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Dow Jones Industrial Average

Stocks rally despite China: Dow gains 212

Adam Shell
USA TODAY

U.S. stocks shrugged off a sell-off in Shanghai and ended higher Thursday as Wall Street seeks to build on yesterday's big rebound rally that wiped out big losses and allowed stocks to finish the day up.

Trader Daniel Kryger works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Wednesday, Feb. 24, 2016.  (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

The Dow Jones industrial average climbed 212 points, or 1.3%. The Standard & Poor's 500 stock index gained 1.1% and the Nasdaq composite index added 0.9%. The Dow and S&P 500 are both out of correction, while the Nasdaq is still in a correction, or more than 10% below its bull market high.

On Wednesday, the Dow enjoyed a massive intraday-reversal, turning an early loss of nearly 266 points into a closing gain of 53.21 points to 16,484.99. The reversal that led to the closing gain was the best since 2008, according to CNBC. The rebound yesterday coincided with a turnaround in oil prices, as the movement of stocks remains tightly correlated to trading in the energy patch.

Chinese stocks plunge more than 6%

Stock gains accelerated in afternoon trading as oil prices again reversed course and moved higher. U.S. benchmark crude was up 3% to $33.17 after earlier falling as low as $31.07.

The U.S. stock market is still trying to build on its recent recovery after the worst start to a year in Wall Street history. Investors are weighing a wide host of market drivers and risks, including slowing global growth, a profits recession in the U.S., continued volatility in the energy space and ongoing angst regarding the Federal Reserve's interest rate policy.

Wall Street was also digesting mixed economic data. The latest reading on first-time jobless claims rose 10,000 to 272,000. But January durable goods orders for long-lasting big-ticket items like refrigerators and dishwashers rose a better-than-expected 4.9%.

Durable goods orders rebound in Jan.; weekly jobless claims bump up

Since the recent stock market low on Feb. 11, U.S. stocks have stabilized. Wall Street is trying to decipher if the latest rally is a head fake or the start of a more sustainable uptrend.

Stocks advanced despite the 6.4% sell-off in China, which was sparked by liquidity fears and continued worries over slowing growth in China.

Stocks in Europe were also shrugging off the stock market weakness in China. The broad Stoxx Europe 600 was 2.1% higher and the German DAX was up 1.8% and the CAC 40 in Paris was 2.2% higher.

Adam Shell on Twitter: @adamshell.

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