The Greenback experienced a rather sharp sell-off on Thursday, weakening against most major currencies.
The US Dollar experienced mixed performance on Wednesday, due to a bad reading of the US Housing Starts, but the majority of FOMC members voting for a rate hike in December.
Due to a bad reading of the Industrial Production, the US Dollar failed to advance against the Aussie, the Loonie and the Sterling.
The American Dollar outperformed most major peers on Monday, with the smallest gain registered against its Canadian counterpart (0.06%).
The Greenback experienced mixed performance on Friday and over the weekend, with gains outweighing the losses.
The Greenback suffered losses against most major peers, despite a rather strong reading of US JOLTS Job Openings.
Due to a bank holiday in the US, the Greenback suffered losses against other major peers.
The Greenback appreciated against most major peers, while remaining relatively unchanged against the others.
The post-NFP hype has ended, leaving the US Dollar in the red zone on Monday.
The Greenback climbed more than 1.00% higher against most of other major currencies on Friday and over the weekend.
The US currency struggled to post significant gains against most major peers, with exception versus the Sterling, which suffered a 1.15% from the BoE Chair's dovish statement.
Strong US fundamentals caused a surge in the US Dollar, helping it advance against most major currencies.
The US Dollar's performance was quite similar to the Sterling's, as it appreciated against most major peers.
The US Dollar posted solid gains against the Kiwi, gaining 0.48%, while rest of the USD crosses remained relatively unchanged.
The US Dollar sustained losses against most major peers on Friday and over the weekend, amid worse-than-expected US fundamental data results.
The Buck failed to retain its bullish momentum against most major currencies, as the GDP figures disappointed.
The US Dollar managed to appreciate against most major peers on a hawkish FOMC statement.
Although yesterday's event did not warrant an increase in demand for the US Dollar, the Greenback was the second most bullish currency after the Yen.
The Greenback was among the main losers on Monday because of the disappointing news on the real estate market. The largest drop was recorded against the New Zealand Dollar that appreciated 0.48% relative to its US counterpart, followed by a 0.45% decline in AUD/USD.
The US Dollar retained its strong bullish momentum that we saw on Thursday and closed Friday mostly in green.
The US Dollar appreciated against most major peers on Thursday, with exception against the Kiwi and the Loonie.
The US Dollar kept appreciating against most major peers, due to rumours about the Fed raising interest rates in December.
The American Dollar experienced mixed performance, appreciating against some major peers, while declining against the others.
The US Dollar managed to post minor gains against most major peers, with exception against the British Pound.