Stocks in major markets rose for a fifth straight session yesterday while gold, the yen and other safety assets fell after Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen reinforced the need for “extraordinary” commitment to support the US economy.

The euro continued to bounce back against the US dollar even as softer-than-forecast inflation numbers added to the discussion of whether the European Central Bank will cut interest rates when it meets later this week.

The S&P 500 was setting up for a monthly gain, the 14th in the past 17 months. A winning quarter for the index would be the fifth straight, matching streaks seen in 2006-2007 and 2003-2004.

Yellen yesterday gave a strong defense for the Fed’s easy-money policies in her first public speech since becoming the Fed’s chief.

Ken Polcari, director of the NYSE floor division at O’Neil Securities in New York, Polcari said the end-of-quarter trading was also giving US equities support.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 103.53 points or 0.63 per cent, to 16,426.59, the S&P 500 gained 12.46 points, or 0.67 per cent, to 1,870.08, and the Nasdaq Composite added 44.229 points, or 1.06 per cent, to 4,199.988.

An index of European blue-chips hit its highest intraday level in more than five years, and the FTSEurofirst 300 index of leading shares was up 0.3 per cent. Overnight in Asia, the MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.6 per cent to close at its highest level this year on heightened speculation that Beijing will launch new spending measures and on reduced tensions out of Ukraine.

Tokyo’s Nikkei stock average also rose, gaining 0.9 per cent to touch a three-week high, supported by comments from Chinese Premier Li Keqiang on Friday that Beijing was ready to support the cooling economy, saying the government had the necessary policies in place and would push ahead with infrastructure investment.

The euro rose to a three-week high against the yen and edged up versus the dollar after hitting a one-month low to the greenback on Friday, even as inflation across the euro zone fell to the lowest level in over four years. The data initially supported expectations the ECB could act to counter the deflationary threat as early as this week.

Forex traders polled by Reuters, however, said the ECB will keep monetary policy unchanged when it meets on Thursday.

The yield on 10-year US Treasuries rose yesterday to as high as 2.7680 per cent, trading within the top half of last week’s range, while the yield on the 30-year bond briefly traded above 3.6 per cent as US stocks held to gains. In emerging markets, the Turkish lira hit its highest level against the US dollar this year after Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan declared victory in local poll.

The results stirred hopes that months of political turbulence would ease. The lira touched 2.1375, its strongest level against the greenback since late December.

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