TLDR
- BAC rose 1.5% premarket after Q1 earnings beat estimates by $0.10
- Net income hit $8.6 billion, up from $7.4 billion a year ago
- Sales and trading revenue rose 13% to $6.4 billion on market volatility
- Investment banking fees jumped 21% to $1.8 billion, well above the 10% the bank had forecast
- Revenue came in at $30.3 billion, topping the $29.92 billion consensus estimate
Bank of America posted a strong first quarter, with profit rising on the back of a busy trading environment and a surge in dealmaking activity.
BANK OF AMERICA $BAC Q1’26 EARNINGS HIGHLIGHTS
🔹 Net of Interest Expense: $30.27B (Est. $29.9B) 🟢; UP +7% YoY
🔹 EPS: $1.11 (Est. $1.01) 🟢; UP +25% YoY
🔹 Net Interest Income: $15.75B (Est. $15.37B) 🟢; UP +9% YoY
🔹 Equities Trading Rev. Ex-DVA: $2.83B (Est. $2.51B) 🟢; UP… pic.twitter.com/tHbtBTlht0— Wall St Engine (@wallstengine) April 15, 2026
Net income came in at $8.6 billion, or $1.11 per share, up from $7.4 billion, or 89 cents per share, in the same period last year. That beat analyst estimates by $0.10 per share.
Revenue for the quarter hit $30.3 billion, ahead of the $29.92 billion consensus.
The stock was up 1.5% in premarket trading following the results.
Bank of America Corporation, BAC
Global markets turned choppy early in 2026. A hawkish Fed pivot, AI valuation concerns, and U.S. Middle East involvement all weighed on sentiment, pushing investors out of growth stocks and into defensive sectors.
That turbulence turned out to be good for BofA’s trading desk.
Sales and trading revenue climbed 13% to $6.4 billion in Q1. Higher client activity during volatile stretches tends to lift revenue across trading operations.
Investment Banking Fees Jump
Investment banking had a strong quarter too. Total fees rose 21% to $1.8 billion, more than double the 10% increase the bank had guided for.
Global M&A activity held up well despite the market noise. Deals in Q1 topped $1.2 trillion, with 22 transactions exceeding $10 billion each — a quarterly record according to LSEG data.
BofA Securities was in the middle of several of those big mandates.
The bank advised on McCormick’s $42.7 billion acquisition of Unilever’s food business, Boston Scientific’s $14.9 billion purchase of Penumbra, and Devon Energy’s $26 billion takeover of Coterra Energy.
It also led the consortium advising senior housing REIT Janus Living on its NYSE listing in March.
Context on the Stock
Despite the earnings beat, BAC is still in the red for 2026 so far, alongside JPMorgan and Wells Fargo. All three are underperforming the S&P 500, which was up around 1.8% as of last close.
Over the past 12 months though, BAC is up nearly 43%.
JPMorgan also reported Q1 results on Tuesday that topped estimates, similarly helped by strong trading and dealmaking numbers.
CEO Brian Moynihan pointed to healthy consumer activity in his 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.”
BofA saw five positive EPS revisions and five negative revisions in the 90 days leading up to the report.
InvestingPro rates Bank of America’s financial health as “fair performance.”
The stock closed at $53.35 ahead of earnings, up 0.72% over the prior three months.
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