SINGAPORE, June 20 (Reuters) - The yuan slipped toward seven-month lows on Tuesday as China cut lending benchmarks, while the Australian dollar fell after its latest central bank meeting minutes showed keeping interest rates unchanged had been under consideration.

China on Tuesday lowered its one-year and five-year loan prime rates (LPR) by 10 basis points, the first such easing in 10 months as authorities seek to shore up a slowing economic recovery.

The decision knocked the yuan lower in Asian trading and it last fell 0.2% in onshore trade to 7.1775 per dollar, not far from last week's nearly seven-month low of 7.1819.

Similarly, the offshore yuan was more than 0.2% lower at 7.1820 per dollar, languishing near last week's trough of 7.1916, its lowest since late November.

"Markets were expecting bigger support and were hoping for a larger LPR cut," said OCBC currency strategist Christopher Wong. "The delivery of a smaller LPR cut came as a signal of lesser support and the disappointment was felt in softer (yuan)."

Investors continue to be on the lookout for greater government support measures, as a faltering post-pandemic recovery has kept sentiment fragile.

"The playbook may be slightly different, in a sense that it's not going to be a big bang stimulus. It's probably going to be more targeted," said Bank of Singapore currency strategist Moh Siong Sim.

Elsewhere, the Australian dollar tumbled more than 0.8% to a session low of $0.6789 after minutes from the Reserve Bank of Australia's (RBA) latest policy meeting released on Tuesday showed its decision to raise interest rates in June was "finely balanced".

"Markets really latched onto the fact that there was a debate between a pause and a hike, and that the decision to hike was 'finely balanced'. And that has lessened fears that another hike is imminent," said Matt Simpson, senior market analyst at City Index.

The New Zealand dollar likewise slumped 0.52% to $0.6166.

RATES OUTLOOK

In other currencies, the U.S. dollar rose broadly to a seven-month peak of 142.26 yen, extending its gain against the Japanese currency after the Bank of Japan's (BOJ) decision on Friday to maintain its ultra-easy monetary policy.

The yen has come under renewed pressure amid rising interest rate differentials between Japan and other developed markets.

"We believe that Japan's economy is recovering solidly compared to other major economies and will continue to outperform in the future. But, if monetary policy fails to reflect this shift of economic fundamentals and the BOJ keeps its dovish policy, then the yen should depreciate even more," Min Joo Kang, ING senior economist for South Korea and Japan, said in a client note.

The euro dipped slightly to $1.0915, though it remained supported by a still-hawkish European Central Bank after two policymakers on Monday said the bank should err on the side of further rate increases as the inflation rate could come in even higher than it expects.

Sterling fell 0.15% to $1.27715, ahead of British inflation data and the Bank of England's (BoE) interest rate decision later in the week.

Markets are expecting the BoE to deliver a quarter-point rate increase on Thursday, which would be its 13th consecutive rise as the bank fights unexpectedly sticky inflation.

"The market has continued to increase pricing expectations of not only a delivery of potentially more than 25 basis points this week, but (also) higher terminal rates," said Rodrigo Catril, senior currency strategist at National Australia Bank.

"To some extent, we think that the pricing has become a little bit too aggressive in terms of what we think the Bank of England needs to do."

Against a basket of currencies, the U.S. dollar rose 0.1% to 102.58.

(Reporting by Rae Wee; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Gerry Doyle)