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Dollar under pressure on China equity rout concerns

The dollar recovers slightly against the yen, although gains are limited as investors remain on edge after a sharp plunge in Chinese stock markets

The dollar recovered slightly against the yen Tuesday, although gains were limited as investors remain on edge after a sharp plunge in Chinese stock markets hit risk sentiment.

In Tokyo the greenback fetched 123.68 yen, up from 123.24 yen in New York late Monday.

The euro changed hands at $1.1062 and 136.60 yen, against $1.1091 and 136.69 yen in US trade, where it rallied thanks to a rise in German business confidence and signs of a pickup in lending in Europe.

Global markets were jolted Monday after Shanghai stocks plunged 8.48 percent -- the steepest one-day fall in eight years -- as data showing more weakness in the Chinese economy combined with fears government support measures for the mainland market will not last.

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The losses continued Tuesday, with Shanghai closing down 1.68 percent, following almost three weeks of relative calm after Beijing unveiled a series of measures to end a month-long rout that saw Shanghai slump more than 30 percent.

"Yen-buying sentiment was strong as players were trying to avoid risk as the Chinese market slumped," said Minori Uchida, head of Tokyo global markets research at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ.

The yen is considered a safe investment in times of uncertainty.

However, the dollar ticked up as the morning progressed and Chinese shares pared some losses.

Traders are now awaiting the Federal Reserve's two-day policy meeting that starts later Tuesday.

While the central bank is not expected to raise interest rates, dealers are hoping for some forward guidance, with most analysts tipping a rise in either September or December.

"Players remain cautious ahead of the Fed meeting -- they want to see its statement before taking positions," Uchida said.

The dollar was sitting at or near multi-year highs against some Asia-Pacific currencies.

It edged up to 13,463 Indonesian rupiah from 13,460 rupiah Monday, after it hit a 17-year-high of 13,465 rupiah last week.

The greenback hit a new six-year high of 34.93 Thai baht from 34.87 baht, while it edged up to 64.06 Indian rupees from 64.05 rupees and to Tw$31.49 from Tw$31.48.

It eased to 1,165.45 South Korean won from 1,167.00 won, to Sg$1.3672 from Sg$1.3701, and to 45.49 Philippine pesos from a fresh five-year high of 45.55 pesos.

The Australian dollar rose to 73.16 US cents from 72.86 cents, while the Chinese yuan was flat at 19.88 yen.