The British currency performed rather well over Friday, with exception against the Swiss Franc.
Gold has generally outperformed during second trading week of June, despite falling on Thursday and hovering in the sideways trend just before the weekend.
The previous trading week was finished in the mixed environment for the Euro, with the currency trading sideways amid lack of macro news all across the board.
The US Dollar was one of the best-performing currencies on Thursday, as it appreciated against most major peers.
The Sterling experienced rather good performance over the day.
There has been a moderate decline registered by all but one commodity from our review on Thursday.
A rate hike from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand has finally been reflected in our most recent review on the common European currency, as the EUR/NZD currency pair surged 2.09% during the past 24 hours.
Though there were no explicitly negative events, the US Dollar was able to outperform only one currency, the Swiss Franc, and by mere 0.08%.
Although the fundamentals were weak, the Great Britain Pound was among the top performers yesterday, appreciating 1.01 and 0.94% against the Swiss Franc and the US Dollar, respectively.
All but one commodity posted a moderate bullish tendency on Wednesday, as only corn dropped considerably by 2.12%.
Despite the Reserve Bank of New Zealand cutting its benchmark interest rate, this decision has not been reflected in our review of the Kiwi's performance yet, and we shall observe major changes only in the tomorrow's report due to differences in time zones.
The US Dollar experienced mixed performance over the day.
Gold moved marginally to the upside during the trading session on Tuesday, even though an increase was rather shallow, as market participants are betting on the outcome of the next week's Federal Reserve meeting.
The common European currency weakened 0.07% against the US Dollar on Tuesday, following a data release on JOLTS jobs in the US, which showed a jump in the number of job openings in June.
The Sterling managed to regain the bullish momentum, as it appreciated against most major peers yesterday.
The US non-farm payrolls report of the previous week has positively weighed on the Buck.
The Euro seems to have benefited the most on the first working day of this week, while rallying against all major currencies.
The American Dollar suffered substantial losses on Monday.
The British Pound mostly suffered losses on Monday, with exception against the US Dollar and the Loonie.
The US Dollar was one of the best-performing currencies on Friday, as it appreciated against most major peers, but with exception against the Loonie.
The Sterling experienced mixed performance on Friday.
On Friday, the yellow metal received some bearish impetus from considerably better than estimated fundamentals from the world's largest economy and Canada, as they both released the labour market statistics, which significantly exceeded analysts' forecasts.
The only currency, which failed to grow in value against the Euro on Friday, was the New Zealand Dollar, as the single currency gained 0.06% versus the Kiwi.
The US Dollar experienced mixed performance over the day.