bac-20221017
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As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on October 17, 2022
 
 
 
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM 8-K
CURRENT REPORT
PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported):
October 17, 2022
BANK OF AMERICA CORPORATION
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
 
Delaware 1-6523 56-0906609
(State or Other Jurisdiction of Incorporation) (Commission File Number) (IRS Employer Identification No.)
100 North Tryon Street
Charlotte, North Carolina 28255
(Address of principal executive offices)
(704) 386-5681
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
Not Applicable
(Former name or former address, if changed since last report)
 
 
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:
 
Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)
 
Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)
 
Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))
 
Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))



Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each classTrading Symbol(s)Name of each exchange on which registered
Common Stock, par value $0.01 per shareBACNew York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,000th interest in a share of Floating Rate Non-Cumulative Preferred Stock, Series EBAC PrENew York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,000th interest in a share of 6.000% Non-Cumulative Preferred Stock, Series GGBAC PrBNew York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,000th interest in a share of 5.875% Non-Cumulative Preferred Stock, Series HHBAC PrKNew York Stock Exchange
7.25% Non-Cumulative Perpetual Convertible Preferred Stock, Series LBAC PrLNew York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,200th interest in a share of BML PrGNew York Stock Exchange
Bank of America Corporation Floating Rate Non-Cumulative
Preferred Stock, Series 1
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,200th interest in a share of BML PrHNew York Stock Exchange
Bank of America Corporation Floating Rate Non-Cumulative
Preferred Stock, Series 2
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,200th interest in a share of BML PrJNew York Stock Exchange
Bank of America Corporation Floating Rate Non-Cumulative
Preferred Stock, Series 4
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,200th interest in a share of BML PrLNew York Stock Exchange
Bank of America Corporation Floating Rate Non-Cumulative
Preferred Stock, Series 5
Floating Rate Preferred Hybrid Income Term Securities of BAC Capital Trust XIII (and the guarantee related thereto)BAC/PFNew York Stock Exchange
5.63% Fixed to Floating Rate Preferred Hybrid Income Term Securities of BAC Capital Trust XIV (and the guarantee related thereto)BAC/PGNew York Stock Exchange
Income Capital Obligation Notes initially due December 15, 2066 of Bank of America CorporationMER PrKNew York Stock Exchange
Senior Medium-Term Notes, Series A, Step Up Callable Notes, due BAC/31BNew York Stock Exchange
November 28, 2031 of BofA Finance LLC (and the guarantee of the
Registrant with respect thereto)
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,000th interest in a share of 5.375% Non-Cumulative Preferred Stock, Series KKBAC PrMNew York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,000th interest in a share of 5.000% Non-Cumulative Preferred Stock, Series LLBAC PrN
New York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,000th interest in a share of 4.375% Non-Cumulative Preferred Stock, Series NNBAC PrONew York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,000th interest in a share of 4.125% Non-Cumulative Preferred Stock, Series PPBAC PrPNew York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,000th interest in a share of 4.250% Non-Cumulative Preferred Stock, Series QQBAC PrQNew York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/1,000th interest in a share of 4.750% Non-Cumulative Preferred Stock, Series SSBAC PrSNew York Stock Exchange
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an emerging growth company as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 (17 CFR 230.405) or Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (17 CFR 240.12b-2).
Emerging growth company
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.




ITEM 2.02. RESULTS OF OPERATIONS AND FINANCIAL CONDITION.
On October 17, 2022, Bank of America Corporation (the “Corporation”) announced financial results for the third quarter ended September 30, 2022, reporting third quarter net income of $7.1 billion, or $0.81 per diluted share. A copy of the press release announcing the Corporation’s results for the third quarter ended September 30, 2022 (the “Press Release”) is attached hereto as Exhibit 99.1 and is incorporated by reference in this Item 2.02. The Press Release is available on the Corporation’s website.
The information provided in Item 2.02 of this report, including Exhibit 99.1, shall be deemed to be “filed” for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.
ITEM 7.01. REGULATION FD DISCLOSURE.
On October 17, 2022, the Corporation will hold an investor conference call and webcast to discuss financial results for the third quarter ended September 30, 2022, including the Press Release and other matters relating to the Corporation.
The Corporation has also made available on its website presentation materials containing certain historical and forward-looking information relating to the Corporation (the “Presentation Materials”) and materials that contain additional information about the Corporation’s financial results for the third quarter ended September 30, 2022 (the “Supplemental Information”). The Presentation Materials and the Supplemental Information are furnished herewith as Exhibit 99.2 and Exhibit 99.3, respectively, and are incorporated by reference in this Item 7.01. All information in Exhibits 99.2 and 99.3 is presented as of the particular date or dates referenced therein, and the Corporation does not undertake any obligation to, and disclaims any duty to, update any of the information provided.
The information provided in Item 7.01 of this report, including Exhibits 99.2 and 99.3, shall not be deemed “filed” for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, nor shall the information or Exhibits 99.2 or 99.3 be deemed incorporated by reference in any filings under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.
ITEM 9.01. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND EXHIBITS.
(d) Exhibits.
Exhibit 99.1 is filed herewith. Exhibits 99.2 and 99.3 are furnished herewith.
EXHIBIT NO.  DESCRIPTION OF EXHIBIT
  
  
  
104Cover Page Interactive Data File (embedded in the cover page formatted in Inline XBRL)



SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the Corporation has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
 
BANK OF AMERICA CORPORATION
By: /s/ Rudolf A. Bless
 Rudolf A. Bless
 Chief Accounting Officer

Dated: October 17, 2022


1 Q3-22 Financial Highlights2 Q3-22 Business Segment Highlights2,3(B) Consumer Banking Global Wealth and Investment Management Global Banking Global Markets Bank of America Reports Q3-22 Net Income of $7.1 Billion; EPS of $0.81 Revenue Grew 8%1 led by 24% Improvement in Net Interest Income to $13.8 Billion Fifth Consecutive Quarter of Operating Leverage(A); CET1 Ratio of 11.0% See page 10 for endnotes. Amounts may not total due to rounding. 1 Revenue, net of interest expense 2 Financial Highlights and Business Segment Highlights are compared to the year-ago quarter unless noted. Loan and deposit balances are shown on an average basis unless noted. 3 The Corporation reports the results of operations of its four business segments and All Other on a fully taxable-equivalent (FTE) basis. 4 Sum of ending deposits, loans and leases, including margin receivables, and consumer investments, excluding deposit sweep balances. 5 Represents the percentage of consumer checking accounts that are estimated to be the customer’s primary account based on multiple relationship factors (e.g., linked to their direct deposit). 6 Source: Dealogic as of October 1, 2022. 7 Predominantly offsetting shares awarded under equity-based compensation plans. 8 Return on average tangible common shareholders’ equity ratio and tangible book value per common share represent non-GAAP financial measures. For more information, see page 19. • Net income of $7.1 billion, or $0.81 per diluted share • Pretax income declined 7% to $8.3 billion reflecting a reserve build compared to a reserve release in Q3-21(C) – Pretax, pre-provision income(D) increased 10% to $9.2 billion • Revenue, net of interest expense, increased 8% to $24.5 billion – Net interest income (NII)(E) up $2.7 billion, or 24%, to $13.8 billion, driven by benefits from higher interest rates, including lower premium amortization expense, and solid loan growth – Noninterest income of $10.7 billion decreased $935 million, or 8%, as higher sales and trading revenue was more than offset by lower investment banking and asset management fees as well as lower service charges • Provision for credit losses of $898 million increased $1.5 billion – Net reserve build of $378 million vs. net reserve release of $1.1 billion in Q3-21(C) – Net charge-offs of $520 million increased 12% • Noninterest expense increased $863 million, or 6%, to $15.3 billion and included $354 million related to the settlement of legacy monoline insurance litigation • Average loan and lease balances up $114 billion, or 12%, to $1.0 trillion led by strong commercial loan growth as well as higher credit card balances • Average deposits up $20 billion, or 1%, to $2.0 trillion • Average Global Liquidity Sources of $941 billion(F) • Common equity tier 1 (CET1) ratio of 11.0% (Standardized)(G) increased by 49 basis points from Q2-22; paid $1.8 billion in common dividends and repurchased $450 million of common stock7 • Return on average common shareholders' equity ratio of 10.8%; return on average tangible common shareholders' equity ratio of 15.2%8 • Net income of $1.1 billion • Sales and trading revenue up 13% to $4.1 billion, including net debit valuation adjustment (DVA) losses of $14 million; Fixed Income Currencies and Commodities (FICC) revenue of $2.6 billion and Equities revenue of $1.5 billion • Excluding net DVA(H), sales and trading revenue up 13% to $4.1 billion; FICC up 27% to $2.6 billion; Equities down 4% to $1.5 billion • Zero days of trading losses in Q3-22 From Chair and CEO Brian Moynihan: “We continued to see strong organic client growth across our businesses, with increased client activity helping to drive revenue up by 8%. Our U.S. consumer clients remained resilient with strong, although slower growing, spending levels and still maintained elevated deposit amounts. Across the bank, we grew loans by 12% over the last year as we delivered the financial resources to support our clients. Our team adapted well to our new capital requirements and improved our CET1 ratio by 49 basis points to 11%, above our new regulatory minimums. I am proud of our teammates’ efforts to deliver for our clients and shareholders.” • Net income of $1.2 billion • Client balances of $3.2 trillion, down 12%, driven by lower market valuations, partially offset by net client flows • Pretax margin of 29% • Client Activity – AUM balances of $1.3 trillion; $42 billion of AUM flows since Q3-21 – Average loan and lease balances of $224 billion, up $24 billion, or 12%; 50th consecutive quarter of average loan and lease balance growth – Added more than 5,700 net new relationships across Merrill and Private Bank • Net income of $2.0 billion • Total investment banking fees (excl. self-led) of $1.2 billion, decrease of 46%, reflecting weaker industry-wide underwriting activity this year • No. 3 in investment banking fees6 • Client Activity – Average loan and lease balances of $384 billion, up $60 billion, or 18% – Global Transaction Services revenue of $2.8 billion, up $858 million, or 44% • Net income of $3.1 billion • Client balances of $1.6 trillion, up 1%4 • Average deposits of more than $1 trillion, up $68 billion, or 7% • Combined credit/debit card spend of $218 billion, up 9% • Client Activity – Added ~418,000 net new Consumer checking accounts in Q3-22; 15th consecutive quarter of growth and highest quarter since Q3-08 – Record 35.6 million Consumer checking accounts with 92% being primary5 – Small Business checking accounts of 3.7 million, up 5% – Digital sales grew 36%


