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    GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks rally on China, German data, euro gains

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    SymbolPriceChange
    MSCI34.33-0.39
    FXCM14.605-0.07

    * Major equity indexes hit five-year peaks, Dow, S&P at

    record highs

    * China reports stronger-than-forecast April trade data

    * March German industrial output also beats estimates

    * Euro rises on German data, copper gains on China

    By Herbert Lash

    NEW YORK, May 8 (Reuters) - Global equity markets and the

    euro rose on Wednesday as strong Chinese trade data and signs

    that Germany may escape a sharp slowdown pushed shares to

    five-year highs worldwide, with U.S. benchmarks climbing to

    all-time records.

    Stocks on Wall Street rose after early declines and closed

    on a surge, a pattern crude oil tried to follow. The U.S. crude

    benchmark gained 1 percent, but North Sea Brent fell a tad as

    concerns persisted over global demand.

    China's daily crude imports in April rose 3.7 percent from a

    year ago, customs data showed, while German industrial output

    unexpectedly jumped in March, fanning hopes that Europe's

    biggest economy is gaining strength.

    The euro advanced against the dollar for a second straight

    session as the unexpected rise in German industrial output pared

    prospects of a near-term interest rate cut in the euro zone.

    The euro rose 0.58 percent to $1.3153 as the

    safe-haven dollar softened and markets began to question

    whether the ECB would need to cut rates again.

    Huge injections of liquidity from leading central banks to

    boost their economies have fueled an equities rally and helped

    to outweigh any doubts of slowdown in China's economy.

    "While the U.S. equity market is widely believed to be

    tracking ahead of economic growth, broad market valuations are

    fair and not at extremes, implying still further upside," said

    Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth

    Management.

    Although analysts cite the attractive valuation of stocks

    relative to other assets, the magnitude and speed of the U.S.

    rally have spurred talk of a pullback.

    The benchmark S&P 500 index is up 14.5 percent so far this

    year and has climbed more than 6 percent in three weeks. Both

    the S&P and the Dow closed at new highs, with the Dow closing

    above 15,000 for the first time.

    It was the fifth successive closing high for the S&P, and

    the second straight closing high for the Dow.

    MSCI (NYSE: MSCI - news) 's all-country world equity index, which

    tracks stocks in 45 countries, rose 0.73 percent to a five-year

    high before pulling back slightly as top European shares

    followed their Asian counterparts.

    The FTSEurofirst 300 of leading regional shares

    rose 0.7 percent to close at 1,229.43.

    The index has gained about 7 percent over the past three

    weeks on strong support from central banks, which have promised

    to keep interest rates low and increase money supply.

    "The market is on life support from the central banks. The

    level of complacency in the market is very high at the moment

    and we could get a correction anytime," FXCM (NYSE: FXCM - news) analyst Nicolas

    Cheron said. "It's time to take profits on a number of stocks

    that have performed well lately, and to hedge the portfolios."

    The Dow Jones industrial average closed up 48.92

    points, or 0.32 percent, to 15,105.12. The Standard & Poor's 500

    Index rose 6.73 points, or 0.41 percent, to 1,632.69. The

    Nasdaq Composite Index gained 16.64 points, or 0.49

    percent, to 3,413.27.

    Copper, one of the commodities tied most closely to

    global growth prospects, jumped to a three-week high of $7,480 a

    tonne before paring some gains to close 2.1 percent higher.

    The economic reports boosted other commodities despite

    doubts about the quality of the Chinese data.

    "We are lacking the catalyst in the numbers to suggest we

    could go back to the highs reached earlier this year," said

    Olivier Jakob, analyst at Petromatrix.

    Brent fell 6 cents to settle at $104.34 a barrel,

    while U.S. oil rose $1.00 to settle at $96.62 a barrel.

    U.S. Treasuries prices turned higher, erasing early losses.

    The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note was up 3/32

    in price to yield 1.7691 percent.

    Spot gold rose $21.17 to $1,473.10 an ounce. U.S.

    Comex gold futures for June delivery settled up $24.90 at

    $1,473.70 an ounce.