New York, March 17 Wall Street opened its doors in red on Thursday and fell 0.31% after a few days of climb after Moscow described the progress of Dow Jones industrialists' talks with Kiev as “inaccurate.” It caused fear that the war would return againeconomy. Ten minutes into trading on the New York Stock Exchange, Dow Jones dropped to 106.20 points 33,956.90, while the optional S&P 500 fell to 0.28%, or 12.23 integers, to 4,345.63. The Nasdaq index remained at 0.40% or 53.71 units in the initial phase, up to 13,382.85. Wall Street began the session with losses after Russian authorities fired a cold water boiler. “The Kremlin said the report on the progress of the talks was inaccurate and that Putin was an “unforgivable” war criminal,” who posed a risk to the cash flow,” said Tom Essaye of the Sevens report. On Wednesday, the British newspaper Financial Times reported that the two countries made “significant progress” in peace plans, including Russia's withdrawal from Ukraine. In addition, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was convinced that he was on the verge of reaching an agreement with Ukraine on security guarantees and the status of neutrality, and Ukrainian President Volodymir Zelensky said in his speech that the meeting with Russia was more “realistic.” A new factor that appeared recently has adversely affected the stock price, but raised Texas oil prices, which now again surpass $100 per barrel. “This shows that we haven't reached the end of this conflict yet, the commodity price situation is not going to improve, and it's difficult to feel for that reason (which is likely to be overcome),” said FlowBank Chief Investment Officer Esty Dwek. Wall Street newspaper. Investors continue to digest today's announcement of a 0.25-point interest rate hike to combat rampant US Federal Reserve (Fed) inflation, a measure that some investors believe is exaggerated. By sector, energy (2.57%) led to profits before real estate (0.24%) and healthcare (0.18%), with the largest losses falling in finance (-1.07%), technology (-0.58%) and industry (-0.46%). Of the 30 Dow Jones shares, American Express (2.06%), Chevron (1.28%) and Merck (0.82%) were the largest gains, while on the other side of the balance sheet there were losses for JP Morgan Chase (-1.59%), Goldman Sachs (-1.32%) and Boeing (-1.31%). In other markets, Texas oil rose to $101.84 per barrel, gold rose to $1,941.90 per ounce, government bond yields dropped to 2.171% in 10 years, and the dollar fell to 1.106 changes against the euro. jfu/modify/copy