 
2 Bank of America Financial Highlights Three Months Ended ($ in billions, except per share data) 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Total revenue, net of interest expense $24.5 $22.7 $22.8 Provision for credit losses 0.9 0.5 (0.6) Noninterest expense 15.3 15.3 14.4 Pretax income 8.3 6.9 9.0 Pretax, pre-provision income1(D) 9.2 7.4 8.3 Income tax expense 1.2 0.6 1.3 Net Income 7.1 6.2 7.7 Diluted earnings per share $0.81 $0.73 $0.85 1 Pretax, pre-provision income represents a non-GAAP financial measure. For more information, see page 19. From Chief Financial Officer Alastair Borthwick: “We delivered a solid quarter for shareholders as we continued to execute on our responsible growth strategy. We grew revenue, delivered operating leverage for the 5th consecutive quarter, continued our steady investments in the franchise, and managed risk well. This helped us to deliver strong pretax, pre-provision income growth year over year.” Net Interest Income $11.1 $11.4 $11.6 $12.4 $13.8 1.68% 1.67% 1.69% 1.86% 2.06% Net Interest Income Net Interest Yield Q3 2021 Q4 2021 Q1 2022 Q2 2022 Q3 2022 Average Loans and Leases $921 $945 $978 $1,015 $1,034 Q3 2021 Q4 2021 Q1 2022 Q2 2022 Q3 2022 Spotlight on Loan and NII Growth ($B) 1 1 Fully taxable equivalent (FTE) basis(E)


 
3 Consumer Banking1,2 Financial Results Three months ended ($ in millions) 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Total revenue2 $9,904 $9,136 $8,838 Provision for credit losses 738 350 247 Noninterest expense 5,097 4,959 4,558 Pretax income 4,069 3,827 4,033 Income tax expense 997 938 988 Net income $3,072 $2,889 $3,045 Business Highlights3(B) Three months ended ($ in billions) 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Average deposits $1,069.1 $1,078.0 $1,000.8 Average loans and leases 295.2 289.6 281.4 Consumer investment assets (EOP)4 302.4 315.2 353.3 Active mobile banking users (MM) 34.9 34.2 32.5 Number of financial centers 3,932 3,984 4,215 Efficiency ratio 51 % 54 % 52 % Return on average allocated capital 30 29 31 Total Consumer Credit Card3 Average credit card outstanding balances $85.0 $81.0 $75.6 Total credit/debit spend 218.2 220.5 200.6 Risk-adjusted margin 10.1 % 9.9 % 10.7 % 1 Comparisons are to the year-ago quarter unless noted. 2 Revenue, net of interest expense. 3 The Consumer credit card portfolio includes Consumer Banking and GWIM. 4 Consumer investment assets includes client brokerage assets, deposit sweep balances and AUM in Consumer Banking. 5 Represents the percentage of consumer checking accounts that are estimated to be the customer’s primary account based on multiple relationship factors (e.g., linked to their direct deposit). 6 As of August 2022. Includes clients in Consumer, Small Business and GWIM. 7 Household adoption represents households with consumer bank login activities in a 90-day period, as of August 2022. • Net income of $3.1 billion increased 1% as revenue improvement was partially offset by business investments and higher provision for credit losses – Pretax income of $4.1 billion increased 1% – Pretax, pre-provision income(D) of $4.8 billion increased 12% • Revenue of $9.9 billion improved 12% due to increased NII driven by higher balances and interest rates, partially offset by the impact of reduced customer non-sufficient funds and overdraft fees • Provision for credit losses was $738 million, primarily driven by loan growth, and increased $491 million from Q3-21, as the prior year benefited from a reserve release(C) • Noninterest expense of $5.1 billion increased 12%, primarily driven by investments in the business, including marketing and technology, and compensation and benefits – Efficiency ratio of 51% Business Highlights1,3(B) • Average deposits exceeded $1 trillion and were up $68 billion, or 7%; 5th straight quarter of average deposits greater than $1 trillion – 56% of deposits in checking accounts; 92% primary accounts5 • Average loans and leases of $295 billion increased $14 billion, or 5% • Consumer investment assets4 of $302 billion declined $51 billion, or 14%, driven by lower market valuations, partially offset by $24 billion of strong client flows from new and existing clients – Record 3.4 million consumer investment accounts, up 6% • Combined credit / debit card spend up $18 billion, or 9%; credit card up 13% and debit card up 6% • 10.1 million Total clients6 enrolled in Preferred Rewards, up 10%, with 99% annualized retention rate Digital Usage Continued to Grow1 • Record 72% of overall households7 actively using digital platforms • Record 43.5 million active digital banking users, up 6% or ~2.6 million • ~1.9 million digital sales, up 36% • Record 3.0 billion digital logins, up 12% • 17.7 million active Zelle® users sent and received 255 million transfers worth $77 billion, up 26% and 29% YoY, respectively • Clients booked ~923,000 digital appointments Continued Business Leadership • No. 1 in estimated U.S. Retail Deposits(a) • No. 1 Online Banking and Mobile Banking Functionality(b) • No. 1 in customer satisfaction with Merchant Services by J.D. Power(c) • No. 1 Small Business Lender(d) • Best Bank in the U.S.(e) • Best Consumer Digital Bank in the U.S.(f) • Certified by J.D. Power for providing outstanding client satisfaction for financial wellness support(g) See page 11 for Business Leadership sources.


 
4 Global Wealth and Investment Management1,2 Financial Results Three months ended ($ in millions) 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Total revenue2 $5,429 $5,433 $5,310 Provision for credit losses 37 33 (58) Noninterest expense 3,816 3,875 3,744 Pretax income 1,576 1,525 1,624 Income tax expense 386 374 398 Net income $1,190 $1,151 $1,226 Business Highlights(B) Three months ended ($ in billions) 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Average deposits $339.5 $363.9 $339.4 Average loans and leases 223.7 219.3 199.7 Total client balances (EOP) 3,248.8 3,367.1 3,692.8 AUM flows 4.1 1.0 14.8 Pretax margin 29 % 28 % 31 % Return on average allocated capital 27 26 30 1 Comparisons are to the year-ago quarter unless noted. 2 Revenue, net of interest expense. Continued Business Leadership • No. 1 on Forbes’ Best-in-State Wealth Advisors (2022), Top Women Wealth Advisors (2022), Top Women Wealth Advisors Best-in State (2022), and Top Next Generation Advisors (2022) • No. 1 on Barron’s Top 100 Women Financial Advisors List (2022) • No. 1 on Financial Planning's 'Top 40 Advisors Under 40' List (2022) • Celent Model Wealth Manager award for Client Experience (2022) • Aite-Novarica award for Digital Client Experience (2022) • No. 1 in personal trust AUM(h) • Best Private Bank in the U.S. by Family Wealth Report(i) and Global Private Banker(j) • Best Philanthropy Offering in the U.S. by WealthBriefing(k) See page 11 for Business Leadership sources. • Net income of $1.2 billion decreased 3% – Pretax income of $1.6 billion decreased 3% – Pretax, pre-provision income(D) of $1.6 billion increased 3% • Revenue of $5.4 billion increased 2%, driven by higher NII, partially offset by the impact of lower market valuations on noninterest income • Noninterest expense of $3.8 billion increased 2%, driven by investments in the business, partially offset by lower revenue-related incentives Business Highlights1(B) • Total client balances of $3.2 trillion decreased 12%, driven by lower market valuations, partially offset by net client flows – AUM flows of $42 billion since Q3-21 – Average deposits of $339 billion, relatively flat – Average loans and leases of $224 billion increased $24 billion, or 12%, driven by residential mortgage lending, custom lending, and securities-based lending; 50th consecutive quarter of average loan and lease balance growth Merrill Wealth Management Highlights1 Client Activity and Advisor Engagement – Client balances of $2.7 trillion – AUM balances of $1.0 trillion – Added ~5,200 net new households in Q3-22, up 23% Strong Digital Usage Continued – 80% of Merrill households digitally active across the enterprise – Continued growth of advisor/client digital communications; 375,000 households exchanged ~1.3 million secure messages – Record 77% households enrolled in eDelivery; 268,000 planning reports generated, up 48% from Q3-21 – Record 75% of eligible checks deposited through automated channels – Record Erica® interactions up 35% Client Engagement – Client balances of $538 billion – AUM balances of $296 billion – Added ~550 net new relationships in Q3-22, up 101% Bank of America Private Bank Highlights1 Strong Digital Usage Continued – 86% of clients digitally active across the enterprise – 75% of eligible checks deposited through automated channels – Clients increasingly leveraging the convenience and effectiveness of our digital capabilities: ▪ Record Erica® interactions up 62% ▪ Record Zelle® transactions up 41% ▪ Record Digital wallet transactions up 63%


 
5 Global Banking1,2,3 Financial Results Three months ended ($ in millions) 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Total revenue2,3 $5,591 $5,006 $5,245 Provision for credit losses 170 157 (781) Noninterest expense 2,651 2,799 2,534 Pretax income 2,770 2,050 3,492 Income tax expense 734 543 943 Net income $2,036 $1,507 $2,549 Business Highlights2(B) Three months ended ($ in billions) 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Average deposits $495.2 $509.3 $534.2 Average loans and leases 384.3 377.2 324.7 Total Corp. IB fees (excl. self- led)2 1.2 1.1 2.2 Global Banking IB fees2 0.7 0.7 1.3 Business Lending revenue 2.1 2.0 1.9 Global Transaction Services revenue4 2.8 2.4 1.9 Efficiency ratio 47 % 56 % 48 % Return on average allocated capital 18 14 24 1 Comparisons are to the year-ago quarter unless noted. 2 Global Banking and Global Markets share in certain deal economics from investment banking, loan origination activities, and sales and trading activities. 3 Revenue, net of interest expense. 4 Prior periods have been revised to conform to current-period presentation. • Net income of $2.0 billion decreased 20% – Pretax income of $2.8 billion decreased 21% – Pretax, pre-provision income(D) of $2.9 billion increased 8% • Revenue of $5.6 billion increased $346 million – NII of $3.3 billion increased $1.1 billion driven by benefits from higher interest rates and strong loan growth – Noninterest income of $2.3 billion decreased $795 million driven by lower investment banking fees and leasing-related revenue as well as lower treasury service charges due to higher earnings credit rates • Provision for credit losses was $170 million, primarily driven by a dampening macroeconomic outlook, with an increase of $951 million from Q3-21, as the prior year benefited from a reserve release(C) • Noninterest expense of $2.7 billion increased 5%, primarily reflecting continued investments in the business, including strategic hiring Continued Business Leadership • Global Most Innovative Financial Institution – 2022(l) • World's Best Bank, North America’s Best Bank for Small to Medium-sized Enterprises, and Best Bank in the US(m) • Best Global Bank for Payments & Collections(n) • Model Bank for Corporate Digital Banking – For CashPro App(o) • Best Bank for Cash Management in North America(n) • Impact Awards in Cash Management and Payments – Product Development for CashPro Forecasting(p) • World’s Best Bank for Payments and Treasury and North America’s Best Bank for Transaction Services(m) • Outstanding Global Leader in Social Bonds, Outstanding Leader in Social Bonds and Sustainable Loans for North America(q) • Relationships with 73% of the Global Fortune 500; 95% of the U.S. Fortune 1,000 (2022) See page 11 for Business Leadership sources. Digital Usage Continued to Grow1 • 76% digitally active clients across commercial, corporate, and business banking clients (CashPro & BA360 platforms) (as of August 2022) • CashPro App Active Users increased 29% and sign- ins increased 41% (rolling 12 months), surpassing 2.0 million sign-ins in the past year • CashPro App Payment Approvals value was $602 billion, increasing 100% (rolling 12 months) • Global Payments to Digital Wallets increased 16% (rolling 12 months as of August 2022) Business Highlights1,2(B) • Average loans and leases of $384 billion increased $60 billion, or 18%, reflecting strong client demand • Average deposits of $495 billion decreased $39 billion, or 7% • Total investment banking fees (excl. self-led) of $1.2 billion decreased $1.0 billion, or 46%


