United States: Consumer Confidence Index (CCI) - Conference Board

Macro

2026-07-01

Description

The U.S. Consumer Confidence Index (CCI), published by The Conference Board, measures the confidence of American consumers in the current economic situation and their expectations for the economy over the next six months. It is a key indicator of U.S. economic vitality and consumer spending intentions.

The Consumer Confidence Survey consists of five questions: the first two relate to the current economic situation, while the last three pertain to future expectations:

1. How do you perceive the current economic situation?
2. How do you perceive the current job market?
3. How do you expect the economic situation to change in the next six months?
4. How do you expect the job market to change in the next six months?
5. How do you expect your household income to change in the next six months?

When the Consumer Confidence Index rises, it generally indicates that consumers are more optimistic about the future economic outlook, which could lead to increased consumer spending and economic growth. Conversely, a decline in the index may indicate weakening consumer confidence, potentially leading to reduced spending and a negative impact on economic activity.

This data is released monthly, reflecting changes in U.S. consumer confidence over the past month.

Published by
Conference Board (Choice)
Frequency
Monthly
Next Update

AI Data Insight

The US consumer confidence index for June dropped to 91.2, lower than the previous reading of 93.1 and missing the market expectation of 94.4, indicating overall confidence remains fragile. Although falling oil prices drove a cooling of short-term inflation expectations and a rebound in the expectations index, the present situation index hit a new low since February 2021. The proportion of people concerned that "jobs are hard to get" rose significantly, indicating that the cooling labor market will be the main hidden concern suppressing US real consumption momentum going forward.

AI Data Insight

The US consumer confidence index for June dropped to 91.2, lower than the previous reading of 93.1 and missing the market expectation of 94.4, indicating overall confidence remains fragile. Although falling oil prices drove a cooling of short-term inflation expectations and a rebound in the expectations index, the present situation index hit a new low since February 2021. The proportion of people concerned that "jobs are hard to get" rose significantly, indicating that the cooling labor market will be the main hidden concern suppressing US real consumption momentum going forward.

Description

The U.S. Consumer Confidence Index (CCI), published by The Conference Board, measures the confidence of American consumers in the current economic situation and their expectations for the economy over the next six months. It is a key indicator of U.S. economic vitality and consumer spending intentions.

The Consumer Confidence Survey consists of five questions: the first two relate to the current economic situation, while the last three pertain to future expectations:

1. How do you perceive the current economic situation?
2. How do you perceive the current job market?
3. How do you expect the economic situation to change in the next six months?
4. How do you expect the job market to change in the next six months?
5. How do you expect your household income to change in the next six months?

When the Consumer Confidence Index rises, it generally indicates that consumers are more optimistic about the future economic outlook, which could lead to increased consumer spending and economic growth. Conversely, a decline in the index may indicate weakening consumer confidence, potentially leading to reduced spending and a negative impact on economic activity.

This data is released monthly, reflecting changes in U.S. consumer confidence over the past month.

Published by
Conference Board (Choice)
Frequency
Monthly
Next Update