
"Shares of Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) lost 0.06% over the past month after gaining 0.29% the month prior. That brings the stock's year-to-date gain to 19.64%. Since hitting its 2025 low on April 4, BAC is up 54.09%. When the company reported Q3 earnings on Oct. 15, 2025, it beat on earnings and revenue expectations, with EPS of $1.06 topping forecasts of 95 cents, and revenue of $28.09 billion - an 11% year-over-year increase - higher than analysts' expectations for $27.5 billion."
"Since its Depression-era roots in San Francisco, Bank of Americahas weathered close to a century of wars and financial upheavals to rise as one of the top financial institutions in the US, ranking #2 behind JP Morgan Chase by asset size. Bank of America's massive AUM heft made it a $45 billion "too big to fail" TARP bailout recipient during the 2008 subprime banking meltdown."
"After reaching its five-year high of $49.18 per share in January 2022, Bank of America has struggled to attain that level again. Efforts to climb higher had been thwarted, but after bottoming in late October 2023, the stock has rallied back gaining nearly 109% through the end of October 2025. Regardless, investors are much more concerned with future stock's performance over the next one, five and 10 years."
Bank of America lost 0.06% over the past month following a 0.29% gain the prior month, producing a year-to-date gain of 19.64%. Since the April 4, 2025 low the stock is up 54.09%. Q3 2025 results showed EPS of $1.06 versus $0.95 expected and revenue of $28.09 billion, an 11% year-over-year increase beating forecasts. The bank traces roots to the Depression era, became a $45 billion TARP recipient in 2008 and acquired Merrill-Lynch. CEO Brian Moynihan has cut operations to grow assets under management. The stock rallied nearly 109% from late October 2023 through October 2025.
Read at 24/7 Wall St.
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]