By Carla Mozee, MarketWatch

FTSE 100 drives above 7,000 for first time

LONDON (MarketWatch) -- European stocks jumped Friday, strengthening on the prospect that U.S. interest rates will stay low for a longer period of time, and finding support as Greece said it's drawing up another plan for economic reforms.

The Stoxx Europe 600 leapt 0.9% to 404.01, flirting with its all-time closing high of 405.50.

All sectors advanced, led by gains among oil and gas and basic resources shares. The groups benefited as a pullback in the U.S. dollar(DXY) aided dollar-denominated prices for oil and metals. U.S. oil futures (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/oil-prices-stay-choppy-ahead-of-rig-count-data-2015-03-20)(CLJ5) climbed 5% and Brent crude futures rose more than 1%.

As investors digested the Federal Reserve's removal of the word "patient" (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/fed-takes-step-to-rate-hike-but-scales-back-intended-pace-2015-03-18) from its policy statement this week, "we're seeing bond yields in the U.S. falling hard, we're seeing the dollar is falling hard and stocks pushing higher, and all of these three elements belong to the premise ... that there's more of a realization that the Federal Reserve will keep rates unchanged for at least until September," said Ashraf Laidi, chief global strategist, at City Index Ltd.

The Stoxx 600 logged a weekly advance of 1.9%, marking a seventh straight week of gains, with European stocks buoyed by the impact of the European Central Bank's asset-purchase program.

The re-evaluation of the Fed's statement "is especially positive for the stock market because it is ridding the rate fear as we near earnings season," said Laidi.

Germany's DAX 30 leapt 1.2% to 12,039.37, its first win after three sessions of declines. The index logged a weekly rise of 1.2%, marking its 10th consecutive weekly gain. Analysts at Société Générale analysts on Friday suggested now is the time to take profit on the DAX (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/it-is-a-perfect-time-to-say-auf-wiedersehen-to-the-dax-30-2015-03-20).

The U.K.'s FTSE 100 (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/ftse-100-edges-up-but-on-track-for-best-week-in-two-months-2015-03-20), which is heavily weighted by energy and mining shares, surged 0.9% to 7,022.51. That marked its first-ever close above the 7,000 level. France's CAC 40 ended 1% higher at 5,087.49.

Greece's Athex Composite ended up 2.9% at 744.42 as Greece's Prime Minister Alex Tsipras said a revamped list of Greek economic-reform proposals (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/greece-will-toughen-up-reforms-stick-to-agreed-plan-merkel-2015-03-20) will be sent to European officials within days. Greece last month agreed to a four-month extension of the country's 240-billion-euros ($256 billion) bailout, but progress on necessary reforms has been slow and Greece is still tussling with its creditors.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the new list of proposals needs to stretch beyond the previous suggested measures. Merkel and Tsipras were slated to meet in Berlin on Monday.

Topping the Stoxx 600, shares of National Bank of Greece SA rallied 16.7%, Alpha Bank AE gained 13% and Piraeus Bank SA rose 5.3%.

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