 
6 Global Markets1,2,3,6 Financial Results Three months ended ($ in millions) 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Total revenue2,3 $4,483 $4,502 $4,519 Net DVA4 (14) 158 (20) Total revenue (excl. net DVA)2,3,4 $4,497 $4,344 $4,539 Provision for credit losses 11 8 16 Noninterest expense(I) 3,023 3,109 3,252 Pretax income 1,449 1,385 1,251 Income tax expense 384 367 325 Net income $1,065 $1,018 $926 Net income (excl. net DVA)4 $1,076 $898 $941 Business Highlights2(B) Three months ended ($ in billions) 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Average total assets $847.9 $866.7 $804.9 Average trading-related assets 592.4 606.1 563.7 Average loans and leases 120.4 114.4 97.1 Sales and trading revenue2 4.1 4.2 3.6 Sales and trading revenue (excl. net DVA)2(H) 4.1 4.0 3.6 Global Markets IB fees2 0.4 0.5 0.8 Efficiency ratio 67 % 69 % 72 % Return on average allocated capital 10 10 10 1 Comparisons are to the year-ago quarter unless noted. 2 Global Banking and Global Markets share in certain deal economics from investment banking, loan origination activities, and sales and trading activities. 3 Revenue, net of interest expense. 4 Revenue and net income, excluding net DVA, are non-GAAP financial measures. See endnote H on page 10 for more information. 5 VaR model uses a historical simulation approach based on three years of historical data and an expected shortfall methodology equivalent to a 99% confidence level. Average VaR was $117MM, $118MM and $78MM for Q3-22, Q2-22 and Q3-21, respectively. 6 The explanations for current period-over-period changes for Global Markets are the same for amounts including and excluding net DVA. 7 Macro products include currencies, interest rates and commodities products. • Net income of $1.1 billion increased $139 million, or 15% – Excluding net DVA, net income of $1.1 billion increased 14%4 • Revenue of $4.5 billion decreased 1%, primarily driven by lower investment banking fees, partially offset by higher sales and trading revenue – Excluding net DVA, revenue decreased $42 million, or 1%4 • Noninterest expense of $3.0 billion decreased $229 million, or 7%, primarily driven by the absence of expenses related to a liquidating business activity, which was realigned from Global Markets to All Other(I) in Q4-21 • Average VaR of $117 million5 Business Highlights1,2,6(B) • Sales and trading revenue increased 13% to $4.1 billion – FICC revenue increased to $2.6 billion, driven by improved performance across all macro products,7 partially offset by a weaker trading performance for credit and mortgage products – Equities revenue decreased to $1.5 billion, driven by lower client activity in Asia and a weaker trading performance in cash, partially offset by increased client activity in derivatives • Excluding net DVA, sales and trading revenue increased 13% to $4.1 billion(H) – FICC revenue of $2.6 billion increased 27% – Equities revenue of $1.5 billion decreased 4% Additional Highlights • 670+ research analysts covering 3,500+ companies, 1,180+ corporate bond issuers across 55+ economies and 24 industries Continued Business Leadership • Americas Derivatives House of the Year and Americas House of the Year for Equity Derivatives, FX Derivatives, Interest Rate Derivatives, and Commodities Derivatives(r) • Interest Rate Derivatives House of the Year(s) • Global Leader for Sustainable Project Finance(l) • Overall Leader for North America in Sustainable Finance(l) • No. 2 Global Research Firm(t) • No. 2 Global Fixed Income Research Team(t) • Securitization Research Team of the Year(r) • Most Impressive Corporate Bond House in Dollars(r) • No. 1 Municipal Bonds Underwriter(u) See page 11 for Business Leadership sources.


 
7 All Other1,2 Financial Results Three months ended ($ in millions) 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Total revenue2 $(799) $(1,286) $(1,045) Provision for credit losses (58) (25) (48) Noninterest expense(I) 716 531 352 Pretax loss (1,457) (1,792) (1,349) Income tax expense (benefit) (1,176) (1,474) (1,294) Net income (loss) $(281) $(318) $(55) 1 Comparisons are to the year-ago quarter unless noted. 2 Revenue, net of interest expense. Note: All Other primarily consists of asset and liability management (ALM) activities, liquidating businesses and certain expenses not otherwise allocated to a business segment. ALM activities encompass interest rate and foreign currency risk management activities for which substantially all of the results are allocated to our business segments. • Net loss of $281 million, compared to net loss of $55 million in Q3-21, driven primarily by higher litigation expense as a result of the legacy monoline settlement and the realignment of a liquidating business activity from Global Markets to All Other(I) in Q4-21 • Total corporate effective tax rate (ETR) for the quarter was 14.7% driven by recurring ESG tax credit benefits – ETR includes $152 million net reduction in tax credit benefits, as certain solar investment tax credits recognized in 1H22 were reversed and replaced with production tax credits, which are now available under the Inflation Reduction Act and are expected to be claimed – Excluding ESG tax credits, the ETR would have been approximately 24%


 
8 Credit Quality1 Highlights Three months ended ($ in millions) 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Provision for credit losses $898 $523 ($624) Net charge-offs 520 571 463 Net charge-off ratio2 0.20 % 0.23 % 0.20 % At period-end Nonperforming loans and leases $3,983 $4,164 $4,714 Nonperforming loans and leases ratio 0.39 % 0.41 % 0.51 % Allowance for loan and lease losses $12,302 $11,973 $13,155 Allowance for loan and lease losses ratio3 1.20 % 1.17 % 1.43 % 1 Comparisons are to the year-ago quarter unless noted. 2 Net charge-off ratio is calculated as annualized net charge-offs divided by average outstanding loans and leases during the period. 3 Allowance for loan and lease losses ratio is calculated as allowance for loan and lease losses divided by loans and leases outstanding at the end of the period. Note: Ratios do not include loans accounted for under the fair value option. Charge-offs • Total net charge-offs of $520 million decreased $51 million from Q2-22 – Consumer net charge-offs of $459 million decreased $66 million from Q2-22, primarily driven by the absence of charge-offs associated with non-core mortgage sales – Commercial net charge-offs of $61 million remained low • Net charge-off ratio of 20 basis points decreased 3 basis points from Q2-22; net charge-off ratio remained near historical lows2 Provision for credit losses • Provision for credit losses of $898 million – Net reserve build of $378 million in Q3-22 driven primarily by credit card loan growth and a dampening macroeconomic outlook(C) Allowance for credit losses • Allowance for loan and lease losses of $12.3 billion represented 1.20% of total loans and leases3 – Total allowance of $13.8 billion included $1.5 billion for unfunded commitments • Nonperforming loans decreased $181 million from Q2-22 to $4.0 billion – 63% of Consumer nonperforming loans are contractually current • Commercial reservable criticized utilized exposure of $17.7 billion decreased $455 million from Q2-22, driven by Commercial Real Estate


 
9 Balance Sheet, Liquidity and Capital Highlights ($ in billions except per share data, end of period, unless otherwise noted)(B) Three months ended 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Ending Balance Sheet Total assets $3,073.4 $3,111.6 $3,085.4 Total loans and leases 1,032.5 1,030.8 927.7 Total loans and leases in business segments (excluding All Other) 1,022.1 1,019.9 910.9 Total deposits 1,938.1 1,984.3 1,964.8 Average Balance Sheet Average total assets $3,105.5 $3,157.9 $3,076.5 Average loans and leases 1,034.3 1,014.9 920.5 Average deposits 1,962.8 2,012.1 1,942.7 Funding and Liquidity Long-term debt $269.1 $275.7 $278.6 Global Liquidity Sources, average(F) 941 984 1,120 Equity Common shareholders’ equity $240.4 $240.0 $249.0 Common equity ratio 7.8 % 7.7 % 8.1 % Tangible common shareholders’ equity1 $170.2 $169.8 $178.7 Tangible common equity ratio1 5.7 % 5.6 % 5.9 % Per Share Data Common shares outstanding (in billions) 8.02 8.04 8.24 Book value per common share $29.96 $29.87 $30.22 Tangible book value per common share1 21.21 21.13 21.69 Regulatory Capital(G) CET1 capital $175.6 $171.8 $174.4 Standardized approach Risk-weighted assets $1,599 $1,638 $1,568 CET1 ratio 11.0 % 10.5 % 11.1 % Advanced approaches Risk-weighted assets $1,391 $1,407 $1,380 CET1 ratio 12.6 % 12.2 % 12.6 % Supplementary leverage Supplementary leverage ratio (SLR) 5.8 % 5.5 % 5.6 % 1 Represents a non-GAAP financial measure. For reconciliation, see page 19.


