By Anora Mahmudova and Barbara Kollmeyer, MarketWatch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- The U .S. equity market ended Tuesday's session higher, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average to an intraday record high, while the S&P 500 recorded its biggest one-day gain in 4 weeks.

Afternoon gains on Wall Street were driven by a rally in energy companies. Investors also grew optimistic about the Fed keeping the interest rates low for a while after a report by the Wall Street Journal. Jon Hilsenrath, chief economics correspondent at the WSJ in a webcast said the Federal Reserve may keep the words "considerable time" in its policy statement, but qualify them.

The Federal Open Market Committee's two-day policy meeting, which began Tuesday morning, may offer the clearest insight yet as to wether the U.S. central bank will dial up rates sooner than expected. Also read: Eight keys to Fed's September meeting

The S&P 500 (SPX) rallied 14.85 points, or 0.8%, to 1,998.98, as energy and health-care sector stocks led broad-based gains.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) rose 100.83 points, or 0.6%, to 17,131.97, after briefly touching an intraday record high. The Nasdaq Composite (RIXF) added 33.86 points, or 0.8%, to 4,552.76.

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"The Fed is not going to need to hurry and is going to be very careful. It does not want to make the mistake of raising interest rates too soon and risk tipping the economy back toward a slower pace of growth," wrote Scott Wren, senior equity strategist at Wells Fargo Advisors.

"Those anticipating a more hawkish tone from the Fed will likely be disappointed," Wren added.

In economic news, producer prices were flat in August thanks to falling gasoline and food costs, another sign that inflationary pressure is receding. It was the lowest reading in the producer price index since December, the Labor Department reported.

Global Head of Asset Allocation at Societe Generale Alain Bokobza and his team advised investors to "switch out of expensive, illiquid and over-owned assets" like small-cap stocks and into large-cap equities in Europe and the U.S. "As the Fed continues to normalize its monetary policy, small caps are at risk of a large correction," he wrote. Read Need to Know: A dearth of deep-value plays

Data compiled by Bloomberg News showed 47% of stocks in the Nasdaq Composite are down at least 20% from their peak in the past 12 months, and more than 40% of Russell 2000 (RUT) companies have fallen by as much. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 index has logged 33 new closing highs this year, and fewer than 6% of companies have entered what is considered bear-market territory, Bloomberg reported Monday.and

Stocks to watch: Majesco Entertainment Co. (COOL) fell 20% after a similar drop late Monday when the video-game maker posted a larger-than-expected third-quarter loss.

Humana Inc. (HUM) shares rallied 3.2% after the health insurance company unveiled a $2 billion buyback program that will replace its current share repurchase program.

Tesla Motors Inc. (TSLA) rose 2.8% recouping some of the sharp losses Monday when a Morgan Stanley argued that the electric-car maker's stock is overvalued. Trip Chowdhry at Global Equities Research, however, advised in a note Tuesday that investors buy Tesla on weakness, reiterating an overweight rating and a 12-to-18-month price target of $385. (Read more about the day's notable movers here: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/adobe-factset-earnings-in-spotlight-2014-09-16.)

Other markets: Oil prices rallied after OPEC's secretary general Abdalla el-Badri reportedly said he expects oil prices to recover later this year. In addition, he said OPEC may cut its output targets, according to media reports. The comments pushed crude-oil prices (CLV4) up by almost 2% and helped U.S. energy majors.

Asian stocks largely fell. China's largest wireless carrier China Mobile Ltd. tumbled 3.8% at the close, after reports said the release date for iPhone 6 in mainland China is still uncertain. China data also showed that in August foreign direct investment fell to a four-year low. This followed weak factory data released over the weekend.

Worries about this week's Scottish referendum continued to dull UK markets and a disappointing German economic sentiment survey further put pressure on European stocks .

Among currencies, the Russian ruble (USDRUB) continued to fall against the U.S. dollar, off another 1% as sanctions worries weighed. Gold(GCZ4) prices were little changed.

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