Bank of America (BAC) Could Be a Timely Trade as Higher Rates Stay in Focus

The financial sector may be starting to look like more than a defensive hiding place.
After the June 5 selloff hit technology shares hard, investors have a reason to ask whether the next leg of the market needs broader participation. The AI trade is not dead, but it is no longer the only game worth watching. When leadership gets crowded and rate expectations shift, capital often starts hunting for stocks with cleaner valuations, stronger cash generation and more direct leverage to the economy.
And within the financial sector, Bank of America (BAC) stands out. Shares have rallied roughly 20% over the last year, but have been mostly flat over the last six months. That creates an appealing setup: the longer-term trend remains positive, but the stock has not become as crowded or extended as many high-growth market leaders.
For investors looking beyond technology, that gives BAC a more compelling profile. It is a major bank with earnings momentum, positive rate sensitivity and a bullish 28-day Sigmanomic forecast. And if financials keep attracting capital, the chart may still have room to reset higher.
What Bank of America Does—And Why It Matters Now
Bank of America is one of the largest financial institutions in the United States, with a business model tied directly to consumers, corporations, capital markets and interest rates.
The company operates across consumer banking, global wealth and investment management, global banking and global markets. That gives Bank of America exposure to checking accounts, savings products, credit cards, mortgages, commercial lending, investment banking, asset management, trading, foreign exchange, fixed income and risk management.
That broad mix is the core of the investment case. Consumer banking remains the foundation. When employment is healthy and consumers keep spending, Bank of America can benefit through deposits, cards, loans and everyday banking activity. The company’s scale gives it a major advantage because it has a large deposit base, a national customer footprint and deep relationships with households and small businesses.
Wealth management adds another important earnings stream. Through Merrill and the Private Bank, Bank of America benefits from advisory fees, brokerage activity, retirement services and client asset growth. When markets rise and client balances expand, this segment can generate higher fee revenue without depending only on loan growth.
Global banking and global markets give the company more leverage to corporate activity and market volatility. Commercial lending, treasury services, investment banking, trading and institutional client activity can all contribute when companies borrow, hedge, raise capital or reposition portfolios.
That matters in the current market because Bank of America is not just a defensive bank stock. It is a broad financial platform that can benefit from several themes at once: resilient consumers, higher rates, loan demand, trading activity, wealth management growth and a possible rotation away from crowded technology trades.
The rate backdrop may be the most important near-term catalyst. Higher rates can pressure parts of the economy, but they can also help large banks earn more on loans and securities. For Bank of America, net interest income remains a key earnings driver, and a slower path for rate cuts could keep that part of the story intact.
That does not erase the risks. Banks remain exposed to credit quality, deposit costs, regulation, loan demand and bond-market volatility. But if investors are looking for large-cap stocks that can work outside the technology trade, Bank of America has a cleaner case than many other cyclical names.
Earnings Momentum Strengthens the Bull Case
Bank of America’s first-quarter results gave investors a strong reason to stay interested.
On April 15, the company reported earnings per share of $1.11, comfortably above expectations of $1.01. Revenue came in at $30.43 billion, also ahead of estimates. Net income rose 17% year over year to $8.6 billion, while revenue increased 7.2%, helped by higher net interest income, stronger trading revenue and higher fees from investment banking and asset management.
That was not a narrow beat. The strength showed up across several important parts of the business. Net interest income increased 9% year over year to $15.9 billion, ahead of expectations. That is one of the most important numbers for Bank of America because it reflects the spread between what the bank earns on loans and securities and what it pays on deposits and funding.
Management also raised its full-year net interest income growth outlook from 5% to 7% to a new range of 6% to 8%. That guidance increase is important because it suggests the company sees continued support from the rate and balance sheet backdrop, not just a one-quarter lift.
The markets business also delivered. Equities trading revenue jumped 30% to $2.83 billion, helping drive Bank of America’s strongest trading quarter in 15 years. Investment banking revenue rose 21% to $1.8 billion, also ahead of expectations.
That mix matters because market volatility can cut both ways. It can pressure investor sentiment, but it can also increase trading and client activity for large banks with strong capital markets businesses. Bank of America appears to be benefiting from that dynamic.
Credit trends were encouraging as well. Bank of America posted a $1.3 billion provision for credit losses, below the year-earlier level and below expectations. The net charge-off ratio improved to 0.48%, suggesting credit quality was not flashing the kind of warning sign that would undercut the bullish case.
