The Kiwi overperformed on Tuesday, as it pierced the target resistance and even tested the third one at 0.6690.
The US Dollar remained relatively unchanged against its Canadian counterpart on Tuesday, due to mixed fundamental data.
The Australian Dollar skyrocketed yesterday, due to a boost received from the RBA leaving the cash rate unchanged.
The Euro extended its recovery on Tuesday, slightly beating expectations and closing trade at 130.62.
XAU/USD's advance was prolonging up to the weekly R1 at 1,074 on Tuesday.
Weak US fundamentals and a stronger Yen pushed the USD/JPY back under 123.00 yesterday.
The US Dollar weakened against the Sterling on Tuesday, amid the US ISM Manufacturing PMI showing signs of contraction.
Yesterday the EUR/USD cross rallied by 67 pips during the trading session, which ended strongly in favour of the bulls.
The New Zealand Dollar succeeded in stabilising above the tough cluster around 0.6550 yesterday and is now aiming for the up-trend.
Despite a hike in oil prices, the USD/CAD remained relatively unchanged over the day, with the pair edging only a few pips lower.
The AUD/USD slightly overperformed and closed trade at 0.7226 yesterday, rather than the expected 0.7210 level.
Although the Euro advanced only four pips against the Yen yesterday, this rally was sufficient to bring the given cross back inside the channel's borders.
Disappointing statistics on Chicago PMI and US pending home sales dragged American equity markets lower on Monday, which consequently supported the safe-haven commodity.
There were no surprises in the USD/JPY's performance, with the pair appreciating and returning above the up-trend.
A correction occurred on Monday, causing the Cable to erase intraday losses and end the day with a 21-pip gain.
EUR/USD hovered modestly to the downside on Monday, but the currency pair saw few opportunities to be dragged significantly lower in course of the session.
The NZD/USD currency pair slightly failed to meet expectations, as it dropped as low as 0.6530, rather than 0.6540.
The US Dollar skyrocketed against the Canadian Dollar on Friday, making it the largest intraday gain in three weeks.
The Australian Dollar weakened against its US counterpart at the end of last week, returning under the down-trend and even piercing the immediate support.
The European currency remained relatively unchanged against the Japanese Yen on Friday, having lost only four pips.
With US markets reopening for shorter-than-usual session on Friday, the traders' focus was shifted back to the Fed December meeting and a busy new week.
The US currency managed to outperform the Japanese Yen at the end of last week, after edging closer to the weekly low of 122.25.
In spite of all positive signs, the Sterling suffered a rather heavy loss against the US Dollar on Friday, amid rising conviction of the Fed hiking in December.
EUR/USD is getting ready for sharp losses by the end of new trading week, in case the ECB announces more stimulus on Thursday.