Although the EUR/JPY cross negated Monday's losses at first, the pair still experienced a slump by the end of the day.
XAU/USD has been losing value for a third consecutive day on Wednesday.
The US Dollar's volatility to the upside reached the weekly S1 at 120.41, but was instantly pushed back, ultimately resulting in a slight decline.
Despite reaching a fresh two-month high yesterday, the Cable returned under the 1.57 psychological level.
Bears gained strong momentum on Tuesday, as EUR/USD attempted to cross several 2015 highs and close below the 1.14 mark.
Among all commodity currencies, the Kiwi suffered the most losses, with its volatility to the downside exceeding 500 pips.
The US Dollar behaved according to the forecast and appreciated against its Canadian counterpart.
Even though the AUD/USD currency pair experienced a more than 200-pip move to the downside, the exchange rate still managed to stabilise at 0.7174.
The Euro dropped against the Yen as low as the 136.00 major level on Monday, amid the Chinese stock market turmoil.
Gold had been benefiting from its safe-haven status last week, as stock markets continued to decline around the world.
The Greenback plummeted against the Japanese Yen yesterday, with volatility to the downside exceeding 550 pips.
The Sterling skyrocketed against the US Dollar on Monday, amid the market turmoil and the Fed's September rate hike being postponed.
Yesterday's panic, which was caused by fears that the crash of Chinese stock market may hammer global economic recovery, made the Euro a safe-haven currency against the Dollar.
The New Zealand Dollar appreciated against the Greenback for the fifth day in a row last Friday.
On Friday, the Greenback refused to drop below the six-year high mark again.
The Australian Dollar declined 23 pips against the US Dollar on Friday, while suffering even more losses over the weekend.
Upon reaching the monthly R1 on Friday, the Euro managed to regain the bullish momentum and outperform the Japanese Yen.
Uplifted volatility of gold prices failed to push the bullion in any direction on Friday, as it stood broadly flat below 100-day SMA at 1,159.
The US Dollar suffered heavy losses on Friday, not only breaking through the strong support cluster, but also breaking through the third one at 122.19 and under 122.00 major level.
The Cable's volatility to the upside was limited by the Bollinger band and weekly R1 last Friday, ultimately nullifying the rally.
EUR/USD climbed from 1.1020 to 1.15 in just slightly more than three trading days, reflecting Fed dovishness and dropping equity markets worldwide.
The Kiwi extended its gains against the Greenback yesterday, crossing the 0.66 major level.
The US Dollar weakened against the Loonie yesterday, as hopes of the Fed raising interest rates as early as September were dampened.
The Aussie edged lower yesterday, breaching the immediate support cluster around 0.7345.