By Francesco Canepa and Balazs Koranyi
FRANKFURT, Feb 19 (Reuters) – European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde has told colleagues she remains focussed on her job and she would tell them first if she was about to step down, a message they took to mean she was not about to resign, four sources told Reuters.
The Financial Times reported on Wednesday that Lagarde planned to leave her job early ahead of next year’s French presidential election, a vote which the eurosceptic far-right could win.
An early resignation aimed at giving outgoing French leader Emmanuel Macron a say in picking the new ECB president would rekindle a debate about central bank independence from politics, a principle which has come under threat in the United States from President Donald Trump’s attack on the Federal Reserve.
Lagarde sent a private message to fellow policymakers later on Wednesday to reassure them that she was still concentrating on her role of leading Europe’s most important financial institution and that they would hear it from her, rather than the press, if she wanted to step down, the sources said.
Recipients of the message said this indicated that Lagarde did not want to leave the ECB immediately but she did not firmly close the door to such a step either.
An ECB spokesperson declined to comment.
Some policymakers said they were surprised that speculation about Lagarde’s future should emerge already, with more than a year to go until the French elections in the spring of 2027 and the end of Lagarde’s term in October of next year.
ECB board member Piero Cipollone said on Thursday there was nothing to suggest Lagarde was about to leave, emphasising her work on longer-term projects such as the European Union’s Savings and Investment Union and new liquidity lines.
“It doesn’t look at all like the behaviour of someone who’s packing their suitcases,” he told an Italian Parliament hearing.
Separately, ECB Vice-President Luis de Guindos, whose own term runs out in three months time, said Lagarde was completely focussed on her job and would remain a “magnificent president for as long as she is there”.
CENTRAL BANK INDEPENDENCE
Bank of France Governor Francois Villeroy de Galhau announced plans to step down last week, in a move that gives Macron a chance to pick the next French central bank chief.
Speaking privately, ECB policymakers said Villeroy’s move and the Lagarde message indicated a French desire to ensure competent, independent central bankers would be chosen regardless of who wins the French elections.






