If You Invested $10K In Bank of America Stock 10 Years Ago, How Much Would You Have Now?
If You Invested $10K In Bank of America Stock 10 Years Ago, How Much Would You Have Now?
If You Invested $10K In Bank of America Stock 10 Years Ago, How Much Would You Have Now?

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Bank of America Corp. (NYSE:BAC) provides various financial products and services for individual consumers, small and middle-market businesses, institutional investors, large corporations, and governments worldwide.

If You Bought Bank of America Stock 10 Years Ago

The company's stock traded at approximately $16.45 per share 10 years ago. If you had invested $10,000, you could have bought roughly 608 shares. Currently, shares trade at $40.93, meaning your investment's value could have grown to $24,881 from stock price appreciation alone. However, Bank of America also paid dividends during these 10 years.

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Bank of America's dividend yield is currently 2.54%. Over the last 10 years, it has paid about $6.84 in dividends per share, which means you could have made $4,158 from dividends alone.

Summing up $24,881 and $4,158, we end up with the final value of your investment, which is $29,039. This is how much you could have made if you had invested $10,000 in Bank of America stock 10 years ago. This means a total return of 190.39%. However, this figure is less than the S&P 500 total return for the same period, which was 219.60%.

What Could The Next 10 Years Bring?

Bank of America has a consensus rating of "Buy" and a price target of $45.31 based on the ratings of 25 analysts. The price target implies more than a 10% potential upside from the current stock price.

On April 15, the company announced its Q1 2025 earnings, posting EPS of $0.90, beating the analyst consensus estimate of $0.81, as reported by Benzinga.

Trending: Arrived Home's Private Credit Fund’s has historically paid an annualized dividend yield of 8.1%*, which provides access to a pool of short-term loans backed by residential real estate with just a $100 minimum. 

Revenue, net of interest expense, increased 6% year-over-year to $27.37 billion, above the analyst consensus estimate of $26.99 billion.This was driven by noninterest income growth across all segments and higher net interest income.

Bank of America reiterated Q4 net interest income of around $15.5 billion to $15.7 billion.