By Anora Mahmudova and Barbara Kollmeyer, MarketWatch China's central bank cuts interest rates

NEW YORK (MarketWatch)--U.S. stocks pared most of their early morning gains on Friday as the rally triggered by a fresh dose of liquidity from China's central bank and dovish comments from European Central Bank President Mario Draghi faded by afternoon.

The key indexes could still score another record close at these levels and look set to book weekly gains.

The S&P 500 (SPX) and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) were trading higher, but well off session highs. The Nasdaq Composite (RIXF) was nearly flat.

J.J. Kinahan, chief derivatives strategist at TD Ameritrade, said that the realization that today's news from China and Europe was not all that good may be behind the fading of the rally.

"While in the short term, cutting rates and buying bonds by central banks is good for equities, the underlying reasons are not positive -- those actions are a response to a slowing and weak demand. Their economies are in trouble," said Kinahan.

"Also, the S&P 500 hit a resistance level at 2,071 and it's not surprising to retrench a few times," he added.

China's central bank cut its one-year loan rate by 0.4 percentage points and its one-year deposit rate by 0.25 percentage points while saying it would allow more flexible deposit rates.

The ECB said it began buying asset-backed securities Friday, expanding its quantitative easing regimen.

Before that, Draghi said the ECB will do what it "must to raise inflation and inflation expectations as fast as possible," at a banking conference in Frankfurt. The comments were taken as a sign the ECB will step-up asset buying.

The ABS purchases represent the second leg of the ECB's quest to catalyze growth by expanding its balance sheet. In September, the central bank began buying covered corporate bonds, which are guaranteed against a company's assets.

Correction off the table for now: After China's move, the majority of the world's big central banks now have loose policies, while there's growing consensus that the Fed and the Bank of England will hold off near-term tightening, said Benjamin Yip, senior analyst in London for Amplify Trading.

"In light of this, stocks have been bid for the majority of the morning session and apart from some de-risking of portfolios and balance sheets ahead of the weekend, we cannot see any reason for a major correction," Yip said in a note.

On Thursday, the S&P 500 (SPX) logged its 44th record close this year after a marginal 0.2% gain to 2,052.75. The Dow industrials (DJI) logged a 27th record close. Trading volumes were thin, something Goldman Sachs said investors should get used to in the coming year. See also: Crash-caller Schiff says Fed will cause the next one

Stocks to watch: Sports retailer Hibbett Sports Inc.(HIBB) jumped after lifting its outlook.

Gap Inc.(GPS) slid after results late Thursday missed Wall Street forecasts and the retailer delivered a disappointing full-year outlook.

Splunk Inc.(SPLK) surged after results topped analysts forecasts.

GameStop Corp.(GME) fell after a set of weak results and outlook late Thursday.

(Read more about today's daily movers in our regular Movers & Shakers column http://www.marketwatch.com/story/foot-locker-ann-gamestop-marvell-in-focus-2014-11-21.).

Europe rallies, euro hit: Europe got a big lift from Draghi's comments and China, with the Stoxx 600 index up 2.1%, while the euro (EURUSD) slid against the dollar. The yen(USDJPY) rose against the dollar to around Yen117.80 after Japan Finance Minister Taro Aso said the yen had declined "too fast" in the past weeks. The Nikkei 225 snapped a four-day losing streak, rising along with the yen.

Among other assets, gold (GCZ4) and oil prices (CLF5) were also higher.

Victor Reklaitis contributed to this article.

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