Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average  dropped 0.2 percent, erasing gains of as much as 0.2 percent, after the  government said it is becoming more pessimistic about exports and  business sentiment. The country’s export growth accelerated for the first time in nine months in November, data released today showed.
Canon  Inc., the world’s largest maker of cameras that gets about 28 percent  of sales from the U.S., increased 1.9 percent in Tokyo. Mitsui &  Co., which counts commodities as its biggest source of profit, gained  0.7 percent. Sanyo Electric Co., a maker of rechargeable batteries,  slumped 5.1 percent after its parent Panasonic Corp. announced plans to  delist the company.
European stocks advanced for a third day,  extending a 27-month high, as U.S. economic growth was revised higher  and merger activity boosted companies from Hermes International SCA to  Aker Solutions ASA.
ARM Holdings Plc soared 9.1 percent after  Microsoft Corp. was said to be preparing to unveil a full version of its  Windows operating system that runs on the U.K. company’s technology.  Hermes gained 2.3 percent as LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA raised  its stake in the luxury-goods company. Aker Solutions, Norway’s largest  engineering company, climbed 4.3 percent as Jacobs Engineering Group  Inc. agreed to buy some of its units.
The benchmark Stoxx Europe 600  Index rose 0.1 percent to 281.45 at the 4:30 p.m. close in London. The  gauge has rallied 11 percent in 2010, recovering all its losses from the  plunge that followed Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s collapse in 2008,  as companies reported higher earnings, the European Union bailed out  Greece and Ireland and the Federal Reserve unveiled $600 billion of  additional bond purchases to support the recovery.
U.S. stocks  gained, sending the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index higher for a fifth  day, as government data showed the economy grew last quarter at a faster  pace than previously estimated.
Bank of America Corp. and  JPMorgan Chase & Co. rose at least 2 percent after lawmakers denied  budget increases that regulators said were needed to meet  responsibilities imposed by the Dodd-Frank Act. Walgreen Co. jumped 7  percent after the largest U.S. drugstore chain reported profit that beat  analyst estimates. Carnival Corp. jumped 4.3 percent as S&P equity  analysts advised buying the stock.
The S&P 500 rose 0.2 percent  to 1,257.25 at 2:04 p.m. in New York, reaching the highest since Sept.  8, 2008, on a closing basis. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added  19.71 points, or 0.2 percent, to 11,552.87.
The S&P 500 yesterday  completed its recovery from the six- month plunge that followed Lehman  Brothers Holdings Inc.’s collapse in September 2008, extending its rally  from a bear- market low in March 2009 to 85 percent. The index will end  2011 at 1,374, according to the average forecast of 11 strategists at  Wall Street’s biggest banks.
The U.S. economy expanded at a 2.6  percent annual rate in the third quarter, marking a pickup in growth  that may extend into 2011 as companies and consumers gain confidence to  spend. The revised increase in gross domestic product compares with a  2.5 percent estimate issued last month and was less than the median  forecast of a 2.8 percent in a Bloomberg News survey.
The Federal  Reserve’s preferred price gauge, which is tied to consumer spending and  strips out food and energy costs, rose at a 0.5 percent annual pace, the  slowest since record-keeping began in 1959, today’s report showed.  Inventories rose more than initially reported, while the rise in  household purchases was revised down.