The UK's FTSE 100 climbed 1.1 per cent amid further signs the country's economic recovery is gathering steam. Shares of Hammerson rose, closing 3.1 per cent higher, after the company posted earnings that pleased investors and bolstered confidence about the outlook for UK corporate profits.
"When you look at property, it's always a great barometer for confidence," Mike McCudden, head of derivatives at Interactive Investor, told Reuters. "When you see the likes of [Hammerson] coming out with good numbers it perks up the whole market."
Copper rose, advancing 0.6 per cent on the London Metal Exchange, as did silver and gold.
Some believe gold will likely continue its recent climb, beginning its recovery from last year's slump and rising to the highest level in three months today.
"It is the insurance product against further emerging market turmoil, more bad US data, potentially too frothy equity markets and unforeseen market shocks," UBS analysts wrote in a report, according to Bloomberg News. "With positioning so light and the sentiment turn in gold's favour so recent, we expect that gold will remain bid."
US markets were closed on Monday for the Presidents' Day holiday.
On Wednesday, minutes of the January FOMC meeting will be released, and investors will comb them for further clues about outlook for the Fed's plans to taper its bond-buying program, now at US$65 million a month.
Later today the Bank of Japan will conclude a regularly scheduled two-day policy meeting. The focus will be on Governor Haruhiko Kuroda's comments on the outlook for the nation's economy.