The Sterling suffered serious losses for the second day yesterday.
Crude oil continued tumbling on Wednesday, by falling 1.30% after a slight decrease on Tuesday and a 7% slump back on Monday.
The 19-nation currency rallied 1.25% versus the British Pound yesterday, as the Sterling received a significant bearish impetus after the UK budget announcement.
The Greenback was one of the best-performing currencies on Tuesday, with exception against the Yen.
The British Pound suffered serious losses on Tuesday, declining against most major peers.
Greek crisis failed to increase demand for the safe-haven assets yesterday, while market participants are focusing on the Fed's first interest rate hike and stronger US Dollar.
EUR/JPY was the major loser of Tuesday, as this currency pair tumbled 0.44% and was followed by the EUR/USD cross, which fell 0.41%.
The Greenback appreciated against most major currencies, but suffered losses versus the Yen and the Sterling.
The Sterling was one of the best-performing currencies on Monday, as it appreciated against most major peers.
Oil prices experienced one of the steepest daily declines in many months, by retreating as much as 7% on Greek "No" vote in a referendum back on Sunday. The outcome boosted the US currency, making commodities generally less attractive.
The Euro suffered considerable losses against all but one currency yesterday, while rising only in its currency pair with the Canadian Dollar by 0.12%. Among the biggest losers, EUR/GBP and EUR/JPY retreated 0.75% and 0.67%, respectively. Euro/Dollar cross, however, plunged by 0.52% on Monday.
Natural gas, Crude oil, corn and silver were completely unchanged in their prices last Friday, reflecting calm trading session due to closure of the American market.
The common currency rallied against the Australian Dollar on Friday, by jumping as much as 1.76% versus this currency amid disappointing retail sales' data from the South-Pacific country.
The UK Pound suffered more losses than experiencing gains over Friday and the weekend.
The US Dollar experienced mixed performance over Friday and the weekend.
The US Dollar mostly suffered losses on Thursday, with exception against the Kiwi and the Aussie, where the Buck added 0.19% and 0.18%, respectively.
The Sterling suffered losses against most major peers on Thursday, with exception against the Kiwi and the Aussie.
Even though the precious metal decreased in price by only 0.22% yesterday, it was the biggest loser of the trading session, while the majority of other commodities climbed.
The Euro rallied versus five major currencies Thursday, while declining against two of them. The upcoming Greek referendum on Sunday seems to have a muted effect at the moment, and the currency market shows no uplifted volatility.
The Greenback was one of the best performing currencies on Wednesday, as it appreciated against most major peers.
The British Pound experienced mixed performance over Wednesday, as it appreciated against some major peers and declined versus the others.
All but one commodity on the market were on the side of under-performers yesterday, as only corn added 0.12%. In the meantime, oil dropped in price quite substantially Wednesday, by plummeting 4.22% and 2.48% for Crude and Brent types of it, respectively. Gold, however, suffered the least and was down just 0.3%.
EUR/CHF currency pair bounced back yesterday, by gaining the most among all major Euro-crosses on the market, namely 0.62%. This development followed a significant drop of the pair seen on Tuesday.
The Greenback was one of the best performing currencies on Tuesday, as it appreciated against most major peers.