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The Charlotte, North Carolina-based company is facing similar obstacles as other megabanks, as it builds up provisions for potentially bad loans and struggles to make new ones. The $3.3 trillion-asset bank is also showing similar strengths as its peers, with investment banking fees continuing to surge.
During the second quarter,
The company reported earnings-per-share of $0.83, topping consensus expectations of $0.80. Its stock price was up less than 1% from Monday, with shares trading at $41.89 per share before the market opened Tuesday.
CEO Brian Moynihan said in a prepared statement that the "earnings power" of the bank's consumer banking business was complemented by "the growth and profitability of our global markets, global banking and wealth management businesses."
"Our team produced another strong quarter, serving a growing client base," Moynihan said. "Our investments in this business are delivering for our shareholders."
Net interest income fell to $13.7 billion, down from $14 billion the previous quarter and $14.2 billion in the second quarter of 2023, largely due to higher deposit costs, which shot up in the last year as customers sought stronger returns in the higher rate environment.
With the expected rate cuts, the bank anticipates low single-digit percentage growth in loans and deposits, slower deposit rotation and fixed-rate asset repricing of securities at the bank.