 
10 Endnotes Three months ended (Dollars in millions) 9/30/2022 6/30/2022 9/30/2021 Sales and trading revenue Fixed-income, currencies and commodities $ 2,552 $ 2,500 $ 2,009 Equities 1,540 1,653 1,605 Total sales and trading revenue $ 4,092 $ 4,153 $ 3,614 Sales and trading revenue, excluding net debit valuation adjustment1 Fixed-income, currencies and commodities $ 2,567 $ 2,340 $ 2,025 Equities 1,539 1,655 1,609 Total sales and trading revenue, excluding net debit valuation adjustment $ 4,106 $ 3,995 $ 3,634 A Operating leverage is calculated as the year-over-year percentage change in revenue, net of interest expense, less the percentage change in noninterest expense. B We present certain key financial and nonfinancial performance indicators (KPIs) that management uses when assessing consolidated and/or segment results. We believe this information is useful because it provides management and investors with information about underlying operational performance and trends. KPIs are presented in Balance Sheet, Liquidity and Capital Highlights and on the Segment pages for each segment. C Reserve Build (or Release) is calculated by subtracting net charge-offs for the period from the provision for credit losses recognized in that period. The period-end allowance, or reserve, for credit losses reflects the beginning of the period allowance adjusted for net charge-offs recorded in that period plus the provision for credit losses recognized in that period. D Pretax, pre-provision income (PTPI) at the consolidated level, as well as at the segment level, is a non-GAAP financial measure calculated by adjusting the respective entity’s pretax income to add back provision for credit losses. Management believes that PTPI (both at the consolidated and segment level) is a useful financial measure as it enables an assessment of the Company’s ability to generate earnings to cover credit losses through a credit cycle and provides an additional basis for comparing the Company's results of operations between periods by isolating the impact of provision for credit losses, which can vary significantly between periods. For Reconciliations to GAAP financial measures, see page 19 for Total company and below for segments. 1 For the three months ended September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, net DVA gains (losses) were $(14) million, $158 million and $(20) million, FICC net DVA gains (losses) were $(15) million, $160 million and $(16) million, and Equities net DVA gains (losses) were $1 million, $(2) million and $(4) million, respectively. I Effective October 1, 2021, a business activity previously included in the Global Markets segment is being reported as a liquidating business in All Other, consistent with a realignment in performance reporting to senior management. The activity was not material to Global Markets' results of operations, and historical results for the third quarter of 2021 were not restated. (Dollars in millions) Third Quarter 2022 Consumer Banking GWIM Global Banking Pretax income $ 4,069 $ 1,576 $ 2,770 Provision for credit losses 738 37 170 Pretax, pre-provision income $ 4,807 $ 1,613 $ 2,940 Second Quarter 2022 Consumer Banking GWIM Global Banking Pretax income $ 3,827 $ 1,525 $ 2,050 Provision for credit losses 350 33 157 Pretax, pre-provision income $ 4,177 $ 1,558 $ 2,207 Third Quarter 2021 Consumer Banking GWIM Global Banking Pretax income $ 4,033 $ 1,624 $ 3,492 Provision for credit losses 247 (58) (781) Pretax, pre-provision income $ 4,280 $ 1,566 $ 2,711 E We also measure NII on an FTE basis, which is a non-GAAP financial measure. FTE basis is a performance measure used in operating the business that management believes provides investors with meaningful information on the interest margin for comparative purposes. We believe that this presentation allows for comparison of amounts from both taxable and tax-exempt sources and is consistent with industry practice. NII on an FTE basis was $13.9 billion, $12.5 billion, $11.7 billion, $11.5 billion and $11.2 billion for the three months ended September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022, March 31, 2022, December 31, 2021 and September 30, 2021, respectively. The FTE adjustment was $106 million, $103 million, $106 million, $105 million and $101 million for the three months ended September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022, March 31, 2022, December 31, 2021 and September 30, 2021, respectively. F Global Liquidity Sources (GLS) include cash and high-quality, liquid, unencumbered securities, inclusive of U.S. government securities, U.S. agency securities, U.S. agency mortgage-backed securities, and a select group of non-U.S. government and supranational securities, and other investment-grade securities, and are readily available to meet funding requirements as they arise. It does not include Federal Reserve Discount Window or Federal Home Loan Bank borrowing capacity. Transfers of liquidity among legal entities may be subject to certain regulatory and other restrictions. G Regulatory capital ratios at September 30, 2022 are preliminary. The Corporation reports regulatory capital ratios under both the Standardized and Advanced approaches. The approach that yields the lower ratio is used to assess capital adequacy, which for CET1 is the Standardized approach for all periods presented. H The below table includes Global Markets sales and trading revenue, excluding net DVA, which is a non-GAAP financial measure. We believe that the presentation of measures that exclude this item is useful because such measures provide additional information to assess the underlying operational performance and trends of our businesses and to allow better comparison of period-to-period operating performance.


 
11 (a) Estimated U.S. retail deposits based on June 30, 2022 FDIC deposit data. (b) Javelin 2022 Online and Mobile Banking Scorecards. (c) Bank of America received the highest score in the J.D. Power 2022 Merchant Services Satisfaction Study of customers’ satisfaction with credit card/debit payment processors among small business owners/operators. Visit jdpower.com/awards for more details. (d) FDIC, 2Q22. (e) Global Finance, May 2022. (f) Global Finance, August 2022. (g) J.D. Power 2022 Financial Health Support CertificationSM is based on exceeding customer experience benchmarks using client surveys and a best practices verification. For more information, visit jdpower.com/awards. (h) Industry Q2-22 FDIC call reports. (i) Family Wealth Report, 2022. (j) Global Private Banking, The Digital Banker, 2021. (k) WealthBriefing, 2022. (l) Global Finance, 2022. (m) Euromoney, 2022. (n) Global Finance Treasury & Cash Management Awards, 2022. (o) Celent, 2022. (p) Aite-Novarica Group, 2022. (q) Global Finance, 2021. (r) GlobalCapital, 2022. (s) Risk.net, 2022. (t) Institutional Investor, 2021. (u) Refinitiv, 2022 YTD. Business Leadership Sources


 
12 Contact Information and Investor Conference Call Invitation Investor Call Information Chief Executive Officer Brian Moynihan and Chief Financial Officer Alastair Borthwick will discuss third-quarter 2022 financial results in a conference call at 8:30 a.m. ET today. The presentation and supporting materials can be accessed on the Bank of America Investor Relations website at https://investor.bankofamerica.com. For a listen-only connection to the conference call, dial 1.877.200.4456 (U.S.) or 1.785.424.1732 (international). The conference ID is 79795. Please dial in 10 minutes prior to the start of the call. Investors can access replays of the conference call by visiting the Investor Relations website or by calling 1.800.934.4850 (U.S.) or 1.402.220.1178 (international) from October 17 through 11:59 p.m. ET on October 27. Investors May Contact: Lee McEntire, Bank of America Phone: 1.980.388.6780 lee.mcentire@bofa.com Jonathan G. Blum, Bank of America (Fixed Income) Phone: 1.212.449.3112 jonathan.blum@bofa.com Bank of America Bank of America is one of the world’s leading financial institutions, serving individual consumers, small and middle-market businesses and large corporations with a full range of banking, investing, asset management and other financial and risk management products and services. The company provides unmatched convenience in the United States, serving approximately 68 million consumer and small business clients with approximately 3,900 retail financial centers, approximately 16,000 ATMs and award-winning digital banking with approximately 56 million verified digital users. Bank of America is a global leader in wealth management, corporate and investment banking and trading across a broad range of asset classes, serving corporations, governments, institutions and individuals around the world. Bank of America offers industry-leading support to approximately 3 million small business households through a suite of innovative, easy-to-use online products and services. The company serves clients through operations across the United States, its territories and approximately 35 countries. Bank of America Corporation stock (NYSE: BAC) is listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Forward-Looking Statements Bank of America Corporation (the “Corporation”) and its management may make certain statements that constitute “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements can be identified by the fact that they do not relate strictly to historical or current facts. Forward-looking statements often use words such as “anticipates,” “targets,” “expects,” “hopes,” “estimates,” “intends,” “plans,” “goals,” “believes,” “continue” and other similar expressions or future or conditional verbs such as “will,” “may,” “might,” “should,” “would” and “could.” Forward-looking statements represent the Corporation’s current expectations, plans or forecasts of its future results, revenues, provision for credit losses, expenses, efficiency ratio, capital measures, strategy, and future business and economic conditions more generally, and other future matters. These statements are not guarantees of future results or performance and involve certain known and unknown risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict and are often beyond the Corporation’s control. Actual outcomes and results may differ materially from those expressed in, or implied by, any of these forward- looking statements. Reporters May Contact: Bill Halldin, Bank of America Phone: 1.916.718.1251 william.halldin@bofa.com Christopher Feeney, Bank of America Phone: 1.980.386.6794 (office) christopher.feeney@bofa.com


