MW Why ECB's Lagarde may leave her post early
By Jules Rimmer
Lagarde and Macron may want to 'future-proof' the ECB from a future Eurosceptic French government.
European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde speaks during a panel discussion at the 62nd Munich Security Conference $(MSC)$ on February 15, 2026 in Munich, southern Germany. A report said Lagarde may leave the role as ECB chief early.
A report that European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde is leaving has stirred speculation about why she might depart.
The Financial Times is reporting Wednesday that Lagarde will leave her position earlier than scheduled in October of this year.
It's not the first time Lagarde has been reported to exit, as she was previously linked to a possible move to the World Economic Forum.
The European Central Bank has responded to this latest report without an outright denial by stating, "President Lagrade is totally focused on her mission and has not taken any decision regarding the end of her term."
While speculation over the identity of her successor is likely to be intense, a desk note from Nomura's senior economist, Andrzej Szczepaniak, predicts the policy impact of a premature departure "would be very limited."
UBS economist Paul Donovan was in agreement, saying her departure would make little difference to near-term policy, though could impact the ECB longer term.
However, Szczepaniak's note suggests there may be sound reasoning behind such a move. Lagarde's tenure, and that of other executive board members Lane and Schnabel, is set to end in Oct. 2027 so she may leave earlier to enable President Emmanuel Macron to select a successor before the French presidential elections in April 2027. The intent, Szczepaniak writes, "would be to 'future-proof' the ECB from the far-right under the assumption the National Rally will win the French presidential election."
At this stage, far right leader of Rassemblement National and outright Eurosceptic, Marine Le Pen, is leading in the polls.
After experiencing some difficulties during her time in office, most notably with the 2022 inflation spike to 11%, the trade war with the U.S., the pandemic and the complications caused by the war in Ukraine, Lagrade may feel she is leaving her office in good order.
Inflation is at the 2% target, the policy interest rate has been steady at the same level for many months now and Szczepaniak thinks rates will stay at the same level throughout this year and even next.
Among future contenders for the ECB presidency is ex-Bank of Spain governor Pablo Hernández de Cos and ex-Netherlands central bank chief Klaas Knot, current Bundesbank head Joachim Nagel and ECB board member Isabel Schnabel. A Bloomberg survey of economists shows Knot to be the favorite at present.
-Jules Rimmer
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 18, 2026 04:23 ET (09:23 GMT)
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