Consumer Sentiment by Country

Latest released Consumer Sentiment value for every supported currency, with the previous reading, the change between releases, reference date, frequency, unit, and source.

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Economy
Consumer Sentiment across supported currencies

A survey of consumer confidence levels.

Updated 04 May 2026 07:23 UTC.
5 with data 5 supported currencies
Each row links to the per-currency reference page and the underlying API endpoint at /api/v1/announcements/{currency}/consumer_sentiment. Non-USD endpoints require an API key query parameter.
Country / Currency Latest Previous Change Reference Frequency Unit Source
China
CNY · Chinese Yuan
213,618,066.43
28 Feb 2026
90,977,498.77
28 Feb 2026
▲ +122,640,567.66 28 Feb 2026 Monthly Index NBS/PBoC
United States
USD · US Dollar
53.3
31 Mar 2026
56.6
28 Feb 2026
▼ -3.3 31 Mar 2026 Monthly Index FRED (UMich)
Japan
JPY · Japanese Yen
32.2
30 Apr 2026
33.3
31 Mar 2026
▼ -1.1 30 Apr 2026 Monthly Index BoJ/Statistics Japan
Canada
CAD · Canadian Dollar
3.98
31 Mar 2026
4.1
31 Dec 2025
▼ -0.12 31 Mar 2026 Quarterly Balance Bank of Canada/StatCan
Switzerland
CHF · Swiss Franc
-42.858
31 Mar 2026
-30.377
28 Feb 2026
▼ -12.481 31 Mar 2026 Quarterly Index SNB/FSO

What is Consumer Sentiment?

Consumer sentiment is the headline reading from household surveys (University of Michigan in the US, GfK in Europe and the UK) asking respondents how they feel about current conditions and the year ahead. It complements consumer confidence; the two are highly correlated but methodology and weighting differ.

Why it matters for FX

Sentiment helps the FX market read the household pulse before hard spending data arrives. A sustained sentiment slump usually precedes a slowdown in retail sales and services activity, which feeds into the central-bank rate path.

How to read this page

Watch the trend rather than single months. The 1-year inflation expectations sub-index from Michigan is closely watched by the Fed and is a meaningful FX driver in its own right.

What to watch for

  • Inflation-expectations sub-component (1y and 5-10y)
  • Buying-conditions sub-index for big-ticket items
  • Political polarisation distorting the headline
  • Preliminary vs final reading revisions
  • Cross-checks with Conference Board confidence