Bank of America: Why I Bought The Panic

Summary:

  • Last week Bank of America stock plummeted as yield curve inversion worsened and Blackstone faced a wave of real estate fund redemptions.
  • The ‘mood’ toward financials was ominous due to several bad-sounding news items coming out at the same time.
  • However Bank of America is doing pretty well this year.
  • Its net interest income grew 24% last quarter, and pre-provision net income grew 10%.
  • I bought the panic in Bank of America shares, mainly because yield curve inversion doesn’t hurt banks as much as it used to, and because past experience taught me that banks tend to be great buys during ‘panic’ events.

Bank CEOs Testify Before Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee

Drew Angerer

Last week, Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) crashed 10%, as a slew of bad news reports rocked the financial services sector.

First, the yield curve reached its deepest inversion since 1990, with a -75 basis point spread between

2022

2023 – scenario 1

2023 – scenario 2

2023 – scenario 3

Q1

$2500

$1,250

$2,510

$2,400

Q2

$2500

$1,000

$2,510

$2,350

Q3

$2500

$2500

$2,510

$2645

Q4

$2500

$5,290

$2,510

$2645

Full year

$10,000

$10,040

$10,040

$10,040

Yield curve

Yield curve (U.S. Treasury Yield Curve dot com)


Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of BAC either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.


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