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Customer Susan Newman and salesman Dick Tran look at a Toyota Prius at a Palo Alto, Calif., dealership. Retail sales rose more than expected in October due largely to a rebound in auto sales. Without that rebound, sales rose just 0.2 percent.
Customer Susan Newman and salesman Dick Tran look at a Toyota Prius at a Palo Alto, Calif., dealership. Retail sales rose more than expected in October due largely to a rebound in auto sales. Without that rebound, sales rose just 0.2 percent.
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NEW YORK — Investors kept the stock market’s upward momentum going Monday, sending shares sharply higher after retail sales rebounded more than expected in October and the dollar extended its slide.

Major stock indexes rose more than 1 percent to new 13-month highs, including the Dow Jones industrial average, which jumped 136 points. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index closed above the 1,100 mark for the first time in more than a year.

The weaker dollar lifted gold to a record and pumped up prices of other commodities, including oil. That, in turn, helped shares of energy and materials companies.

Stocks got another boost after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke reaffirmed that the central bank would hold interest rates at record-low levels for an “extended period,” and that he didn’t see signs that the money being pumped into the economy by the government was creating speculative bubbles. Bond prices rose after Bernanke said inflation appeared contained.

Some analysts have cautioned that the surge in stocks, which has been hastened by the falling dollar, might not be justified by the still-struggling economy. In fact, they say some investors might misread the big advance in stocks as a sign that the economy is stronger than it actually is.

Dan Deming, a trader with Stutland Equities, said the S&P 500’s move above 1,100 after a month of retreating when it hit that level gave some investors a shot of confidence and led to short-covering, which tends to amplify gains in the market. Short-covering occurs when investors have to buy stock after having earlier sold borrowed shares in a bet they would fall.

“We’re breaking through the 1,100 mark, which is psychologically significant, and the market is seeing a little pop from that,” Deming said.

Stocks began rising from the start after the Commerce Department said retail sales rose 1.4 percent in October, nearly double the increase forecast by economists polled by Thomson Reuters. It was a sharp rebound after the 2.3 percent drop in September.

Excluding the gain from autos, however, sales rose just 0.2 percent, half of what economists predicted.

Jamie Cox, a managing partner at Harris Financial Group, said the sales growth was a good sign heading into the holiday shopping season because the numbers weren’t inflated by factors such as sales-tax holidays and government stimulus programs that had been present in the preceding months.

The Dow advanced 136.49, or 1.3 percent, to 10,406.96 after rising nearly 164 points.

The broader S&P 500 index rose 15.82, or 1.5 percent, to 1,109.30. It has hovered around the 1,100 mark for a month but hadn’t closed above it since October last year. The index first finished above 1,100 more than a decade ago, in March 1998.

The Nasdaq composite index rose 29.97, or 1.4 percent, to 2,197.85.

Gold rose $22.50, or 2 percent, to $1,139.20 an ounce.

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