By Anora Mahmudova and Barbara Kollmeyer, MarketWatch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- The U.S. stock market marched higher on Tuesday, as investors pushed prices up ahead of the Federal Reserve's two-day policy meeting.

The Federal Reserve officials are widely expected to announce the end to the bond-buying stimulus program, while leaving the language on the statement broadly dovish. That generally means the central bank would be quick to signal a prolonged period of low rates, if the economy got dicey.

The S&P 500 rose (SPX), with all ten main sectors trading in positive territory.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped (DJI), helped by a big advance in its biggest component Visa Inc.

The Nasdaq Composite outperformed the main benchmark rising significantly higher (RIXF)

Read: What to make of this roller-coaster stock market

Throw 'em a bone: "Markets are trading into the [Federal Open Market Committee] statement later this week, expecting an end to quantitating easing, but dovish wording (they basically expect the FOMC to throw them a bone)," said Wouter Sturkenboom, strategist at Russell Investments in London, in emailed comments.

A decision after the two-day FOMC meeting comes Wednesday.

Investors did not dwells on mixed bag of economic reports, giving them a broad pass. U.S. consumers have regained confidence in the short-term outlook for the economy and labor market, and are more optimistic about their future earnings potential, according to the latest data from the Conference Board.

Orders for U.S. durable goods fell in September for the second month in a row as demand waned for a variety of products including autos, aircraft, computers and heavy machinery. The up-and-down airline category was a chief culprit, with orders sinking 16.1% after a 74% drop in August and a whopping 315% spike in July. Read: Businesses step up investment. Will it last?

U.S. home prices nudged up by less than forecast in August, according to S&P/Case-Shiller's 20-city composite index released Tuesday.

Stocks to watch:

Whirlpool Corp. (WHR) shares fell after earnings per share missed expectations.

Kohl's shares slid after it warned its full-year results will come in at the low end of its previously issued guidance.

AutoNation Inc. shares rallied after it reported third-quarter results that topped expectations.

Twitter Inc.(TWTR) was hit by downgrades from several analysts on Tuesday, leading shares to drop sharply. The social-media company disappointed investors after its fourth-quarter revenue forecast came slightly under analysts' expectations, and growth in new users slowed in the third quarter. Read a live-blog recap

Apple Inc.(AAPL) shares rose after Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.'s (BABA) chief executive officer Jack Ma said he was interested in cooperating with the iPhone maker on financial payments. Ma was speaking during an interview at the WSJD Liveglobal technology conference in California late Monday.

Also at that conference, Apple CEO Tim Cook played down reports of retailers such as Rite Aid Corp.(RAD) not accepting Apple Pay at stores. He said more than one million cards were activated on Apple Pay within 72 hours of its debut last week, making it the largest mobile-payment offering.

Madison Square Garden Co.(MSGNV) shares jumped after the company said late Monday that it was exploring the possibility of splitting into two publicly traded companies to unlock value in its sports franchises.

Facebook Inc.(FB) will report later Tuesday.

(Read more about the day's notable stocks in Movers & Shakers column: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/facebook-coach-pfizer-earnings-in-focus-2014-10-28.)

Other markets: European stocks were on the rebound Tuesday, with the German DAX 30 index up 1.5%. Stocks in China surged, with the Hong Kong Hang Seng Index up 1.6%. Oil prices (CLZ4) were taking a breather after a sharp drop on Monday. Gold prices (GCZ4) were lackluster, as was the dollar (DXY).

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