NEW YORK, July 14, 2026, 08:08 EDT.
Bank of America Corp NYSE:BAC reported a 27% rise in second-quarter profit, but a clean revenue bridge shows the beat leaned heavily on market-sensitive businesses. Market making, investment and brokerage services, and investment banking generated $2.61 billion, or 63%, of the bank’s $4.12 billion year-on-year revenue increase. Net interest income — the spread between what a bank earns on assets and pays for funding — supplied another 32%.
That distinction matters because the widely cited $7.1 billion sales-and-trading figure includes $1.77 billion of interest income. Adding trading growth to company-wide net interest income would therefore count part of the quarter twice; the standard income-statement categories provide a cleaner view of what drove the expansion.
July 14 is a regular New York Stock Exchange session, although the cash market had not opened at the time of publication. Bank of America shares, up about 8% this year before the report, were last down 0.2% at $59.50 in premarket trading. That restrained response suggests investors were weighing the size of the earnings beat against how readily its strongest revenue lines can recur.
The bank earned $9.07 billion, or $1.21 per diluted share, compared with $7.17 billion and 90 cents a year earlier. Earnings per share were about 7% above the $1.13 analyst estimate cited by the Wall Street Journal. Revenue grew nearly twice as fast as expenses.
| Q2 2026 | Q2 2025 | Year-on-year | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $31.56 bln | $27.44 bln | +15.0% |
| Net income | $9.07 bln | $7.17 bln | +26.6% |
| Diluted EPS | $1.21 | $0.90 | +34.4% |
| Net interest income | $16.00 bln | $14.67 bln | +9.0% |
| Noninterest expense | $18.63 bln | $17.18 bln | +8.4% |
Company filing and Wall Street Journal estimate; percentage calculations use unrounded company figures.
The revenue bridge is more revealing than the headline growth rates. Market making was the largest noninterest contributor, while investment banking and investment-and-brokerage services together added a further $1.58 billion.
| Contribution to revenue growth | Increase | Share of total increase |
|---|---|---|
| Net interest income | $1.327 bln | 32.2% |
| Market making and similar activities | $1.024 bln | 24.9% |
| Investment and brokerage services | $0.873 bln | 21.2% |
| Investment banking fees | $0.710 bln | 17.3% |
| Card income, service charges and other | $0.181 bln | 4.4% |
| Total revenue increase | $4.115 bln | 100.0% |
Bank of America supplemental filing; calculations based on reported income-statement categories.
Within trading, equities revenue surged 70% to $3.62 billion and edged above the $3.48 billion produced by fixed income, currencies and commodities. The phenomenon was not unique to Bank of America: JPMorgan Chase & Co NYSE:JPM reported an 86% increase in equity-trading revenue, while Goldman Sachs Group Inc NYSE:GS posted a 72% rise. Bank of America kept pace with the sector, but the peer comparison also indicates that much of the windfall came from the trading environment rather than market-share gains alone.
The conventional banking franchise still contributed. Average loans and leases rose 8% to about $1.22 trillion, average deposits increased more than 2% to $2.02 trillion, and consumer credit- and debit-card spending grew 9%. Provision for credit losses fell to $1.37 billion from $1.59 billion, while the net charge-off ratio improved to 0.47% from 0.55%.
Costs rose, but less quickly than revenue. Noninterest expense increased 8.4%, partly because of compensation tied to the stronger markets businesses, while the efficiency ratio improved to 59.0% from 62.6%. The $226 million decline in credit-loss provisions helped profit, although the net reserve release was just $46 million — small relative to quarterly earnings — limiting the role of accounting adjustments in the result.
Share repurchases provided another material lift. Average diluted shares fell 4.7%, and the bank bought back $6 billion of common stock during the quarter. Holding the year-earlier share count constant, current common earnings would have produced roughly $1.14 per share rather than $1.21. About 7 cents, or 22% of the 31-cent year-on-year EPS increase, therefore came from dividing earnings across fewer shares.
Chief Executive Brian Moynihan said, “Near-term, pipelines remain strong, and commercial borrowing has picked up.” Chief Financial Officer Alastair Borthwick said “our $3.5 trillion balance sheet remained a source of strength.” The loan growth, deposit stability and $8 billion returned to shareholders support those assessments. Bank of America Corporation
But the revenue mix cuts both ways. A decline in market volatility could reduce market-making and brokerage income; weaker asset prices would weigh on management fees; and delayed mergers or offerings could reverse some of the investment-banking surge. Lower interest rates or more aggressive deposit pricing could also slow net interest income, while expenses are already rising at more than 8%. The peer-wide equities boom reinforces the risk that part of the quarter’s gain was cyclical.
The investor test is whether deal pipelines convert into fees, net interest income remains near $16 billion and buybacks continue without weakening capital ratios. The quarter supports higher earnings estimates, but a sustained valuation gain will depend on how much of the 63% contribution from market-linked businesses proves durable rather than exceptional.