However, both Clinton and Trump have very high unfavourable ratings in the CBS News/New York Times poll released last night.
Senator Bernie Sanders from Vermont is only of the three presidential candidate left in the race to have a better positive rating and defeats Trump by a bigger margin of 13 percentage points in a hypothetical match up.
In its latest poll, The New York Times and CBS News said Clinton (47 per cent) leads Trump (41 per cent) by six percentage points among registered voters if the elections were held now.
For Sanders, his unfavourable rating is just 33 per cent.
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"When compared to past major party presidential candidates at a similar point in the election cycle, Trump and Clinton's unfavourable ratings continue to be the highest in CBS News/New York Times polls going back to 1984, when the question was first asked," the survey result said.
According to the survey, neither Trump nor Clinton has a clear advantage on handling the economy or on being the nation's commander-in-chief.
About half of voters expressed at least some confidence in each to manage the economy or direct the country's military, but about half say they are not too or not at all confident in either candidate, it said.