Stocks fail to make headway as investors stay focused on what Trump's intentions are.
Rudakubana has been removed from court twice today, both times claiming he was ill and needed to speak to a paramedic
Donald Trump's threats aimed at strong-arming Moscow into ending its war in Ukraine have been badly received by some politicians and nationalists in Russia who say his tactics bode ill for a deal. Trump said on Wednesday he would likely impose new sanctions, taxes and tariffs on Russia, whose economy he said was failing, and on Moscow's allies, unless President Vladimir Putin struck a deal with him "soon" to end the conflict. In an apparent attempt to balance his threat with a compliment, Trump spoke of the need to never forget that Russia had helped the United States win World War Two and incorrectly stated that the then Soviet Union had lost 60 million people in that conflict as opposed to the 26.6 million people estimated by the Russian authorities.