 
13 You should not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statement and should consider the following uncertainties and risks, as well as the risks and uncertainties more fully discussed under Item 1A. Risk Factors of the Corporation’s 2021 Annual Report on Form 10-K and in any of the Corporation’s subsequent Securities and Exchange Commission filings: the Corporation’s potential judgments, orders, settlements, penalties, fines and reputational damage resulting from pending or future litigation and regulatory investigations, proceedings and enforcement actions, including as a result of our participation in and execution of government programs related to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, such as the processing of unemployment benefits for California and certain other states; the possibility that the Corporation's future liabilities may be in excess of its recorded liability and estimated range of possible loss for litigation, and regulatory and government actions; the possibility that the Corporation could face increased claims from one or more parties involved in mortgage securitizations; the Corporation’s ability to resolve representations and warranties repurchase and related claims; the risks related to the discontinuation of the London Interbank Offered Rate and other reference rates, including increased expenses and litigation and the effectiveness of hedging strategies; uncertainties about the financial stability and growth rates of non-U.S. jurisdictions, the risk that those jurisdictions may face difficulties servicing their sovereign debt, and related stresses on financial markets, currencies and trade, and the Corporation’s exposures to such risks, including direct, indirect and operational; the impact of U.S. and global interest rates, inflation, currency exchange rates, economic conditions, trade policies and tensions, including tariffs, and potential geopolitical instability; the impact of the interest rate, inflationary and macroeconomic environment on the Corporation’s business, financial condition and results of operations; the possibility that future credit losses may be higher than currently expected due to changes in economic assumptions, customer behavior, adverse developments with respect to U.S. or global economic conditions and other uncertainties, including the impact of supply chain disruptions, inflationary pressures and labor shortages on economic conditions and our business; potential losses related to the Corporation’s concentration of credit risk; the Corporation's ability to achieve its expense targets and expectations regarding revenue, net interest income, provision for credit losses, net charge-offs, effective tax rate, loan growth or other projections; adverse changes to the Corporation’s credit ratings from the major credit rating agencies; an inability to access capital markets or maintain deposits or borrowing costs; estimates of the fair value and other accounting values, subject to impairment assessments, of certain of the Corporation’s assets and liabilities; the estimated or actual impact of changes in accounting standards or assumptions in applying those standards; uncertainty regarding the content, timing and impact of regulatory capital and liquidity requirements; the impact of adverse changes to total loss- absorbing capacity requirements, stress capital buffer requirements and/or global systemically important bank surcharges; the potential impact of actions of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System on the Corporation’s capital plans; the effect of changes in or interpretations of income tax laws and regulations; the impact of implementation and compliance with U.S. and international laws, regulations and regulatory interpretations, including, but not limited to, recovery and resolution planning requirements, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation assessments, the Volcker Rule, fiduciary standards, derivatives regulations and the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act and any similar or related rules and regulations; a failure or disruption in or breach of the Corporation’s operational or security systems or infrastructure, or those of third parties, including as a result of cyber-attacks or campaigns; the risks related to the transition and physical impacts of climate change; our ability to achieve environmental, social and governance goals and commitments or the impact of any changes in the Corporation's sustainability strategy or commitments generally; the impact of any future federal government shutdown and uncertainty regarding the federal government’s debt limit or changes in fiscal, monetary or regulatory policy; the emergence of widespread health emergencies or pandemics, including the magnitude and duration of the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on U.S. and/or global financial market conditions and our business, results of operations, financial condition and prospects; the impact of natural disasters, extreme weather events, military conflict (including the Russia/Ukraine conflict, the possible expansion of such conflict and potential geopolitical consequences), terrorism or other geopolitical events; and other matters. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made, and the Corporation undertakes no obligation to update any forward- looking statement to reflect the impact of circumstances or events that arise after the date the forward-looking statement was made. “Bank of America” and “BofA Securities” are the marketing names used by the Global Banking and Global Markets divisions of Bank of America Corporation. Lending, other commercial banking activities, and trading in certain financial instruments are performed globally by banking affiliates of Bank of America Corporation, including Bank of America, N.A., Member FDIC. Trading in securities and financial instruments, and strategic advisory, and other investment banking activities, are performed globally by investment banking affiliates of Bank of America Corporation (“Investment Banking Affiliates”) or other affiliates, including, in the United States, BofA Securities, Inc., Merrill Lynch Professional Clearing Corp. and Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated, each of which are registered broker-dealers and Members of SIPC, and, in other jurisdictions, by locally registered entities. BofA Securities, Inc. and Merrill Lynch Professional Clearing Corp. are registered as futures commission merchants with the CFTC and are members of the NFA. Investment products offered by Investment Banking Affiliates: Are Not FDIC Insured · May Lose Value · Are Not Bank Guaranteed. Bank of America Corporation’s broker-dealers are not banks and are separate legal entities from their bank affiliates. The obligations of the broker-dealers are not obligations of their bank affiliates (unless explicitly stated otherwise), and these bank affiliates are not responsible for securities sold, offered, or recommended by the broker-dealers. The foregoing also applies to other non-bank affiliates. For more Bank of America news, including dividend announcements and other important information, visit the Bank of America newsroom at https://newsroom.bankofamerica.com. www.bankofamerica.com


 
Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation. 14 Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries Selected Financial Data (In millions, except per share data) Nine Months Ended September 30 Third Quarter 2022 Second Quarter 2022 Third Quarter 2021Summary Income Statement 2022 2021 Net interest income $ 37,781 $ 31,524 $ 13,765 $ 12,444 $ 11,094 Noninterest income 32,637 35,529 10,737 10,244 11,672 Total revenue, net of interest expense 70,418 67,053 24,502 22,688 22,766 Provision for credit losses 1,451 (4,105) 898 523 (624) Noninterest expense 45,895 45,000 15,303 15,273 14,440 Income before income taxes 23,072 26,158 8,301 6,892 8,950 Income tax expense 2,676 1,193 1,219 645 1,259 Net income $ 20,396 $ 24,965 $ 7,082 $ 6,247 $ 7,691 Preferred stock dividends 1,285 1,181 503 315 431 Net income applicable to common shareholders $ 19,111 $ 23,784 $ 6,579 $ 5,932 $ 7,260 Average common shares issued and outstanding 8,122.2 8,583.1 8,107.7 8,121.6 8,430.7 Average diluted common shares issued and outstanding 8,173.3 8,702.2 8,160.8 8,163.1 8,492.8 Summary Average Balance Sheet Total debt securities $ 940,808 $ 878,437 $ 901,654 $ 945,927 $ 949,009 Total loans and leases 1,009,211 912,091 1,034,334 1,014,886 920,509 Total earning assets 2,718,770 2,572,166 2,670,578 2,707,090 2,654,015 Total assets 3,156,657 2,990,984 3,105,546 3,157,855 3,076,452 Total deposits 2,006,584 1,879,597 1,962,775 2,012,079 1,942,705 Common shareholders’ equity 241,420 250,889 241,882 239,523 252,043 Total shareholders’ equity 269,514 274,726 271,017 268,197 275,484 Performance Ratios Return on average assets 0.86 % 1.12 % 0.90 % 0.79 % 0.99 % Return on average common shareholders’ equity 10.58 12.67 10.79 9.93 11.43 Return on average tangible common shareholders’ equity (1) 14.93 17.61 15.21 14.05 15.85 Per Common Share Information Earnings $ 2.35 $ 2.77 $ 0.81 $ 0.73 $ 0.86 Diluted earnings 2.34 2.75 0.81 0.73 0.85 Dividends paid 0.64 0.57 0.22 0.21 0.21 Book value 29.96 30.22 29.96 29.87 30.22 Tangible book value (1) 21.21 21.69 21.21 21.13 21.69 Summary Period-End Balance Sheet September 30 2022 June 30 2022 September 30 2021 Total debt securities $ 879,958 $ 932,910 $ 968,617 Total loans and leases 1,032,466 1,030,766 927,736 Total earning assets 2,639,450 2,662,871 2,658,502 Total assets 3,073,383 3,111,606 3,085,446 Total deposits 1,938,097 1,984,349 1,964,804 Common shareholders’ equity 240,390 239,984 249,023 Total shareholders’ equity 269,524 269,118 272,464 Common shares issued and outstanding 8,024.5 8,035.2 8,241.2 Nine Months Ended September 30 Third Quarter 2022 Second Quarter 2022 Third Quarter 2021Credit Quality 2022 2021 Total net charge-offs $ 1,483 $ 1,881 $ 520 $ 571 $ 463 Net charge-offs as a percentage of average loans and leases outstanding (2) 0.20 % 0.28 % 0.20 % 0.23 % 0.20 % Provision for credit losses $ 1,451 $ (4,105) $ 898 $ 523 $ (624) September 30 2022 June 30 2022 September 30 2021 Total nonperforming loans, leases and foreclosed properties (3) $ 4,156 $ 4,326 $ 4,831 Nonperforming loans, leases and foreclosed properties as a percentage of total loans, leases and foreclosed properties (3) 0.40 % 0.42 % 0.52 % Allowance for loan and lease losses $ 12,302 $ 11,973 $ 13,155 Allowance for loan and lease losses as a percentage of total loans and leases outstanding (2) 1.20 % 1.17 % 1.43 % For footnotes, see page 15.


 
Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation. 15 Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries Selected Financial Data (continued) (Dollars in millions) Capital Management September 30 2022 June 30 2022 September 30 2021 Regulatory capital metrics (4): Common equity tier 1 capital $ 175,554 $ 171,754 $ 174,407 Common equity tier 1 capital ratio - Standardized approach 11.0 % 10.5 % 11.1 % Common equity tier 1 capital ratio - Advanced approaches 12.6 12.2 12.6 Tier 1 leverage ratio 6.8 6.5 6.6 Supplementary leverage ratio 5.8 5.5 5.6 Total ending equity to total ending assets ratio 8.8 8.6 8.8 Common equity ratio 7.8 7.7 8.1 Tangible equity ratio (5) 6.6 6.5 6.7 Tangible common equity ratio (5) 5.7 5.6 5.9 (1) Return on average tangible common shareholders’ equity and tangible book value per share of common stock are non-GAAP financial measures. We believe the use of ratios that utilize tangible equity provides additional useful information because they present measures of those assets that can generate income. Tangible book value per share provides additional useful information about the level of tangible assets in relation to outstanding shares of common stock. See Reconciliations to GAAP Financial Measures on page 19. (2) Ratios do not include loans accounted for under the fair value option. Charge-off ratios are annualized for the quarterly presentation. (3) Balances do not include past due consumer credit card loans, consumer loans secured by real estate where repayments are insured by the Federal Housing Administration and individually insured long-term stand-by agreements (fully insured home loans), and in general, other consumer and commercial loans not secured by real estate, and nonperforming loans held for sale or accounted for under the fair value option. (4) Regulatory capital ratios at September 30, 2022 are preliminary. Bank of America Corporation reports regulatory capital ratios under both the Standardized and Advanced approaches. The approach that yields the lower ratio is used to assess capital adequacy, which for Common equity tier 1 is the Standardized approach for all periods presented. (5) Tangible equity ratio equals period-end tangible shareholders’ equity divided by period-end tangible assets. Tangible common equity ratio equals period-end tangible common shareholders’ equity divided by period-end tangible assets. Tangible shareholders’ equity and tangible assets are non-GAAP financial measures. We believe the use of ratios that utilize tangible equity provides additional useful information because they present measures of those assets that can generate income. See Reconciliations to GAAP Financial Measures on page 19.


