Euro against US dollar: what were the reasons of a 50bp ECB rate hike?

After a tumultuous week in the financial markets, things appear to have settled down. The euro is showing limited movement, trading at 1.0655.
It was anything but a quiet Sunday, as the Swiss government engineered an emergency bank merger, with UBS agreeing to buy Credit Suisse, the second largest bank in Switzerland. At the same time, six major central banks, including the Federal Reserve and the ECB, announced a joint move to ensure liquidity in the financial system.
Both moves were aimed at restoring confidence after two US banks collapsed and Credit Suisse shares plunged. This has caused market turmoil and battered the global banking system, with European, Japanese and US bank shares all down by around 10%. The palpable fear is that the contagion could spread and trigger a full-blown financial crisis and it remains to be seen if the Credit Suisse merger and the central banks’ move will calm the markets.
The ECB kept the pedal on the floor last week, delivering a 50-basis point rate hike which brought the cash rate to 3.0%. The move came in the middle of the banking crisis, and there was speculation that the Bank would opt for a modest 25-bp increase. There were two strong reasons for the oversize rate hike. First, ECB President Lagarde had stated that the ECB would raise rates by 50 bp, and not following through could have damaged the Banks’ credibility. Second, inflation remains high at 8.5%, and with Germany and the eurozone showing some decent economic numbers, the conditions were ripe for a 50-bp move. The ECB is lagging behind other central banks with a cash rate of 3.0% and will have to continue raising rates to lower inflation closer to the target of around 2%.
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