Yes, a misery index, you've got it right.
It seems that Mario Draghi's announcement provided a long-term, strong bullish bias for the Sterling, as even disappointing statistics from the domestic economy had almost no impact on the cable.
The economy contracted 1.0% in the first quarter, the ADP non-farm payrolls report disappointed markets to the downside, Fed officials were ready for weak job growth and an uptick in the unemployment rate.
The decision to cut all three interest rates and expand its LTROs was supposed to push the single currency significantly lower, as central bank tries to combat higher Euro and weak inflation.
Welcome to the uncharted waters.
The Australian Dollar is poised to hit the highest level since November against its New Zealand counterpart, after penetrating a key resistance for the first time in more than a year.
Japan's economists have been examining the strength of the world's third largest economy for months before giving a green light for Shinzo Abe to make the first tax hike since 1997.
The Bank of England offered no surprises to markets and lefts its monetary policy unchanged during June's meeting, given its vocal commitment to keep the base rate unchanged for as long as possible.
The Fed publishes its Beige Book eight times per year. Central bankers have been doing so since 1983, however, even at that time they were considering its content harmless, and perhaps, that is why they have put a beige cover on it.
The ECB left its bazooka in the closet; however, entered the uncharted territory, widely meeting analysts' expectations.
Upcoming spending cuts and new taxes, a possible boom in the housing market and waning investment in the key mining sector– all that was constantly adding more pressure on the RBA to reconsider its monetary policy.
New Zealand central bank made two consecutive rate hikes over the last two months, bringing the official cash rate to 3.00%.
Following two consecutive disappointing reports from manufacturing and construction sectors, the Sterling has lost some of the value versus other major currencies and moved closely to a major level at 1.67.
After the release of the disappointing statistics from the world's largest economy, the single currency managed to gain only 0.02%, with EUR/USD hitting 1.3629, as looming ECB meeting pushed the single currency lower.
With one day left before the ECB meeting, 18-nation's bloc continues to disappoint.
With no surprises to markets the Reserve Bank of Australia maintained the selected course and kept its benchmark cash rate at a record-low, as recently-unveiled budget adds to a mining investment slowdown and weighs on confidence, becoming a brake on growth.
A recent report from the Bank of Japan showed that the nation's monetary base soared 45.6% in May from the same period a year earlier, hitting 224.37 trillion yen, as central bank continues to inject a huge amount of cash into the domestic financial system in a bid to boost growth and inflation.
On Monday the cable moved lower 0.04% following the release of the manufacturing PMI figure.
Ahead of the widely-anticipated labour market figures, investors eyed a report from the Institute for Supply Management about the demand for manufacturing goods in the world's largest economy.
Inflation and unemployment reports were the last pieces of puzzle ahead of the ECB meeting this Thursday.
Tony Abbott has claimed his victory for the Coalition during the 2013 federal election.
Perhaps we should just ease pressure on Haruhiko Kuroda and his team and let us wait for more indicators?
More evidence the Bank of England can raise interest rates sooner than expected occurred on Monday, as manufacturing sector maintained strong momentum, mortgage lending has been cooling down the most in three recent months, and output in production industries entered second quarter on a solid footing.
The world's largest economy continues to disappoint.