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US stocks rise; Home Depot boosts Dow average

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U.S. stocks rose Tuesday after a sluggish start. A surge in Home Depot's stock lifted the Dow Jones industrial average.

Major indexes had opened lower after European leaders postponed the latest aid package for Greece. The Dow turned positive in the first hour of trading and rose solidly through the morning.

The Dow was up 56 points at 12,870 shortly after noon Eastern time. About a third of the gain was attributable to Home Depot, which soared 4 percent after delivering a strong earnings report that beat analysts' expectations. Home Depot added $2.45 to $63.61.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose seven points to 1,386. The Nasdaq composite index rose two to 2,906.

European stock markets had been lower but rose after trading opened in New York. Benchmark indexes in France, Britain and Germany closed modestly higher.

Traders there are concerned because finance ministers postponed $40 billion in desperately needed aid for Greece. The news surprised investors. A day earlier, there was word that leaders had prepared a "positive" report on Greece, making it appear likely that the aid would be released.

Investors are trading against the backdrop of the "fiscal cliff," a set of U.S. government spending cuts and tax increases that will take effect automatically at the beginning of next year unless U.S. leaders reach a compromise before then.

Worries about the fiscal cliff pushed U.S. stocks to one of their worst weekly losses of the year last week after voters re-elected President Barack Obama and a deeply divided Congress. Obama was set to meet Tuesday with labor leaders and others who advocate higher taxes on the wealthy and want to protect health benefits for seniors and other government programs. Obama will meet with business leaders Wednesday.

Until the U.S. government's fiscal issues are resolved, traders can expect many more days of indecisive trading and volatility, said Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at ConvergEx Group.

"It's a little bit like Groundhog Day," Colas said, referring to the classic Bill Murray movie whose protagonist must relive the same day over and over. Until there is decisive news from Washington, something he doesn't expect for weeks, markets will remain vulnerable to headlines from Europe and the U.S. that mean little in the long run, Colas said.

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