New York, May 31, 2026, 15:03 EDT
Bank of America shares slipped slightly for the shortened week, even as they bounced Friday, heading into June with investors watching the trading setup and the coming U.S. jobs report for any clues on interest rates.
Big banks are back to moving on two simple issues now: is Wall Street revenue returning, and will interest rates still boost lending income without hitting credit? For Bank of America, net interest income—basically what it makes on loans and securities minus what it pays for deposits—remains a key figure.
U.S. cash markets didn’t open Sunday, with trading last week cut short as the NYSE recognized Memorial Day on May 25 as a holiday. NYSE trading hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. ET on regular days.
Bank of America ended Friday at $51.60, up 1.63%. About 57.93 million shares changed hands. JPMorgan Chase rose 0.87%, Wells Fargo moved up 1.16%, and Citigroup gained 0.98%. BAC traded with the stronger big-bank names.
BAC shares ended the week mixed. The stock closed at $51.80 on May 22, then slid through a rough four-session stretch to end May 29 at $51.60, down about 0.4% close to close, according to .
Banks had a better market setup to work with. Wall Street’s main indexes closed at record highs on Friday, boosted by gains in technology stocks. The S&P 500 ended the week up 1.43%, the Nasdaq climbed 2.39%, and the Dow rose 0.9%.
Bank of America got a boost earlier this week after CEO Brian Moynihan said second-quarter trading revenue should be up around 15% from last year. Moynihan told investors to “be careful year over year,” citing a volatile prior period. He described investment banking as “pretty good shape” and said full-year net interest income might reach the top of the bank’s 6% to 8% target range. Reuters
Bank of America posted some numbers to back that up. For the quarter ended March 31, it reported revenue net of interest expense of $30.3 billion, net income of $8.6 billion and diluted EPS of $1.11.
May’s nonfarm payrolls will be in focus for markets on June 5, with a Reuters poll calling for 85,000 jobs added and unemployment at 4.3%. The jobs report, which tracks employment outside farming and a few sectors, is the next big data point for macro watchers. Liz Ann Sonders at the Schwab Center for Financial Research said a strong report and hotter inflation might “change the outlook for Fed policy.” Edward Jones strategist Angelo Kourkafas also pointed to risk from a “potentially overheating economy.” Reuters
But conditions can shift fast. Higher rates help some bank earnings, but if Treasury yields stay high, stocks can take a hit, borrowing costs climb and banks could face credit problems. Strong payrolls may push the market to expect a more hawkish Fed. Weak jobs data, though, can raise concerns about loan demand, consumer spending and deal flow.
Bank of America’s story this week will be less about one-day gains on Friday and more about whether the upgraded revenue outlook holds up if rates move against it. BAC’s story is clearer than it was earlier this year, but it still needs support from the market tape.