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Bank of America: 8% Dividend Hike in Q2

Core Insights - Bank of America reported Q2 2025 earnings with EPS of $0.89, exceeding analyst expectations of $0.86, and net income rose to $7.1 billion, marking a year-over-year increase [1][5] - Total revenue for the quarter was $26.5 billion, slightly below consensus estimates of $26.77 billion, reflecting a 4.3% increase from the previous year [1][5] Financial Performance - EPS (GAAP) increased by 7.2% year-over-year from $0.83 to $0.89 [2] - Revenue (GAAP) rose to $26.5 billion from $25.4 billion in Q2 2024, but missed estimates by approximately 0.8% [2][5] - Net interest income grew to $14.7 billion, a 7.3% increase from $13.7 billion in the prior year [2][5] - Net income increased by 2.9% from $6.9 billion in Q2 2024 to $7.1 billion [2][5] Business Segments - Investment banking fees decreased by 9%, while Global Banking segment revenue fell by 6% [6] - Global Markets segment saw a strong performance with trading revenue up 14% and FICC revenue up 16% [6] - Wealth management asset management fees rose by 9%, with client balances exceeding $4.4 trillion [6] Operational Insights - Noninterest expenses rose by 5% to $17.2 billion, driven by higher revenue-related expenses and investments in technology and personnel [7] - The efficiency ratio improved in consumer banking, with 49 million active digital users and 65% of sales being digitally enabled [7] Risk Management - Provision for credit losses increased to $1.6 billion, consistent with previous quarters, while the net charge-off ratio remained steady at 0.55% [8] - The allowance for loan and lease losses was 1.17% of total loans for Q2 2025, down from 1.26% in Q2 2024 [8] Capital Returns - The company returned $7.3 billion to shareholders through dividends and buybacks, with an announced 8% dividend increase for Q3 2025 [9] Future Outlook - The company targets a quarterly exit rate of $15.5 billion to $15.7 billion by Q4 2025, with full-year expenses expected to rise by 2% to 3% [10] - Investors should monitor fee revenue softness in investment banking and potential challenges from expense growth due to technology and wage pressures [11]