Overall, the quarter supports the idea that Bank of America is operating from a position of strength. Revenue is growing, profitability is improving, net interest income is moving higher, trading is active and credit trends remain manageable. That is a solid foundation if investors continue looking for opportunities in financials.

Valuation and Analyst Sentiment Leave Room for an Upside Re-Rating
Bank of America’s valuation looks favorable for a large bank with improving earnings momentum, positive rate sensitivity and strong analyst support.
The stock trades at roughly 12x forward GAAP earnings, compared with a sector average near 11x. The forward price-to-sales ratio sits around 3.1x versus a sector average near 2.9x, while price-to-book is roughly 1.3x compared with about 1.2x for the sector.
Those are modest premiums, not aggressive ones. More importantly, they look reasonable given Bank of America’s scale, diversified earnings base and improving net interest income outlook. The stock is being valued like a high-quality large bank, but it is not carrying the kind of multiple that requires a flawless growth story.
The recent price action also strengthens the case. Bank of America is up roughly 20% over the last year, but shares have been mostly flat over the last six months. That means the stock has participated in the broader market recovery without becoming as crowded or extended as many high-growth market leaders.
Analyst sentiment remains supportive. Of the 26 analysts covering Bank of America, 21 rate the stock a buy and five rate it a hold. With shares recently trading around $54, the average analyst price target near $62 implies additional upside of roughly 15%. Higher-end targets above $70 point to a more bullish path if net interest income continues to improve, credit quality holds up and investors rotate further into financials.
Source: Barchart
Taken together, those factors create a compelling setup. The valuation is reasonable, the stock has spent months consolidating, Wall Street remains broadly positive, and the average price target still sits meaningfully above the current share price. If financials continue attracting capital, Bank of America could become a natural large-cap beneficiary.
Sigmanomics Forecast Data Adds Support to the Bullish Setup
The fundamental case for Bank of America looks increasingly constructive, and Sigmanomics data adds important context.
The model is not calling for an immediate breakout. The 7-day and 14-day forecasts remain bearish, with reward-to-risk readings of 0.1 and 0.3, respectively. That suggests near-term volatility could remain a factor, especially after Friday’s broader market selloff. But that does not necessarily point to a broken setup. It may simply mean the stock needs more time to build momentum.
The more encouraging read comes from the 28-day forecast. Sigmanomics shows a bullish tilt over that window, with a reward-to-risk reading of 1.2. The expected move is roughly plus or minus 13.4%, creating an estimated range of $51.00 to $65.40.
The Sigmanomics forecast data gives traders a straightforward framework. As long as Bank of America holds above the lower end of the expected range near $51, the bullish setup remains intact. A move toward the upper end of the range would suggest the rotation trade is gaining momentum, while a break below $51 would weaken the signal.
That makes Bank of America less of a short-term chase and more of a rotation setup that may need time to develop. The shorter-term models remain cautious, but the longer-window forecast lines up with the broader bull case: improving earnings momentum, reasonable valuation, positive analyst sentiment and a market backdrop that could keep financials in focus.
The Bottom Line
The market’s recent selloff showed how quickly investors can rethink crowded trades when yields rise and rate-cut expectations shift. Technology has led for much of the year, but if investors start looking for steadier opportunities beyond high-growth names, large financials could become a more attractive place to look.
Bank of America has a solid case in that environment. The company is delivering stronger net interest income, healthy consumer trends, active trading revenue, improving investment banking fees and manageable credit quality. Management also raised its full-year net interest income outlook, which gives the higher-for-longer rate thesis more support.
The valuation strengthens the setup. Bank of America is not trading at a deep discount, but it also does not look stretched. The stock trades at only modest premiums to sector averages, while analyst sentiment remains strongly positive. With shares recently near $54 and the average price target around $62, Wall Street still sees room for considerable upside.
That arguably makes Bank of America a timely rotation candidate. It is not a high-flying technology trade, and it is not a distressed turnaround. It is a large, profitable bank with improving fundamentals, reasonable valuation support and a constructive longer-window forecast. If financials continue attracting capital, Bank of America could be one of the cleaner large-cap ways to participate.
Andrew Prochnow
Options and volatility trader with more than 15 years of experience trading global financial markets, including 10 years as a professional options trader. Contributor to tastyfx, Barchart, Benzinga, New Constructs, DailyFX, and Luckbox Magazine. Covers forex, equities, options, and macro markets.






