FRANKFURT, Germany — The European Central Bank left its key interest rate benchmark unchanged Thursday as its rate-setting council and President Christine Lagarde take their time to make sure stubborn inflation is firmly under control before lowering rates again.
The decision leaves the deposit rate at 3.75%, where it has stood after a single quarter-point cut rate at the previous meeting on June 6.
That means home buyers and businesses hoping for lower interest rates in Europe are going to have to wait at least until the bank's September meeting for more affordable credit - and possibly even longer than that.
Lagarde would not commit to a rate cut even at the September 12 meeting, saying that ''the question of September and what do we do in September, is wide open and will be determined on the basis of all the data that we will be receiving'' ahead of the meeting.
Lagarde was asked at her post-decision news conference about the potential impact of higher U.S. tariffs on imports if former President Donald Trump returns as president in the November election. ''I'm not going to speculate on political developments,"she said.
''Of course, we have to take into account the consequences of, for instance, the increase in tariffs or policies that are determined, outside of the euro area by any country with which we have either strong trade or financial links." she said.
She added that "obviously, given the size of the US financial markets in particular, the developments taking place in the United States will be very carefully assessed to see what consequences it might have on the European Union and on the euro area in particular.''
The ECB's stance for now resembles that that of the U.S. Federal Reserve, which is expected to hold off lowering rates at its next meeting July 30-31, though the Fed appears closer to cutting rates after that than is the ECB.