The Japanese Yen tumbled 0.35% against the greenback, bouncing from the two-month high, after disappointing data, underscoring drags on the world's third largest economy as Shinzo Abe tries to revive economic growth. A report from the Ministry of Finance showed Japanese current-account surplus plunged 64% from a year earlier, hitting a record low of 161.5 billion yen, as overseas income fell for the first time in nine months, while imports exceeded exports. The major downside pressure came from surplus in income balance, which plunged 10% on an annual basis to 1.25 trillion yen, from 1.79 a month earlier, due to decline in profits from direct investment. Official data also showed that even though investment income on country's residents' overseas investments advanced, foreign companies in Japan sent most of their profits back home, pulling the overall balance lower.