The EUR/JPY currency pair dropped below the 135.00 mark, with the 200-day SMA preventing the cross from falling deeper on Wednesday.
On Tuesday and Wednesday the bullion repeated development seen on Friday and Monday, respectively.
The USD/JPY dropped to the support cluster at 119.80 yesterday, which caused the pair to retreat back above the 120.00 major level.
The Cable prolonged its rally for another day on Wednesday, reaching the target resistance cluster around 1.53.
The outlook for the EUR/USD currency pair remains unclear for the time being as neither bulls nor bears are still able to overtake leadership of the market.
The New Zealand Dollar extended its rally on Tuesday, completely ignoring the immediate resistance, as it stabilised at 0.6543.
The USD/CAD dropped for the fifth consecutive day on Tuesday, as the support cluster around 1.3060 failed to cause a rebound and the poor Trade Balance figures weighed on the Buck.
The Australian Dollar appreciated against its US counterpart, as the RBA left rates unchanged again.
The single currencies ended the day (Tuesday) higher against the Japanese Yen, climbing above the 135.17 resistance cluster.
As expected the precious metal surged above the 100-day SMA and 61.8% Fibonacci retracement of the Aug-Sep downtrend on Tuesday.
The US Dollar began weakening against the Yen, after having reached the 120.63 potential resistance yesterday.
The US currency failed to outperform the Sterling, amid poor trade data and rising concerns over a 2015 Fed rate hike.
A long-awaited close above the 50% Fibonacci retracement of the Jul-Aug uptrend became reality yesterday.
The Kiwi met expectations on Monday, as it settled in front of the second resistance cluster around 1.6495.
The American Dollar decline against the Loonie for another day, as it is slowly driving the exchange rate away from the multi-year highs.
With a fourth consecutive really yesterday, the AUD/USD broke out of the descending channel pattern.
The EUR/JPY currency pair was close to reaching a two-week high yesterday, but was pushed back down.
Following massive price changes on Friday, the yellow metal was broadly unchanged in the beginning of a new working week.
Despite trading limbo through most of the day, the US Dollar managed to climb almost 50 pips against the Japanese Yen on Monday.
Although the Sterling tested the immediate resistance in face of the weekly R1, the worse-than-expected UK Services PMI reading pushed the GBP/USD back under the 23.60% Fibo.
There have been four attempts to breach the 1.1260 mark (50% retracement) since Sep 24.
The NZD/USD behaved according to the forecast, as the currency pair ended the day, settling around the 0.6340 resistance cluster.
The US Dollar sustained a rather heavy loss against its Canadian counterpart, amid worse-than-expected Non-Farm Payrolls figures on Friday.
The Australian Dollar remained volatile during Friday, having touched the resistance cluster around 0.7060 and the support in face of the 0.70 major level.