Wall Street stocks staged a solid rally Thursday, shrugging off three straight losing sessions as markets grapple with worries about inflation and monetary policy.

Tech shares led the broader market as investors weighed chances that the Federal Reserve could move soon to scale back asset purchases and shift away from highly accommodative monetary policy.

"I think there has been so much discussion about it that the odds are pretty good that it's discounted in the market," Maris Ogg of Tower Bridge Advisors said of a possible shift in Fed policy.

"I think it's inevitable and I hope they take the action," she added.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended up 0.6 percent at 34,082.90.

The broad-based S&P 500 won 1.1 percent to 4,159.13, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index jumped 1.8 percent to 13,535.09.

New filings for unemployment aid declined for the third straight week in the United States, government data showed, an indication of further progress in the labor market.

Wall Street got off to a hot start Friday morning to cap a record-setting week.
Wall Street stocks have rallied to end three straight losing sessions AFP / Angela Weiss

Among individual companies, Ford jumped 3.2 percent after officially unveiling the all-electric version of its bestselling F-150 truck, an eco-friendly reinvention of the flagship American car brand.

But the Ford announcement weighed on electric-truck startup Lordstown Motors, which plunged 15.3 percent.

Morgan Stanley advanced 0.6 percent as it announced a series of executive promotions for potential successors to Chief Executive James Gorman. These include promoting Ted Pick and Andy Saperstein as co-presidents.

Kohl's sank 10.2 percent on questions about the company's outlook, even as it boosted its projections for sales growth and earnings-per-share.

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