Finance

Bank of America profit tops estimates as lender releases reserves for soured loans

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Brian Moynihan, chairman and chief executive officer of Bank of America Corp, speaks in New York City, September 25, 2019.
Shannon Stapleton | Reuters

Bank of America posted first-quarter profit on Monday that exceeded analysts’ estimates, helped by the better-than-expected credit quality of its borrowers.

Here are the numbers:

  • Earnings:  80 cents a share vs 75 cents a share Refinitiv estimate.
  • Revenue:  $23.33 billion vs $23.2 billion estimate

The bank said that profit declined 12% to $7.07 billion, or 80 cents per share, exceeding the 75 cent estimate of analysts surveyed by Refinitiv. Revenue climbed 1.8% to $23.33 billion, roughly matching expectations.

Bank of America said that a run of strong credit at the second biggest U.S. lender by assets continued into the first quarter; the company had $392 million in net loan charge-offs in the quarter, less than half of the $848.7 million StreetAccount estimate and a 52% drop from a year earlier.

The bank posted a mere $30 million provision for credit losses, far less than the $468 million expected by analysts, and released $362 million in reserves.

Bank of America’s release of loan-loss reserves is in contrast to rival JPMorgan Chase, which disclosed last week that it opted to build reserves by $902 million on concern over the increasing odds of a recession, which would lead to a wave of loan defaults.

Bank of America, led by CEO Brian Moynihan, had enjoyed tailwinds as rising interest rates and a rebound in loan growth promised to boost income. But bank stocks got hammered this year amid concerns that higher inflation would help spark a recession, which would lead to higher defaults.

While longer-term rates rose during the quarter, short term rates rose more, and that flat, or in some cases inverted, yield curve spurred concerns about an economic slowdown ahead.  

Bank of America shares have fallen 15% this year before Monday, worse than the 11.6% decline of the KBW Bank Index.

Last week, JPMorgan said profit slumped as it posted losses tied to Russia sanctions and set aside money for future loan losses. Goldman, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup each topped expectations with stronger-than-expected trading results, and Wells Fargo missed on revenue amid a decline in mortgage lending.

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