 
Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation. 16 Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries Quarterly Results by Business Segment and All Other (Dollars in millions) Third Quarter 2022 Consumer Banking GWIM Global Banking Global Markets All Other Total revenue, net of interest expense $ 9,904 $ 5,429 $ 5,591 $ 4,483 $ (799) Provision for credit losses 738 37 170 11 (58) Noninterest expense 5,097 3,816 2,651 3,023 716 Net income (loss) 3,072 1,190 2,036 1,065 (281) Return on average allocated capital (1) 30 % 27 % 18 % 10 % n/m Balance Sheet Average Total loans and leases $ 295,231 $ 223,734 $ 384,305 $ 120,435 $ 10,629 Total deposits 1,069,093 339,487 495,154 38,820 20,221 Allocated capital (1) 40,000 17,500 44,500 42,500 n/m Quarter end Total loans and leases $ 297,825 $ 224,858 $ 377,711 $ 121,721 $ 10,351 Total deposits 1,072,580 324,859 484,309 37,318 19,031 Second Quarter 2022 Consumer Banking GWIM Global Banking Global Markets All Other Total revenue, net of interest expense $ 9,136 $ 5,433 $ 5,006 $ 4,502 $ (1,286) Provision for credit losses 350 33 157 8 (25) Noninterest expense 4,959 3,875 2,799 3,109 531 Net income (loss) 2,889 1,151 1,507 1,018 (318) Return on average allocated capital (1) 29 % 26 % 14 % 10 % n/m Balance Sheet Average Total loans and leases $ 289,595 $ 219,277 $ 377,248 $ 114,375 $ 14,391 Total deposits 1,078,020 363,943 509,261 41,192 19,663 Allocated capital (1) 40,000 17,500 44,500 42,500 n/m Quarter end Total loans and leases $ 294,570 $ 221,705 $ 385,376 $ 118,290 $ 10,825 Total deposits 1,077,215 347,991 499,714 40,055 19,374 Third Quarter 2021 Consumer Banking GWIM Global Banking Global Markets All Other Total revenue, net of interest expense $ 8,838 $ 5,310 $ 5,245 $ 4,519 $ (1,045) Provision for credit losses 247 (58) (781) 16 (48) Noninterest expense 4,558 3,744 2,534 3,252 352 Net income 3,045 1,226 2,549 926 (55) Return on average allocated capital (1) 31 % 30 % 24 % 10 % n/m Balance Sheet Average Total loans and leases $ 281,380 $ 199,664 $ 324,736 $ 97,148 $ 17,581 Total deposits 1,000,765 339,357 534,166 54,650 13,767 Allocated capital (1) 38,500 16,500 42,500 38,000 n/m Quarter end Total loans and leases $ 280,803 $ 202,268 $ 328,893 $ 98,892 $ 16,880 Total deposits 1,015,276 345,590 536,476 54,941 12,521 (1) Return on average allocated capital is calculated as net income, adjusted for cost of funds and earnings credits and certain expenses related to intangibles, divided by average allocated capital. Other companies may define or calculate these measures differently. n/m = not meaningful The Company reports the results of operations of its four business segments and All Other on a fully taxable-equivalent (FTE) basis.


 
Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation. 17 Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries Year-to-Date Results by Business Segment and All Other (Dollars in millions) Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022 Consumer Banking GWIM Global Banking Global Markets All Other Total revenue, net of interest expense $ 27,853 $ 16,338 $ 15,791 $ 14,277 $ (3,526) Provision for credit losses 1,036 29 492 24 (130) Noninterest expense 14,977 11,706 8,133 9,249 1,830 Net income (loss) 8,939 3,475 5,267 3,678 (963) Return on average allocated capital (1) 30 % 27 % 16 % 12 % n/m Balance Sheet Average Total loans and leases $ 289,672 $ 218,030 $ 373,547 $ 114,505 $ 13,457 Total deposits 1,067,785 362,611 514,612 41,448 20,128 Allocated capital (1) 40,000 17,500 44,500 42,500 n/m Period end Total loans and leases $ 297,825 $ 224,858 $ 377,711 $ 121,721 $ 10,351 Total deposits 1,072,580 324,859 484,309 37,318 19,031 Nine Months Ended September 30, 2021 Consumer Banking GWIM Global Banking Global Markets All Other Total revenue, net of interest expense $ 25,093 $ 15,346 $ 14,967 $ 15,437 $ (3,468) Provision for credit losses (1,067) (185) (2,738) 33 (148) Noninterest expense 14,548 11,425 7,915 10,150 962 Net income 8,767 3,100 7,147 3,888 2,063 Return on average allocated capital (1) 30 % 25 % 22 % 14 % n/m Balance Sheet Average Total loans and leases $ 284,644 $ 194,090 $ 326,632 $ 87,535 $ 19,190 Total deposits 968,272 333,119 509,445 54,699 14,062 Allocated capital (1) 38,500 16,500 42,500 38,000 n/m Period end Total loans and leases $ 280,803 $ 202,268 $ 328,893 $ 98,892 $ 16,880 Total deposits 1,015,276 345,590 536,476 54,941 12,521 (1) Return on average allocated capital is calculated as net income, adjusted for cost of funds and earnings credits and certain expenses related to intangibles, divided by average allocated capital. Other companies may define or calculate these measures differently. n/m = not meaningful


 
Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation. 18 Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries Supplemental Financial Data (Dollars in millions) Nine Months Ended September 30 Third Quarter 2022 Second Quarter 2022 Third Quarter 2021FTE basis data (1) 2022 2021 Net interest income $ 38,096 $ 31,846 $ 13,871 $ 12,547 $ 11,195 Total revenue, net of interest expense 70,733 67,375 24,608 22,791 22,867 Net interest yield 1.87 % 1.66 % 2.06 % 1.86 % 1.68 % Efficiency ratio 64.88 66.79 62.18 67.01 63.14 Other Data September 30 2022 June 30 2022 September 30 2021 Number of financial centers - U.S. 3,932 3,984 4,215 Number of branded ATMs - U.S. 15,572 15,730 16,513 Headcount 213,270 209,824 209,407 (1) FTE basis is a non-GAAP financial measure. FTE basis is a performance measure used by management in operating the business that management believes provides investors with meaningful information on the interest margin for comparative purposes. The Corporation believes that this presentation allows for comparison of amounts from both taxable and tax- exempt sources and is consistent with industry practices. Net interest income includes FTE adjustments of $315 million and $322 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, respectively; $106 million and $103 million for the third and second quarters of 2022, respectively, and $101 million for the third quarter of 2021.


 
Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation. 19 The Corporation evaluates its business based on the following ratios that utilize tangible equity, a non-GAAP financial measure. Tangible equity represents shareholders’ equity or common shareholders’ equity reduced by goodwill and intangible assets (excluding mortgage servicing rights), net of related deferred tax liabilities (“adjusted” shareholders’ equity or common shareholders’ equity). Return on average tangible common shareholders’ equity measures the Corporation’s net income applicable to common shareholders as a percentage of adjusted average common shareholders’ equity. The tangible common equity ratio represents adjusted ending common shareholders’ equity divided by total tangible assets (total assets less goodwill and intangible assets (excluding mortgage servicing rights), net of related deferred tax liabilities). Return on average tangible shareholders’ equity measures the Corporation’s net income as a percentage of adjusted average total shareholders’ equity. The tangible equity ratio represents adjusted ending shareholders’ equity divided by total tangible assets. Tangible book value per common share represents adjusted ending common shareholders’ equity divided by ending common shares outstanding. These measures are used to evaluate the Corporation’s use of equity. In addition, profitability, relationship and investment models all use return on average tangible shareholders’ equity as key measures to support our overall growth goals. See the tables below for reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most closely related financial measures defined by GAAP for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, and the three months ended September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021. The Corporation believes the use of these non-GAAP financial measures provides additional clarity in understanding its results of operations and trends. Other companies may define or calculate supplemental financial data differently. Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries Reconciliations to GAAP Financial Measures (Dollars in millions, except per share information) Nine Months Ended September 30 Third Quarter 2022 Second Quarter 2022 Third Quarter 2021 2022 2021 Reconciliation of income before income taxes to pretax, pre-provision income Income before income taxes $ 23,072 $ 26,158 $ 8,301 $ 6,892 $ 8,950 Provision for credit losses 1,451 (4,105) 898 523 (624) Pretax, pre-provision income $ 24,523 $ 22,053 $ 9,199 $ 7,415 $ 8,326 Reconciliation of average shareholders’ equity to average tangible shareholders’ equity and average tangible common shareholders’ equity Shareholders’ equity $ 269,514 $ 274,726 $ 271,017 $ 268,197 $ 275,484 Goodwill (69,022) (68,999) (69,022) (69,022) (69,023) Intangible assets (excluding mortgage servicing rights) (2,127) (2,181) (2,107) (2,127) (2,185) Related deferred tax liabilities 925 916 920 926 915 Tangible shareholders’ equity $ 199,290 $ 204,462 $ 200,808 $ 197,974 $ 205,191 Preferred stock (28,094) (23,837) (29,134) (28,674) (23,441) Tangible common shareholders’ equity $ 171,196 $ 180,625 $ 171,674 $ 169,300 $ 181,750 Reconciliation of period-end shareholders’ equity to period-end tangible shareholders’ equity and period-end tangible common shareholders’ equity Shareholders’ equity $ 269,524 $ 272,464 $ 269,524 $ 269,118 $ 272,464 Goodwill (69,022) (69,023) (69,022) (69,022) (69,023) Intangible assets (excluding mortgage servicing rights) (2,094) (2,172) (2,094) (2,114) (2,172) Related deferred tax liabilities 915 913 915 920 913 Tangible shareholders’ equity $ 199,323 $ 202,182 $ 199,323 $ 198,902 $ 202,182 Preferred stock (29,134) (23,441) (29,134) (29,134) (23,441) Tangible common shareholders’ equity $ 170,189 $ 178,741 $ 170,189 $ 169,768 $ 178,741 Reconciliation of period-end assets to period-end tangible assets Assets $ 3,073,383 $ 3,085,446 $ 3,073,383 $ 3,111,606 $ 3,085,446 Goodwill (69,022) (69,023) (69,022) (69,022) (69,023) Intangible assets (excluding mortgage servicing rights) (2,094) (2,172) (2,094) (2,114) (2,172) Related deferred tax liabilities 915 913 915 920 913 Tangible assets $ 3,003,182 $ 3,015,164 $ 3,003,182 $ 3,041,390 $ 3,015,164 Book value per share of common stock Common shareholders’ equity $ 240,390 $ 249,023 $ 240,390 $ 239,984 $ 249,023 Ending common shares issued and outstanding 8,024.5 8,241.2 8,024.5 8,035.2 8,241.2 Book value per share of common stock $ 29.96 $ 30.22 $ 29.96 $ 29.87 $ 30.22 Tangible book value per share of common stock Tangible common shareholders’ equity $ 170,189 $ 178,741 $ 170,189 $ 169,768 $ 178,741 Ending common shares issued and outstanding 8,024.5 8,241.2 8,024.5 8,035.2 8,241.2 Tangible book value per share of common stock $ 21.21 $ 21.69 $ 21.21 $ 21.13 $ 21.69


