The Euro grew against all currencies but two on Thursday of this week, while registering 0.03% and 0.04% mild losses in its currency pairs with the Japanese Yen and Australian Dollar.
The US Dollar experienced poor performance on Wednesday, as it declined against almost all other major currencies.
Risk appetite caused the Sterling to appreciate the most against the safe-haven Yen, with the pair adding 0.60%, while the Pound also managed to outperform most of major currencies yesterday.
Among all major commodities, only gold continued to fall down on Wednesday and slumped 0.23%, given expectations that the Federal Reserve will raise the main target interest rate in June or July and will push down demand for the save haven metal.
European fundamental data, particularly from Germany, has been very positive on Wednesday.
The Buck managed to outperform most of major currencies on Tuesday, with exception of the Loonie and the Sterling.
The UK Inflation Report Hearings yesterday caused the British currency to post solid gains across the board.
Commodities had a mixed trading session yesterday, with most of energy components rebounding and precious metals continuing to lose value.
US new home sales skyrocketed at the fastest monthly pace since August 2014, by surging 16.6% in April of this year.
The British Pound began the week with rather poor performance, as it sustained losses against most major peers on Monday.
The US Dollar experienced mixed performance on Monday, having appreciated against some major peers, but also declined against the others.
Corn was the only commodity included in this review to add value on Monday, May 24. While growing 0.82%, it curbed the overall daily drop of the benchmark S&P GSCI Index and narrowed it to 0.66%.
Except for the Japanese Yen, the FX market has been relatively calm on the first day of this week. The most silent cross was EUR/USD, which lost just 0.04% despite a broad presence of speakers from the Federal Open Market Committee.
The US Dollar experienced mixed performance over the weekend, with the largest gain of 0.77% registered against the British Pound.
The Sterling ended the week with poor performance, having sustained rather serious losses against all other major currencies.
Gold and oil futures dipped on Friday of the previous week; however, trading session used to be quiet and changes turned to be narrow.
Largely positive statistics from the Euro area resulted in gains for the common currency on Friday of the previous week.
The Greenback appreciated against most major peers on Thursday, but also sustained losses against the others, amid a poor reading of the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index.
A positive reading of the UK Retail Sales data yesterday caused the Sterling to outperform most major peers.
In the aftermath of the release of US gas storage report, futures for this energy component jumped by 1.9%. Natural gas was the only commodity to gain value, while silver and corn in turn depreciated the most.
Five out of seven major currency pairs with the Euro were down on Thursday. Only EUR/CAD added 0.34%, while EUR/CHF appreciated by 0.17%.
Even though the FOMC Meeting Minutes boosted the US Dollar on Wednesday, it still struggled to post substantial gains against most major peers.
After another day the Sterling skyrocketed against most major peers, amid surprise EU referendum polls showing that the majority is voting for the ‘Bremain' camp.
Oil markets were shocked by increasing US inventories, after the data from the Energy Information Administration was released on Wednesday.