Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Bank of America outlines plans for earnings growth and AI in first investors day in years

Bank of America (BAC) CEO Brian Moynihan pledged that the nation’s second-largest bank will deliver higher profits in the years ahead during its first investor day in nearly 15 years.

“There’s no cap to our ambition,” Moynihan said during a Q&A with analysts in Boston.

Bank of America laid out those ambitions in a presentation on Wednesday morning and forecast its earnings per share would grow 12% annually over the next three to five years.

The 66-year-old Moynihan, who has been BofA CEO since 2010, has kept his bank on a conservative path that he’s dubbed “responsible growth.” But in more recent years, BofA’s stock has trailed its five closest banking giant peers, with critics now wondering whether investors may have lost out due to the bank’s risk-averse approach.

BofA’s stock fell 2% Wednesday before paring losses.

It’s up 19% for the year, outperforming the S&P 500 by 3 percentage points, but has lagged behind all of its peers over that time frame, as well as a wider five-year stretch.

“Can we grow faster? We have the plans to do that,” Moynihan said during his opening remarks.

It also set a target range of 16% to 18% over the coming years for a key profitability measure known as return on tangible common equity (ROTCE), which tells investors how much return the bank is generating from its operations.

The increase compares to Bank of America’s reported 14% ROTCE so far this year and was in line with what analysts expect, but it was far below targets set by each of Bank of America’s major divisions, as some noted.

The bank also set targets for each of its divisions. Its consumer bank is aiming for to $20 billion in profits while its global wealth and investment management unit is shooting to grow revenue twice as much as expenses, each over the next three to five years.

Within its Wall Street operations, the investment bank wants to add 50 to 100 basis points of to its market share of global dealmaking fees and its markets business projects to nearly doubling its full year revenue (+42%) by 2030.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 28: Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan attends
Under pressure? Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan attends “Mornings With Maria” at Fox Business Network Studios on Oct. 28, 2025, in New York City. (John Lamparski/Getty Images) · John Lamparski via Getty Images

“At first blush, this is a down the fairway update for BofA, with the top and bottom-line growth targets generally a continuation of recent trends,” TD Cowen analyst Steven Alexopoulos wrote to clients Wednesday from the event. “In looking at the overall fundamental trajectory, we see a very solid path,” Alexopoulos added in a followup note.

Bank of America could achieve a higher return measure based on the specific targets disclosed by each of the bank’s divisions, Goldman Sachs analyst Richard Ramsden also noted Wednesday.

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