{"date":"2026-07-17","slug":"2026-07-17-us-university-of-michigan-consumer-sentiment-index-july-preliminary","event":"University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index (July, Preliminary)","country":"US","category":"consumer-confidence","importance":"high","actual":"54.4","forecast":"51.0","previous":"49.5","unit":"index points","surprise":"hotter","affected_markets":[{"why":"Stronger-than-expected consumer sentiment signals resilient household spending, supportive for growth and consumer-discretionary earnings","market":"US equities (S&P 500 / Nasdaq)","direction":"up"},{"why":"Better sentiment reduces recession fears and can reinforce a cautious Fed on rate cuts, pushing yields modestly higher","market":"US Treasury yields","direction":"up"},{"why":"Improved confidence supports the soft-landing narrative, mildly dollar-positive","market":"US Dollar Index (DXY)","direction":"up"},{"why":"Sentiment rebound was itself driven by falling gasoline prices, so the causality mostly runs from energy to sentiment rather than the reverse","market":"Oil / energy","direction":"neutral"}],"analysis_en":{"headline":"US Consumer Sentiment jumps to 54.4 in July, well above the 51.0 forecast","learning":"Consumer sentiment is a leading indicator, not a direct measure of actual spending — it captures perceptions, which can shift quickly with things like gas prices or geopolitical tension. That's why it's more useful to track the trend over several months than to react to a single print, and to always compare the actual number against the analyst consensus (not just the prior month) to gauge whether markets were actually surprised.","market_impact":"A positive surprise in consumer sentiment is typically read as a sign household spending is holding up, which tends to support US equities (especially consumer discretionary names) and can push Treasury yields modestly higher as recession fears ease and the Fed has more room to stay cautious on rate cuts. The dollar often gets a small lift from this kind of upside surprise.","what_it_means":"The University of Michigan survey measures how American consumers feel about their personal finances and the broader economy. The preliminary July reading rose to 54.4, up from 49.5 in June, comfortably beating the 51.0 consensus. It's the second straight monthly gain following May's record low, driven mainly by falling gasoline prices. Even so, sentiment remains 12% below year-ago levels."},"source_url":"https://www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2026-07-17/us-consumer-sentiment-rises-to-a-five-month-high-video","occurred_at":"2026-07-17T16:03:49.359+00:00","published_at":"2026-07-17T16:03:49.359+00:00","brief_url":"https://vectorialdata.com/economia/2026-07-17-us-university-of-michigan-consumer-sentiment-index-july-preliminary/brief.md","page_url":"https://vectorialdata.com/economia/2026-07-17-us-university-of-michigan-consumer-sentiment-index-july-preliminary","json_ld":{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"Dataset","name":"University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index (July, Preliminary) — 2026-07-17","description":"US Consumer Sentiment jumps to 54.4 in July, well above the 51.0 forecast","creator":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Vectorial Data","url":"https://vectorialdata.com"},"license":"https://vectorialdata.com/terms","variableMeasured":"University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index (July, Preliminary) (index points)","temporalCoverage":"2026-07-17","isAccessibleForFree":true,"distribution":[{"@type":"DataDownload","encodingFormat":"application/json","contentUrl":"https://vectorialdata.com/api/economic-events/2026-07-17-us-university-of-michigan-consumer-sentiment-index-july-preliminary"},{"@type":"DataDownload","encodingFormat":"text/markdown","contentUrl":"https://vectorialdata.com/economia/2026-07-17-us-university-of-michigan-consumer-sentiment-index-july-preliminary/brief.md"}]},"disclaimer":"Vectorial Economía is descriptive educational information about macro data. Not investment advice."}