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Just For You
Bank of America’s Rock-Bottom P/E and 25% Upside Potential
Written by Sam Quirke. First Published: 1/28/2026.
What You Need to Know
- Bank of America trades at one of the lowest valuations among mega-cap stocks, even after a strong rally over the past year.
- A recent pullback has provided some time to take profits without breaking the broader uptrend, improving the risk-reward setup.
- Recently refreshed price targets point to solid upside potential heading into February.
Financial giant Bank of America Corp (NYSE: BAC) did almost everything right in 2025. The stock rallied strongly, hit a record high and finished the year in good form. It even pushed to fresh all-time highs in the first trading days of January, and the bulls looked set to remain in control heading into 2026.
Then things cooled. A pullback began, gathering pace after the bank’s earnings report two weeks ago, shaving roughly 10% off the share price. On the surface it’s been a rough start to the year. But zoom out and the picture isn’t as bleak: the broader uptrend remains intact, selling pressure is starting to look tired, and the stock’s valuation has reset to one of the lowest price-to-earnings (P/E) multiples among mega-cap stocks today.
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With analysts lining up to rate the shares a Buy and several setting targets implying at least 25% upside, Bank of America is quietly shaping up as one of the more interesting large-cap setups heading into February. Let’s take a closer look.
An Attractive Valuation
With a current P/E below 14, Bank of America’s multiple is the lowest among mega-cap peers. For investors who view the recent selling as a pause rather than the start of a sustained reversal, that makes for an appealing buy-the-dip opportunity.
When a stock falls in the week before its quarterly earnings report and then slides further after the release, the knee-jerk reaction is to assume the report was weak.
But Bank of America delivered another solid quarter, topping expectations for both revenue and earnings, showing operating leverage, and reporting provisions for credit losses well below forecasts.
Given that, January’s pullback appears driven more by broader market forces than any deterioration in the bank’s fundamentals.
Rising geopolitical tensions have pressured equities recently, and Bank of America’s shares look like they were simply caught up in that shift to risk-off sentiment.
The absence of major follow-through selling suggests the weakness was largely macro-driven. With the uptrend still intact and selling pressure easing, the lower P/E creates an attractive risk/reward profile.
Analysts See Meaningful Upside From Here
Reinforcing the view that the market may be too negative, many analysts continue to rate Bank of America a Buy. The team at Goldman Sachs recently reiterated its Buy rating and raised its price target to $67.
That call echoes similar moves from Morgan Stanley and TD Cowen, both of which reiterated Buy (or equivalent) ratings earlier this month with price targets around $64. Those targets imply more than 25% upside from current levels—not insignificant for a stock trading at a rock-bottom valuation.
Risks Remain, But Are Largely Known
There are headwinds heading into February. One of the more notable is the proposed 10% cap on credit card interest ratesannounced earlier this month. If enacted, it could pressure profitability across parts of the consumer banking business.
The market has had time to digest that possibility, and the recent pullback likely reflects some of that uncertainty. Bank of America’s diversified revenue base and scale also provide a buffer that smaller peers may lack.
Still, bulls will need to prove they’re back in control in the coming sessions. Last week the stock hit a low near $52; while it has bounced since, it remains to be seen whether that level will hold as firm support.
If $52 holds as a floor, don’t be surprised to see the stock trade into the upper $50s or mid-$60s by the end of the quarter.
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