was the    S&P's top percentage gainer, rising 4.1 percent to $22.50, after the    retailer said it would offer a 30 percent discount on its current stock of    Apple iPad 3 tablets in the United States. Private equity firms TPG    Capital and Madison Dearborn Partners are the two finalists bidding for    National Financial Partners , a New York-based wealth management company with    a market value of nearly $900 million, people familiar with the matter said.  |    
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