Bank Of America: Big Bank Stock Offering Big Potential Returns

 | Apr 26, 2019 03:33AM ET

Bank stocks spent much of the past decade recovering from the financial crisis. This was particularly true for the dividend growth stock among the big U.S. banks.

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Bank of America was founded in 1904 and is headquartered in Charlotte, NC. The company provides traditional banking services such as deposit-taking and auto and home lending, but also competes heavily in credit cards, as well as wealth management. To a lesser extent, Bank of America also plays in global banking and equity and debt markets.

The bank delivers more than $90 billion of annual revenue and its current market capitalization is $287 billion, making it one of the largest financial companies in the world by that measure.

Bank of America reported Q1 earnings on 4/16/19 and results were better than consensus estimates. Total revenue was essentially flat year-over-year, falling fractionally to $23 billion. A 5% gain in net interest income was entirely offset by a 6% decline in noninterest income. The gain in net interest income arose from higher lending rates as well as stronger lending spreads, thanks to still-low deposit funding rates. Indeed, net interest yield was up 9bps to 2.51% in Q1, a very strong gain considering the significant flattening of the yield curve that has occurred in the past twelve months.

Average loans and leases rose 4% year-over-year to $897 billion as consumer loans gained 3% and commercial loans added 4%. Average deposits rose 5% year-over-year to $1.4 trillion.

Credit quality deteriorated slightly in Q1 as provisions for credit losses increased $179 million to $1 billion. The bank’s net charge-off ratio increased 3bps to 0.43% during Q1, and while these numbers are moving in the wrong direction, we see this as more of a fluctuation in credit metrics rather than a trend change. Credit quality was at historical highs in the relatively recent past, so some moderation off of those levels is to be expected. While we’ll watch Bank of America’s credit quality metrics, we see no cause for concern today.

Bank of America’s years-long focus on reducing operating costs continues to pay off and in Q1, operating expenses fell 4% against the prior year’s Q1. That drove the bank’s efficiency ratio down to 57%, which is in line with its large banking peers. Bank of America struggled for years after the crisis with a bloated cost structure thanks to a combination of the Countrywide acquisition and legacy assets that weren’t performing, and had to be wound down. That is all behind it at this point and Bank of America is operating quite efficiently today, which we see as adding to the attractiveness of the stock.

Indeed, as we can see below, Bank of America has achieved positive operating leverage for a staggering 17 consecutive quarters.

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