The New Zealand Dollar has regained all of the previous session losses against the US Dollar, as the currency exchange rate surged on Thursday from 0.7136 to 0.7230 by end of the day's trading session.
As was anticipated, the Australian Dollar declined against the US counterpart on Thursday, confirming the fact that price keeps gravitating towards the 0.75 major level.
The US Dollar started the Thursday's session by falling lower against the Canadian Dollar, as the pair reached the low level of 1.2877 mid-day.
The Japanese Yen has been outperforming the Euro since the beginning of the week and today is unlikely to be an exception.
The yellow metal stopped its six consecutive trading session surge on Thursday, as the metal dropped from 1,363.66 at the start of Thursday's trading session to 1,360.94 at the end of day's trading.
The GBP/USD currency pair's trade was rather subdued on Thursday, with the bearish momentum ultimately prevailing.
The American Dollar was unable to outperform the Yen on Thursday, which led to a 55-pip drop in the Buck's value.
The European common currency depreciated against the US Dollar on Thursday, as it opened day's trading session at 1.1100 and ended the session at 1.1062.
The New Zealand Dollar surged against the US Dollar, as the New Zealand central bank kept their rates unchanged at 2.25%.
The USD/CAD pair is moving lower, as the US Dollar weakens, and the Canadian Dollar gains strength.
The AUD/USD currency pair closed trade with a strong rally on Wednesday, having almost completely negated Tuesday's decline.
The European single currency managed to recover from its intraday low on Wednesday, ultimately remaining relatively unchanged against the Japanese Yen, closing with only a 25-pip loss.
In spite of the USD/JPY nearly reaching the 100.00 level again yesterday, the pair managed to preserve the broadening falling wedge's support line.
The Pound remained under pressure on Wednesday, having edged lower, with volatility stretching out to the 1.28 mark.
The yellow metal marked its sixth consecutive session of gains on Wednesday, as after a highly volatile trading session, the metal ended day's trading at 1,363.35.
The common European currency remains unchanged against the US Dollar on Thursday, as it was at 1.1099 by 5:00 GMT.
The New Zealand Dollar stopped its five consecutive session post-Brexit surge against the US Dollar on Tuesday, as the currency exchange rate moved down from the day's trading session opening level of 0.7233 to 0.7157 at the end of the trading session.
The US Dollar started its surge against the Canadian Dollar on Tuesday, as it recouped from previous three trading session losses in one single session by appreciating by 100 pips from 1.2851 at the start of Tuesday's session to 1.2951 at the end of the day's trading.
As was expected, the Aussie weakened against the US Dollar on Tuesday, but failed to reach the anticipated 0.7440 level, having closed 25 pips above that level.
Risk aversion pushed the EUR/JPY cross lower, boosting demand for the safe-haven Yen yesterday.
The yellow metal initially moved downwards on Tuesday morning.
As was anticipated, the risk-off sentiment drove the USD/JPY currency pair lower on Tuesday, putting the eight-month support line to the test.
Due to BoE governor's statement on Tuesday the Sterling weakened substantially, breaching the 1.3230 support level and slumping down to the 1.30 major level.
The European stopped the past three session fluctuation around 1.11 level and dropped to 1.1073 on Tuesday against the US Dollar.