U.S. stocks headed higher early Thursday buoyed by a sharp fall in weekly claims for unemployment, which hit their lowest level in four and a half years.
Opening action focused on Sprint Nextel, whose shares immediately soared 17 percent on a report that Japan's Softbank was planning a bid for the number three U.S. wireless carrier.
Forty-five minutes into trade (1415 GMT), the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 58.67 points, or 0.44 percent, at 13,403.64.
The S&P 500 gained 9.23 (0.64 percent) to 1,441.79, while the tech-rich Nasdaq added 22.87 points (0.75 percent) to 3,074.87.
Driving the mood was a sharp fall in weekly jobless claims, a measure of the pace of layoffs around the country, to 339,000 in the week to October 6. The last time weekly claims were that low was mid-February 2008, as the country plunged into a 19-month recession that sent the unemployment rate soaring to 10.0 percent.
Trade was heavy in Spring, with profit-taking easing early gains, the shares up 13.1 percent to $5.70 at 1415 GMT.
Media reports in Japan and the United States said Softbank, Japan's third-biggest mobile carrier, was in talks to take over Sprint worth in a deal the Wall Street Journal reported could be worth more than $13 billion.
The deal could buoy Sprint's ability to compete against dominant U.S. cellphone powers Verizon and AT&T as well as the challenge from smaller T-Mobile and MetroPCS, which are in advanced merger talks.
MetroPCS shares lost 5.0 percent.
Fedex gained 1.8 percent after it unveiled a sweeping global cost-cutting program to deal with slowing world growth, including "several thousand" voluntary job cuts.
Boeing rose 1.4 percent after announcing a $5 billion deal to sell 50 737 single-aisle jetliners to Alaska Airlines.
Alaska Air gained 0.3 percent.
U.S. bond prices fell. The 10-year Treasury yield rose to 1.72 percent from 1.68 percent Wednesday, while the 30-year yield pushed to 2.92 percent from 2.88 percent.
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