BAC

Prezzo Bank of America

BAC
$53,95
+$0,44(+0,82%)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-17 18:42 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-17 18:42, Bank of America (BAC) is priced at $53,95, with a total market cap of $384,02B, a P/E ratio of 13,27, and a dividend yield of 2,05%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $53,75 and $54,60. The current price is 0,37% above the day's low and 1,19% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 35,09M. Over the past 52 weeks, BAC has traded between $39,58 to $57,55, and the current price is -6,25% away from the 52-week high.

BAC Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$54,32
Market Cap$384,02B
Volume35,09M
P/E Ratio13,27
Dividend Yield (TTM)2,05%
Dividend Amount$0,28
Diluted EPS (TTM)4,36
Net Income (FY)$30,50B
Revenue (FY)$191,56B
Earnings Date2026-10-14
EPS Estimate1,14
Revenue Estimate$30,37B
Shares Outstanding7,06B
Beta (1Y)1.2372576
Ex-Dividend Date2026-03-06
Dividend Payment Date2026-03-27

About BAC

Bank of America Corporation, through its subsidiaries, provides banking and financial products and services for individual consumers, small and middle-market businesses, institutional investors, large corporations, and governments worldwide. Its Consumer Banking segment offers traditional and money market savings accounts, certificates of deposit and IRAs, noninterest-and interest-bearing checking accounts, and investment accounts and products; and credit and debit cards, residential mortgages, and home equity loans, as well as direct and indirect loans, such as automotive, recreational vehicle, and consumer personal loans. The company's Global Wealth & Investment Management segment offers investment management, brokerage, banking, and trust and retirement products and services; and wealth management solutions, as well as customized solutions, including specialty asset management services. Its Global Banking segment provides lending products and services, including commercial loans, leases, commitment facilities, trade finance, and commercial real estate and asset-based lending; treasury solutions, such as treasury management, foreign exchange, and short-term investing options and merchant services; working capital management solutions; and debt and equity underwriting and distribution, and merger-related and other advisory services. The company's Global Markets segment offers market-making, financing, securities clearing, settlement, and custody services, as well as risk management products using interest rate, equity, credit, currency and commodity derivatives, foreign exchange, fixed-income, and mortgage-related products. As of December 31, 2021, it served approximately 67 million consumer and small business clients with approximately 4,200 retail financial centers; approximately 16,000 ATMs; and digital banking platforms with approximately 41 million active users. The company was founded in 1784 and is based in Charlotte, North Carolina.
SectorFinancial Services
IndustryBanks - Diversified
CEOBrian Thomas Moynihan
HeadquartersCharlotte,NC,US
Employees (FY)213,00K
Average Revenue (1Y)$899,37K
Net Income per Employee$143,23K

Bank of America (BAC) FAQ

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Bank of America (BAC) is currently trading at $53,95, with a 24h change of +0,82%. The 52-week trading range is $39,58–$57,55.

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Hot Posts su Bank of America (BAC)

rekt_but_vibing

rekt_but_vibing

38 minuti fa
been thinking about dividend strategies lately and wanted to share some stocks that have historically been solid income generators. this is from a few years back but the principles still hold up pretty well. Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F) is a good example. they were 118 years deep in the game and their CEO Jim Farley made a smart move pivoting hard into electric vehicles when he took over in late 2020. the F-150 EV and Mustang EV were gaining serious traction. higher margin EVs meant better profitability, and they actually brought back their dividend after pausing it during covid. yields were sitting around 1.9% at that time. then there's Bank of America (NYSE: BAC). the Fed was signaling rate hikes back then, which is actually great for banks. wider spread between what they pay depositors and what they earn on loans = more profit. BAC stood to gain an extra $6.5 billion in net interest income just from a single percentage point rate increase. that's the kind of earnings growth that drives dividend expansion. similar 1.9% yield. Walmart (NYSE: WMT) made sense too if inflation was the concern. when prices spike, people hunt for deals, and that's literally Walmart's competitive advantage. their massive distribution network also gave them an edge over smaller retailers dealing with supply chain chaos. they were looking at steady profit growth and dividend increases, yielding around 1.6%. Waste Management (NYSE: WM) is the kind of boring-but-reliable play everyone should have. they'd been raising their per-share dividend for 19 consecutive years straight. their network of landfills and collection sites created a real moat - regulations and local opposition made it nearly impossible for competitors to gain ground. that stability meant they could raise prices without losing customers, feeding more cash back to shareholders. 1.5% yield. and Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) if you wanted growth mixed with income. valued at $2.7 trillion but potentially still undervalued on earnings potential. 5G was supposed to drive an iPhone upgrade cycle, M1 chips were crushing it in Macs and iPads, and their services business was firing on all cylinders. Wall Street was projecting they'd double earnings per share over five years, giving them room to increase payouts. though the dividend yield was modest at 0.5%, the total return potential from price appreciation plus rising dividends looked pretty attractive. the best dividend stocks typically combine reliable earnings with management willing to share profits with shareholders. these five represented different sectors and risk profiles, which is always smart for diversification. whether they still make sense today depends on current valuations and your personal risk tolerance.
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