On Friday the most popular FX currency pair violated the two-month trend-line near 1.09, while daily gains attempted to push the pair as high at 1.10 (100-day SMA; Bollinger band).
As was anticipated, the Kiwi retreated from the Nov 2015 low and settled at 0.6473 on Thursday.
The USD/CAD attempted to climb over the 1.44 psychological level on Thursday, but stabilised only at 1.4367.
The Australian currency managed to recover from intraday losses and even erase Wednesday's losses on Thursday.
The European currency was unable to edge higher on Thursday, with volatility somewhat limited by the immediate resistance in face of the weekly PP and the monthly S1.
Bearish sentiment dominated in the market on Thursday, being that gold slumped below 1,075 for the first time in eight trading days.
A strong reading of yesterday's US Import Prices helped the USD/JPY pair to preserve the up-trend and stabilise at the highest level this week.
The Sterling's recent rally against the US Dollar was reduced to zero, with the weekly S1 ultimately holding the gains at 1.4414.
Neither the bulls nor bears have again gained any leadership in terms of driving the EUR/USD currency pair.
The US Dollar pushed the Loonie to a fresh 13-year low on Wednesday, breaching the immediate resistance cluster around 1.43.
The Aussie retreated from intraday gains on Wednesday, as the risk-off sentiment returned after US fundamentals showed oil production surplus.
The NZ Dollar ended the day in the red zone with a 22-pip loss yesterday.
The EUR/JPY extended its trade between the support trend-line and the immediate resistance cluster in form of the weekly PP and monthly S1 yesterday.
The precious metal bounced off a strong 1,084 support cluster yesterday, while nearing the weekly pivot point at 1,092 by the end of Wednesday trading.
Even though the USD/JPY currency pair remained relatively unchanged on Wednesday, its four-pip rally still confirmed the up-trend.
The British currency extended its bearish trend for another day yesterday, but with the immediate support cluster limiting the losses just above 1.44.
On Wednesday the most popular FX cross was testing the 1.08 area, which is reinforced by 55-day SMA at monthly pivot point.
The New Zealand Dollar behaved according to the forecast, as it weakened against its US counterpart yesterday, but with trade closing above the 0.65 level.
The USD/CAD managed to extend its gains for an additional day on Tuesday, with volatility even stretching out beyond the immediate resistance.
The Aussie was unable to fully recover from intraday losses on Tuesday, thus, failing to retake the 0.70 major level.
The support line remained intact yesterday, as the EUR/JPY barely changed over the day, edging only 15 pips lower.
A continuous move away from fixed income and safe-haven assets is putting more pressure on gold prices.
The monthly S2 was able to keep the USD/JPY from falling deeper yesterday, despite volatility reaching Tuesday's opening price.
The Sterling dropped to a fresh five-year low against the Buck on Tuesday, amid disappointment in the Manufacturing Production figures.