FOREX-Dollar steadies after Fed minutes, markets await more central bank cues

* Dollar nudged off recent highs marked vs yen, euro

* US data like ISM non-manufacturing PMI awaited for cues

* Comments by Fed officials, ECB meeting minutes also in focus

* Aussie, loonie dip on sagging commodities (Adds details and quotes, updates prices)

By Shinichi Saoshiro

TOKYO, July 6 (Reuters) - The dollar steadied against its peers early on Thursday after the Federal Reserve's policy meeting minutes took the wind out of its advance, with the market awaiting comments by central bankers and U.S. data for its next cues.

The dollar index against a basket of major currencies was flat at 96.275, having slid from a one-week high of 96.512 touched on Wednesday.

The greenback had rallied earlier in the week after upbeat U.S. economic indicators lifted Treasury yields to multi-week highs. The surge helped the dollar index come off a nine-month low of 95.470 reached last week as investors increased expectations for central banks in Europe to begin scaling back monetary stimulus later this year.

But the dollar's advance stalled after the Fed's minutes on its June 13-14 policy meeting released on Wednesday showed a rift among policymakers over the pace of future U.S. rate increases and disappointed some dollar bulls.

"Overall, the Fed's meeting minutes sounded hawkish in my view, as the possibility was mentioned for the reduction of its balance sheet in the near-term. But the dollar still slipped, showing that it has become top-heavy," said Masafumi Yamamoto, chief forex strategist at Mizuho Securities in Tokyo.

"The market has gotten used to the dollar strengthening this week. So even if upcoming indicators like the U.S. ISM report are in line with expectations, the dollar may drop on disappointment. The currency may need a strong upside data surprise to move further up."

The dollar was little changed at 113.240 yen, pulling back from a seven-week high of 113.690 reached overnight.

"The dollar is expected to move in a 110-115 yen range through to September. The bias is for a stronger dollar as the Fed appears determined to normalise monetary policy," said Masashi Murata, senior currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman in Tokyo.

The euro inched down 0.1 percent to $1.1338 following its decline to a one-week trough of $1.1313 on Wednesday.

U.S. data on tap later in the day includes the ADP employment report, ISM non-manufacturing PMI and the initial jobless claims.

Investors will also look to comments from San Francisco Fed President John Williams and Fed Board Governor Jerome Powell for their potential impact on U.S. yields.