By Kristina Peterson

U.S. stocks climbed Wednesday as new budget-stabilizing plans out of Greece reassured investors, who were also cheered by a smaller-than-expected drop in private-sector jobs and a report of faster expansion in the services sector.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) was up 56 points, or 0.5%, to 10,461, pushing it further into the black for 2010 after slipping below its break-even point for the year earlier in the session.

Industrial giant Caterpillar Inc. (CAT) led the measure's gains, up 2.7%, as the economically sensitive company was boosted by the latest round of improving data points. General Electric Co. (GE) also climbed 1.9%, boosted by signs of economic growth.

Merck (MRK) climbed 0.5% as rival drugmaker Pfizer Inc. (PFE) slid to the bottom of the Dow. Pfizer tumbled 0.6% after Medivation Inc. (MDVN) said its experimental Alzheimer's disease treatment Dimebon, which was in development with Pfizer, was not effective in a large late-stage study. The news also sent shares of Medivation --which has no products on the market and is not a Dow component -- plunging 68% on heavy volume.

The Nasdaq Composite Index (RIXF) rose 0.5%. The Standard & Poor 500 Index (SPX) advanced 0.6%, with all its sectors in the black, led by materials, industrials and energy.

Headlining the economic news, payroll giant Automatic Data Processing said the private sector lost 20,000 jobs in February, less than half the anticipated drop. The February employment decline was the smallest since employment began falling in February 2008. .

Also boosting sentiment, the Institute for Supply Management said U.S. nonmanufacturing sector expanded at a faster-than-expected pace in February, although the report showed employment within the broad sector was still contracting. .

"We've been looking at this great jump in the manufacturing economy, but the services side has really been dormant, so seeing this uptick has been pretty constructive," said Jim McDonald, chief investment strategist at Northern Trust Global Investments. He said the ADP report took some of the edge off investors' primary concern.

"Jobs are the holy grail of the current market mentality," McDonald said.

The Greek government announced a new austerity plan Wednesday totaling EUR4.8 billion ($6.53 billion) to ensure it can meet its deficit-cutting pledge this year, including steep cuts in civil service salaries and entitlements. Greece will also raise its sales tax by two percentage points.

Greece's planned measures helped prop up the euro against the dollar, which was also weaker against the yen. In other markets, crude-oil prices climbed above $80 a barrel, while gold futures also rose. Treasurys declined, with the 10-year note off 10/32 to yield 3.646%.

Among stocks in focus, Novell Inc. (NOVL) surged 27%, topping an offer price announced late Tuesday from hedge fund Elliott Associates and sparking speculation another software company or hedge fund could step in with a higher bid. Elliott, which disclosed it already holds an 8.5% stake in Novell, offered to buy the rest of the company for about $1.8 billion, or $5.75 a share.

Hovnanian Enterprises Inc. (HOV) climbed 5.3% after the home builder swung to a fiscal first-quarter profit, ending a streak of 13 consecutive quarters in the red. The latest to benefit from a federal tax credit, Hovnanian also reported fewer write-downs and its lowest cancellation rate since 2005.

Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart will speak at 1 p.m. Eastern and the Fed will release its Beige Book on the economy an hour later.

 
 
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