 
Bank of America 3Q22 Financial Results October 17, 2022


 
Note: Amounts may not total due to rounding. N/M stands for not meaningful. 1 For more information on reserve build (release), see note A on slide 32. 2 Represent non-GAAP financial measures. For more information on pretax, pre-provision income and a reconciliation to GAAP, see note B on slide 32. For important presentation information about these measures, see slide 35. Summary Income Statement ($B, except per share data) 3Q22 2Q22 Inc / (Dec) 3Q21 Inc / (Dec) Total Revenue, net of interest expense $24.5 $22.7 $1.8 8 % $22.8 $1.7 8 % Provision (benefit) for credit losses 0.9 0.5 0.4 72 (0.6) 1.5 N/M Net charge-offs 0.5 0.6 (0.1) (9) 0.5 0.1 12 Reserve build (release)1 0.4 — 0.4 N/M (1.1) 1.5 N/M Noninterest expense 15.3 15.3 — — 14.4 0.9 6 Pretax income 8.3 6.9 1.4 20 9.0 (0.6) (7) Pretax, pre-provision income2 9.2 7.4 1.8 24 8.3 0.9 10 Income tax expense 1.2 0.6 0.6 89 1.3 — (3) Net income $7.1 $6.2 $0.8 13 $7.7 ($0.6) (8) Diluted earnings per share $0.81 $0.73 $0.08 11 $0.85 ($0.04) (5) Average diluted common shares (in millions) 8,161 8,163 (2) — 8,493 (332) (4) Return Metrics and Efficiency Ratio Return on average assets 0.90 % 0.79 % 0.99 % Return on average common shareholders' equity 10.8 9.9 11.4 Return on average tangible common shareholders' equity2 15.2 14.1 15.8 Efficiency ratio 62 67 63 3Q22 Financial Results 2


 
Added over 18,000 net new relationships YTD 50th consecutive quarter of average loans and leases growth Custom and securities-based lending growth of 25% and 41%, respectively since 1Q20 Record number of bank accounts opened Continued Organic Growth in 3Q22 3 Consumer Banking Global Wealth & Investment Management Global Banking Global Markets Added 418K net new checking accounts; 15th consecutive quarter of growth and highest quarter since 3Q08 1.3MM new credit card accounts, up 20% YoY; 6th consecutive quarter of double-digit percentage growth Record 3.4MM consumer investment accounts Record 1.9 million digital sales, up 36% YoY 44% more Zelle transactions than checks written Grew average loans and leases 18% YoY to $384B $2.8B Global Transaction Services revenue, up 44% YoY Increased headcount 9% vs. 3Q21 #3 in investment banking rankings1 for 3rd consecutive quarter Grew CashPro App active users and digital wallet enrollment Grew sales and trading revenue 13% YoY Highest 3rd quarter and September YTD sales and trading revenue since 2010 Macro trading business revenues2 up 67% YoY 94% of trading days >$25MM revenue No trading loss days Average loans of $120B, up 24% YoY 1 Source:. Dealogic as of October 1, 2022. 2 Macro products include currencies, interest rates and commodities products.


 
Average Consumer Deposit Balances Remain Above Pre-pandemic Levels4 Consumer Spend Remained Strong; 2022 YTD up 12% YoY to $3.1T Note: Amounts may not total due to rounding. 1 Total payments include total credit card, debit card, ACH, wires, billpay, person-to-person (P2P), cash and checks. 2 Includes consumer and small business credit card portfolios in Consumer Banking and Global Wealth & Investment Management (GWIM). 3 Excludes credit and debit Money Transfers, Charitable Donations, and miscellaneous categories with immaterial volume. 4 Average monthly deposit (checking and savings) balances for a fixed group of households that had a consumer deposit account for all months in the period shown, indexed to their January 2020 12-month average deposit balances. Payment Spend1 ($ and Transaction Volume) Quarterly YoY % Growth 4 3Q22 Credit and Debit2,3 ($ and Transaction Volume) YoY % Growth $ Volume Transaction # 1Q- 19 2Q- 19 3Q- 19 4Q- 19 1Q- 20 2Q- 20 3Q- 20 4Q- 20 1Q- 21 2Q- 21 3Q- 21 4Q- 21 1Q- 22 2Q- 22 3Q- 22 (25)% 0% 25% 50% 20% 23% 10% 3% 9% 12% 4% 6% 2% 4% $ Volume Transaction # Travel & Entertainment Gas Food Retail Services 0% 10% 20% 30% Payment Spend1 ($ Volume) and YoY % Growth $2.3T $2.3T $2.8T $3.1T 6% 1% 21% 12% 2019 YTD 2020 YTD 2021 YTD 2022 YTD 5x 3x Jan-20 Sep-22 1x 2x 3x 4x 5x 6x Pre-pandemic balance: <$2K $2K-$10K $10K-$20K 10% 6% 2x


 
Se p- 19 D ec -1 9 M ar -2 0 Ju n- 20 Se p- 20 D ec -2 0 M ar -2 1 Ju n- 21 Se p- 21 D ec -2 1 M ar -2 2 Ju n- 22 Se p- 22 $0 $500 $1,000 $1,500 $2,000 $2,500 • Beginning in 4Q20, we saw early stage delinquencies recede below pre-pandemic levels as expired deferrals worked through the delinquency periods and payment rates increased, fueled by stimulus payments • Late stage (90+ Days) credit card delinquencies remain near multi-year lows, resulting in 3Q22 net charge-offs 54% lower than 3Q19 • 5-29 days and 30 days+ past due delinquency rates are 19 bps and 66 bps lower than they were in 3Q19, respectively Credit Card Days Past Due Trend Credit Card 30+ Days Past Due ($MM) 5-29 Days ($MM) Se p- 19 D ec -1 9 M ar -2 0 Ju n- 20 Se p- 20 D ec -2 0 M ar -2 1 Ju n- 21 Se p- 21 D ec -2 1 M ar -2 2 Ju n- 22 Se p- 22 $0 $500 $1,000 $1,500 $2,000 $2,500 30-59 Days ($MM) 60-89 Days ($MM) Se p- 19 D ec -1 9 M ar -2 0 Ju n- 20 Se p- 20 D ec -2 0 M ar -2 1 Ju n- 21 Se p- 21 D ec -2 1 M ar -2 2 Ju n- 22 Se p- 22 $0 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $600 $700 Se p- 19 D ec -1 9 M ar -2 0 Ju n- 20 Se p- 20 D ec -2 0 M ar -2 1 Ju n- 21 Se p- 21 D ec -2 1 M ar -2 2 Ju n- 22 Se p- 22 $0 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Se p- 19 D ec -1 9 M ar -2 0 Ju n- 20 Se p- 20 D ec -2 0 M ar -2 1 Ju n- 21 Se p- 21 D ec -2 1 M ar -2 2 Ju n- 22 Se p- 22 $0 $200 $400 $600 $800 $1,000 $1,200 90+ Days ($MM) 5 1.89% 2.08% 2.04% 1.38% Delinquency rate


 
3Q22 Highlights (Comparisons to 3Q21, unless otherwise noted) • Net income of $7.1B; diluted earnings per share of $0.81; ROE1 10.8%, ROTCE1,2 15.2% • Revenue, net of interest expense, of $24.5B increased $1.7B, or 8% – Net interest income (NII) of $13.8B ($13.9B FTE2) increased $2.7B, or 24%, driven by benefits from higher interest rates, including lower premium amortization expense, and solid loan growth – Noninterest income of $10.7B decreased $0.9B, or 8%, as higher sales and trading revenue was more than offset by lower investment banking and asset management fees as well as lower service charges • Provision for credit losses of $898MM vs. a benefit of $624MM in 3Q21; asset quality remains strong – Reserve build of $378MM vs. release of $1.1B in 3Q21; release of $48MM in 2Q223 – Net charge-offs (NCOs) of $520MM up 12% vs. 3Q21 and down 9% vs. 2Q22 – Net charge-off ratio of 20 bps remained flat vs. 3Q21 and declined 3 bps from 2Q22 • Noninterest expense of $15.3B increased $0.9B, or 6%, vs. 3Q21 and remained flat QoQ – Included $354MM for the settlement of legacy monoline insurance litigation – Generated operating leverage4 for the 5th consecutive quarter (165 bps in 3Q22) – Efficiency ratio improved to 62% • Balance sheet remained strong – Average loans and leases grew $114B from 3Q21 – Average deposits increased $20B from 3Q21 – Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio of 11.0% grew 49 bps from 2Q22; 58 bps over the new minimum requirement effective October 1, 2022 – Average Global Liquidity Sources (GLS)5 of $941B – Paid $1.8B in common dividends and repurchased $450MM of common stock, predominantly offsetting shares awarded under equity-based compensation plans 6 Note: FTE stands for fully taxable-equivalent basis. 1 ROE stands for return on average common shareholders’ equity; ROTCE stands for return on average tangible common shareholders’ equity. 2 Represents a non-GAAP financial measure. For important presentation information about this measure, see slide 35. 3 For more information on reserve build (release), see note A on slide 32. 4 Operating leverage is calculated as the year-over-year percentage change in revenue, net of interest expense, less the percentage change in noninterest expense. 5 See note C on slide 32 for definition of Global Liquidity Sources.


 
Balance Sheet Metrics 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Basel 3 Capital ($B)5 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Assets ($B) Common equity tier 1 capital $176 $172 $174 Total assets $3,073 $3,112 $3,085 Standardized approach Total loans and leases 1,032 1,031 928 Risk-weighted assets (RWA) $1,599 $1,638 $1,568 Total loans and leases in business segments2 1,022 1,020 911 CET1 ratio 11.0 % 10.5 % 11.1 % Total debt securities 880 933 969 Advanced approaches Risk-weighted assets $1,391 $1,407 $1,380 Funding & Liquidity ($B) CET1 ratio 12.6 % 12.2 % 12.6 % Total deposits $1,938 $1,984 $1,965 Supplementary leverage Long-term debt 269 276 279 Supplementary Leverage Ratio 5.8 % 5.5 % 5.6 % Global Liquidity Sources (average)3 941 984 1,120 Equity ($B) Common shareholders' equity $240 $240 $249 Common equity ratio 7.8 % 7.7 % 8.1 % Tangible common shareholders' equity4 $170 $170 $179 Tangible common equity ratio4 5.7 % 5.6 % 5.9 % Per Share Data Book value per common share $29.96 $29.87 $30.22 Tangible book value per common share4 21.21 21.13 21.69 Common shares outstanding (in billions) 8.02 8.04 8.24 1 EOP stands for end of period. 2 Excludes loans and leases in All Other. 3 See note C on slide 32 for definition of Global Liquidity Sources. 4 Represent non-GAAP financial measures. For important presentation information, see slide 35. 5 Regulatory capital ratios at September 30, 2022 are preliminary. Bank of America Corporation (“the Corporation”) reports regulatory capital ratios under both the Standardized and Advanced approaches. The approach that yields the lower ratio is used to assess capital adequacy, which for CET1 is the Standardized approach for all reporting periods presented. 6 OCI stands for other comprehensive income; AFS stands for available-for-sale. Balance Sheet, Liquidity and Capital (EOP1 basis unless noted) 7 • CET1 ratio of 11.0% increased 49 bps vs. 2Q225 – CET1 capital of $176B rose $4B from 2Q22, driven by net income, partially offset by capital distributions to common shareholders and OCI on AFS debt securities6 – Standardized RWA of $1,599B decreased $39B from 2Q22 • Book value per share of $29.96 grew modestly from 2Q22 • Average Global Liquidity Sources3 of $941B decreased $43B, or 4%, from 2Q22


