Stocks, dollar power higher on 'slow and steady' rate hopes

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By Lawrence Delevingne and Marc Jones

(Reuters) -Wall Street stocks reversed losses to end higher on Thursday, and U.S. government bond yields tempered gains, as investors digested strong economic data and signals of a measured interest rate approach from the Federal Reserve.

U.S. jobless claims numbers fell, while Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said that he favored "slow and steady" quarter-point U.S. rate increases to limit risk to the economy.

That helped Wall Street stocks rebound from an initial decline. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose around 1%, boosted by Salesforce Inc, whose shares jumped about 11.5% after the cloud-based software provider gave an upbeat full-year profit forecast and doubled its share repurchase program.

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite both gained around 0.75%, even as Tesla Inc fell nearly 6% after the company did not unveil a much-awaited small, affordable electric vehicle.

After initially sagging, European shares rose 0.5, even as euro zone inflation numbers justified what is widely expected to be another 50 basis-point hike in the European Central Bank's already decade-high rates this month.

Consumer price inflation in the 20 countries sharing the euro currency barely eased to 8.5% in February from 8.6% in January on lower energy prices, above the 8.2% economists polled by Reuters had expected.

MSCI's broadest index of world shares gained 0.37%.

Stock and bond markets in recent weeks have been driven by different factors, said Kevin Gardiner, global investment strategist at Rothschild & Co. The chief concern in stocks is the expectation of pressured corporate profits, while bonds are sensitive to inflation and rate expectations.

"The economic impact of tightening remains a puzzle. Profitability might not be that fragile, at least, not yet," he said.

Overnight, both benchmark government bonds and shares had taken a blow, as inflation indicators from Germany and the United States reinforced expectations interest rates would go higher and stay there for longer.

Germany's 2-year government bond yield rose to its highest since October 2008.

In the United States, manufacturing activity contracted for a fourth straight month in February, but a gauge of prices for raw materials increased last month, stoking concerns that inflation would remain stubborn.

"Economic data has surprised to the upside," said Steven Oh, global head of credit and fixed income at PineBridge Investments. Any unexpected result in the data would drive policymakers to be more aggressive, and that has reset market expectations, he said.