NYSE • USD • FINANCIAL SERVICES • BANKS - DIVERSIFIED
Current price is 68.5% of 52-week range
Last updated 11 days ago
Bank of America remains one of the best-positioned U.S. universal banks, combining scaled consumer banking, a large low-cost deposit base, and meaningful fee businesses (wealth, markets, investment banking). Scale and distribution are a durable moat, while ongoing product and platform investments (including CashPro treasury tools) help defend share in corporate payments and liquidity services. The co-brand partnership renewal with Alaska Air is incrementally positive for card spend, loyalty economics, and deposit gathering via consumer engagement.
Financially, Q1 2026 was strong: revenue rose 7% year over year to about $30.3B and net income rose 17% to $8.6B, with EPS of $1.11. Capital looks solid for a money-center bank, with CET1 reported at 11.2% (standardized) at March 31, 2026, alongside material shareholder returns in the quarter. Valuation appears reasonable at roughly 13x TTM earnings with EPS (TTM) near $3.99, and the dividend run-rate is about $1.12 annually (roughly a 2%+ yield, depending on price).
Over the next 12 months, the core debate is earnings power versus rate and credit uncertainty: upside comes from better-than-feared net interest income and continued markets/wealth fees, while downside comes from a weaker economy and higher charge-offs/reserve builds. Catalysts include management’s 2026 net interest income growth outlook, the pace of buybacks versus capital targets, and any re-acceleration in investment banking activity. Key risks are deposit repricing pressure, commercial real estate stress, and regulatory capital rule changes that could restrain capital returns.
Recommendation: BUY. The stock offers an attractive mix of scale-driven earnings resilience and capital return at a reasonable multiple, and Q1 2026 results plus CET1 levels suggest capacity to compound value if credit remains contained.