Key Highlights
- BAC shares jumped 1.5% in premarket trading following a $0.10 earnings beat
- Quarterly net income reached $8.6 billion, up significantly from $7.4 billion year-over-year
- Trading desk revenue climbed 13% to reach $6.4 billion amid heightened market volatility
- Investment banking revenue surged 21% to $1.8 billion, significantly outpacing the bank’s 10% projection
- Total revenue reached $30.3 billion, exceeding analyst consensus of $29.92 billion
Bank of America delivered impressive first-quarter results, with earnings climbing substantially thanks to robust trading activity and a resurgence in corporate dealmaking.
The bank reported quarterly net income of $8.6 billion, translating to $1.11 per share, compared to $7.4 billion, or 89 cents per share, during the corresponding period last year. This performance exceeded analyst projections by $0.10 per share.
Quarterly revenue totaled $30.3 billion, surpassing the Wall Street consensus estimate of $29.92 billion.
Shares advanced 1.5% during premarket hours on the strength of these results.
Bank of America Corporation, BAC
Financial markets experienced significant turbulence during the opening months of 2026. A more aggressive Federal Reserve stance, concerns about artificial intelligence valuations, and escalating U.S. engagement in Middle Eastern conflicts all pressured investor sentiment, triggering rotation away from growth-oriented equities toward defensive positions.
This market instability proved beneficial for BofA’s trading operations.
Sales and trading revenue increased 13% to $6.4 billion during the first quarter. Elevated client engagement during periods of market uncertainty typically boosts performance across trading divisions.
Dealmaking Activity Accelerates
The investment banking division also delivered strong performance. Overall fees increased 21% to $1.8 billion, substantially exceeding the 10% growth rate the institution had projected.
Global mergers and acquisitions remained robust despite broader market headwinds. First-quarter deal volume surpassed $1.2 trillion, featuring 22 individual transactions valued above $10 billion each — establishing a quarterly record based on LSEG statistics.
BofA Securities played a central role in numerous high-profile transactions.
The institution provided advisory services for McCormick’s $42.7 billion acquisition of Unilever’s food division, Boston Scientific’s $14.9 billion Penumbra purchase, and Devon Energy’s $26 billion Coterra Energy merger.
Additionally, it headed the advisory group supporting senior housing REIT Janus Living during its March NYSE debut.
Stock Performance Analysis
Notwithstanding the earnings outperformance, BAC remains down for 2026 year-to-date, mirroring the performance of JPMorgan and Wells Fargo. All three banking giants are trailing the S&P 500, which registered approximately 1.8% gains through the most recent close.
Over a trailing twelve-month period, however, BAC has advanced nearly 43%.
JPMorgan similarly released first-quarter earnings on Tuesday that exceeded expectations, likewise benefiting from solid trading desk and investment banking results.
CEO Brian Moynihan highlighted robust consumer trends in his official statement. “We remain watchful of evolving risks. However, we saw healthy client activity, including solid consumer spending and stable asset quality, indicating a resilient American economy.”
Bank of America recorded five upward EPS revisions and five downward revisions during the 90-day window preceding the earnings announcement.
InvestingPro assigns Bank of America a “fair performance” rating for overall financial health.
The stock finished at $53.35 prior to the earnings release, representing a 0.72% gain over the preceding three-month period.


