By Kristina Peterson

U.S. stocks climbed Friday after slower job losses in August encouraged investors still struggling to figure out the economy's trajectory.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 75 points, retreating from its earlier triple-digit climb. The measure pared its gains after a reading of service-sector data came in slightly weaker than expected, denting enthusiasm over the government's monthly jobs report.

"As far as the whole economy's concerned, it's still a debate which way we're going," said David Bellantonio, head of U.S. trading at Instinet. But he said the market was ready to embrace any positive signs of growth in the labor market. "It was a better-than-expected number for a market that was very cautious," he said.

Nonfarm payrolls fell 54,000 last month, matching the level of revised losses recorded the previous month, the U.S. Labor Department said Friday. Economists had predicted a drop of 110,000. The unemployment rate, calculated using a separate household survey, edged up to 9.6%, as expected, after holding at 9.5% for previous two months. .

The Dow (DJI) rose 0.8% to 10404, led by a 2.2% rise in Caterpillar (CAT). After a bruising August, the measure has already climbed 2.4% this week, as traders have seized on brighter manufacturing, housing and jobs data as signs that the economy may still avoid a double-dip recession.

"It's very much become a binary risk-on, risk-off type of market where you've had people that believe the recovery is going to fall apart or the recovery stays intact," said Ed Crotty, chief investment officer at Davidson Investment Advisors. In the wake of encouraging jobs data, investors flooded into riskier small-capitalization stocks. The Russell 2000 index (RUT) of small-cap stocks surged 1.6%.

The Nasdaq Composite (RIXF) gained 1% to 2223. The Standard & Poor's 500-share index (SPX) rose 0.9% to 1100, hovering near the key 1100 level.

Traders said the private sector's addition of 67,000 jobs boded well for the recovery's sustainability.

"It's really going to be the private sector that's got to kick in for this to be sustainable," Crotty said.

Demand for safe-haven Treasurys slipped. The 10-year note fell, pushing its yield up to 2.74%. The dollar weakened against the euro, but strengthened against the yen. The euro was trading recently at 1.2861, up from $1.2822 late Thursday in New York. Crude-oil prices fell, and gold futures declined.

Asian markets gained, and the Stoxx Europe 600 index was up 1.2% in early afternoon trading.

On the deals front, Goldcorp Inc. (GG) shed 3.2% on news that it will acquire all outstanding shares of Andean Resources Ltd. for $3.4 billion. Andean's principal asset is the Cerro Negro gold project located in Argentina. .

Shares of Take-Two Interactive Software Inc. (TTWO) rallied 13% after the company reported an unexpected quarterly profit and said it expects a fiscal-year profit. .

Tax-preparation company H&R Block Inc. (HRB) climbed 8.5% after reporting a smaller-than-expected loss from continuing operations.

Campbell Soup Co. (CPB) slipped 2.4% after its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings jumped 64% on prior-year write-downs, but revenue at its soup business weakened.

This afternoon, Dennis Lockhart, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, is scheduled to speak in Tennessee about the economy.

 
 
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