The US dollar traded almost unchanged ahead of the release of the US NFP jobs report in the New York session.
Investors appeared to remain wary of placing large positions ahead of the key data, seeing the dollar index hover around 102.55 against a basket of major currencies.
In the meantime, the 10-year US bond yield continued to strengthen at the highest level since November at 4.19%.
The US economy is expected to add 205,000 jobs in July following an increase of 209,000 recorded in the previous month, with the unemployment rate remaining at 3.6%.
The latest NFP reading will be used as the next guide for the direction of the Federal Reserve (Fed)'s next policy setting.
In line with other currencies, the euro failed to continue its gains with prices remaining traded hovering around four-week lows against the greenback.
The pound is again under pressure following the decision of the Bank of England (BOE) which raised interest rates by 25 basis points to 5.25% as expected.
On the other hand, the Aussie and New Zealand dollars again erased the gains recorded in the Asian session to continue to trade weakly against the US dollar.
The Canadian dollar continued to weaken to a four-week low as market focus also focused on Canada's jobs data tonight.