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"Investors were worried that the Chinese economy was going to experience overheating in general and high inflation," Morgan Stanley said in a report. "The degree of uncertainty concerning growth and inflation should diminish going forward." Traders are eyeing first quarter corporate earnings reports which began this week. "The overall world economy is recovering, and our advice is to stay long the market," said Tey Tze Ming, a trader with Saxo Capital Markets in Singapore. "The earnings we're going to see over the next couple weeks will set the tone, and I think there's upside from here." Markets in Thailand were closed for a holiday. In New York overnight, the Dow Jones industrial average gained 103.69, or 0.9 percent, to 11,123.11, the highest finish since September 2008. The Dow closed higher Wednesday for a fifth day, buoyed by upbeat earnings from Intel Corp. and JPMorgan Chase. Investors also chased Wall Street gains on Wednesday on a Commerce Department report showing U.S. retail sales increased in March for the third straight month
-- a fresh sign that American consumers are starting to spend more. In currencies, the dollar was steady at 93.15 yen Thursday from 93.21 yen late Wednesday. The euro stood at $1.3597 from $1.3651. Benchmark crude for May delivery was up 5 cents to $85.89 a barrel.
[Associated
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