 
10.5% +40 bps +26 bps +4 bps 11.0% 2Q22 Net income applicable to common shareholders Common dividends Share repurchases OCI on AFS debt securities Risk-weighted assets Other 3Q22 CET1 Ratio1 Drivers Note: Amounts may not total due to rounding. Dollar values indicate changes in CET1 capital, except for risk-weighted assets, which represents change in RWA. 1 Regulatory capital ratios at September 30, 2022 are preliminary. The Corporation reports regulatory capital ratios under both the Standardized and Advanced approaches. The approach that yields the lower ratio is used to assess capital adequacy, which for CET1 is the Standardized approach for all reporting periods presented. 2 Gross share repurchases, excluding shares awarded under equity-based compensation plans. 8 2 (11 bps) (3 bps) (7 bps) $6.6B $1.8B $0.4B ($1.1B) ($38.6B) $0.6B


 
$903 $929 $962 $1,000 $1,024 281 282 284 290 295 200 205 211 219 224 325 339 359 377 384 97 103 109 114 120 Consumer Banking GWIM Global Banking Global Markets 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $250 $500 $750 $1,000 $1,250 $921 $945 $978 $1,015 $1,034 501 517 543 569 585 419 428 435 446 449 Commercial loans Consumer loans 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $250 $500 $750 $1,000 $1,250 +5% +12% +18% +24% Loan and Lease Trends YoY +12% YoY +13% YoY (40%) Total Avg. Loans and Leases in All Other ($B) Avg. Loans and Leases in Business Segments ($B) EOP Loans and Leases in Business Segments ($B)1 Total Avg. Loans and Leases ($B) 9 14 13 12 12 8 4 3 3 3 3 $18 $16 $15 $14 $11 Residential mortgage Home equity 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $5 $10 $15 $20 $25 $1,020 +$2.7 ($0.5) $1,022 2Q22 Consumer Commercial 3Q22 Includes ~($4B) FX impacts and ~($3B) loan sales / syndication Includes ~$3B card loan growth and ~($1B) loan sales Note: Amounts may not total due to rounding. 1 Excludes end of period loans and leases in All Other of $10B in 3Q22 and $11B in 2Q22. Total end of period loans and leases were $1,032B in 3Q22 and $1,031B in 2Q22. +17% +7%


 
Consumer Banking ($B) GWIM ($B) Global Banking ($B) Total Corporation ($B) Average Deposit Trends Bank of America Ranked #1 in U.S. Retail Deposit Market Share1 Note: Amounts may not total due to rounding. Total Corporation also includes Global Markets and All Other. 1 Estimated U.S. retail deposits based on June 30, 2022 FDIC deposit data. $339 $361 $385 $364 $339 226 234 249 232 214 113 127 136 132 125 Sweep/Preferred deposits Bank deposits 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $100 $200 $300 $400 $1,943 $2,017 $2,046 $2,012 $1,963 1,178 1,211 1,247 1,222 1,225 764 806 799 790 738 Interest-bearing Noninterest-bearing 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $500 $1,000 $1,500 $2,000 $2,500 $534 $562 $540 $509 $495 166 165 157 142 171 368 398 383 367 324 Interest-bearing Noninterest-bearing 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $200 $400 $600 (5%) +11% +4% (3%) YoY +1% YoY 0% YoY +7% +3% (12%) +7% YoY (7%) 10 +7% $1,001 $1,027 $1,056 $1,078 $1,069 435 445 458 466 466 232 238 247 249 245 333 344 352 363 359 Money market, Savings, CD/IRA Interest checking Noninterest-bearing 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $250 $500 $750 $1,000 $1,250


 
Net Interest Income (FTE, $B)1 • Net interest income of $13.8B ($13.9B FTE1) increased $2.7B YoY and $1.3B from 2Q22, driven by benefits from higher interest rates, including lower premium amortization expense, and higher loan balances ▪ Premium amortization expense of $0.4B in 3Q22, $0.6B in 2Q22, and $1.4B in 3Q21 • Net interest yield of 2.06% increased 38 bps YoY and 20 bps from 2Q22 – Excluding Global Markets, net interest yield of 2.51%1 • As of September 30, 2022,2 a +100 bps parallel shift in the interest rate yield curve is estimated to benefit net interest income by $4.2B over the next 12 months Net Interest Income Increased $2.7B, or 24% YoY Net Interest Yield (FTE)1 Note: FTE stands for fully taxable-equivalent basis. GM stands for Global Markets. 1 Represent non-GAAP financial measures. Net interest yield adjusted to exclude Global Markets NII of $0.7B, $1.0B, $1.0B, $1.0B, and $1.0B and average earning assets of $591.9B, $598.8B, $610.9B, $580.8B, and $557.3B for 3Q22, 2Q22, 1Q22, 4Q21 and 3Q21, respectively. The Corporation believes the presentation of net interest yield excluding Global Markets provides investors with transparency of NII and net interest yield in core banking activities. For important presentation information, see slide 35. 2 NII asset sensitivity represents banking book positions. See note D on slide 32 for information on asset sensitivity assumptions. 1.68% 1.67% 1.69% 1.86% 2.06% 1.93% 1.92% 1.99% 2.20% 2.51% Reported net interest yield Net interest yield excl. GM 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 1.00% 1.50% 2.00% 2.50% 3.00% $11.2 $11.5 $11.7 $12.5 $13.9 $11.1 $11.4 $11.6 $12.4 $13.8 Net interest income (GAAP) FTE Adjustment 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0.0 $5.0 $10.0 $15.0 11


 
$14.4 $14.7 $15.3 $15.3 $15.3 8.7 9.0 9.5 8.9 8.9 5.7 5.7 5.8 6.4 6.4 Compensation and benefits Other 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0.0 $5.0 $10.0 $15.0 $20.0 63% 67% 66% 67% 62% 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 50% 60% 70% • Noninterest expense of $15.3B in 3Q22 was relatively flat vs. 2Q22, as $354MM litigation expense for the legacy monoline insurance settlement was largely offset by the absence of expenses recognized for certain regulatory matters in 2Q22 • 3Q22 expenses increased $0.9B, or 6%, vs. 3Q21, reflecting higher litigation expense, higher compensation and benefits, investments in the business, and marketing expenses Total Noninterest Expense ($B) Efficiency Ratio Expense and Efficiency Note: Amounts may not total due to rounding. 1 Absent the $0.4B expense for the legacy monoline insurance settlement, reported 3Q22 noninterest expense would have been $14.9B. Absent $0.4B in expense for certain regulatory matters, reported 2Q22 noninterest expense would have been $14.8B. For important presentation information, see slide 35. 12 1 1


 
• Total net charge-offs of $520MM1 decreased $51MM from 2Q22 – Consumer net charge-offs of $459MM decreased $66MM from 2Q22, primarily driven by the absence of charge-offs associated with non-core mortgage sales – Commercial net charge-offs of $61MM remained low • Net charge-off ratio of 0.20% decreased 3 bps from 2Q22; net charge-off ratio remained near historical lows • Provision for credit losses of $898MM – Net reserve build of $378MM in 3Q22, primarily driven by credit card loan growth and a dampening macroeconomic outlook • Allowance for loan and lease losses of $12.3B represented 1.20% of total loans and leases1 – Total allowance of $13.8B included $1.5B for unfunded commitments • Nonperforming loans (NPLs) decreased $0.2B from 2Q22 to $4.0B – 63% of Consumer NPLs are contractually current • Commercial reservable criticized utilized exposure of $17.7B decreased $0.5B from 2Q22, driven by Commercial Real Estate Asset Quality 1 Excludes loans measured at fair value. Allowance for loan and lease losses ratio is calculated as allowance for loan and lease losses divided by loans and leases outstanding at the end of the period. Provision (Benefit) for Credit Losses ($MM) Net Charge-offs ($MM)1 ($624) ($489) $30 $523 $898 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 ($1,000) ($500) $0 $500 $1,000 $463 $362 $392 $571 $520 0.20% 0.15% 0.16% 0.23% 0.20% Net charge-offs Net charge-off ratio 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $200 $400 $600 $800 0.00% 0.10% 0.20% 0.30% 0.40% 0.50% 13


 
Commercial Net Charge-offs ($MM) Consumer Net Charge-offs ($MM) Asset Quality – Consumer and Commercial Portfolios 1 Excludes loans measured at fair value. 2 Fully-insured loans are FHA-insured loans and other loans individually insured under long-term standby agreements. 3 C&I includes commercial and industrial, commercial real estate and commercial lease financing. $134 $50 $52 $46 $610.11% 0.04% 0.04% 0.03% 0.04% C&I Small business Commercial NCO ratio 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 ($50) $0 $50 $100 $150 $200 (0.05)% 0.00% 0.05% 0.10% 0.15% 0.20% $329 $312 $340 $525 $459 0.31% 0.29% 0.32% 0.47% 0.41% Credit card Other Consumer NCO ratio 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $150 $300 $450 $600 0.00% 0.25% 0.50% 0.75% 1.00% Commercial Metrics ($MM) 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Provision $176 $113 ($705) Reservable criticized utilized exposure 17,659 18,114 24,142 Nonperforming loans and leases 1,223 1,298 1,697 % of loans and leases1 0.21 % 0.22 % 0.34 % Allowance for loans and leases $5,422 $5,361 $5,961 % of loans and leases1 0.94 % 0.93 % 1.20 % Consumer Metrics ($MM) 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Provision $722 $410 $81 Nonperforming loans and leases 2,760 2,866 3,017 % of loans and leases1 0.61 % 0.64 % 0.71 % Consumer 30+ days performing past due $2,949 $2,806 $3,001 Fully-insured2 672 734 930 Non fully-insured 2,277 2,072 2,071 Consumer 90+ days performing past due 1,001 1,000 1,106 Allowance for loans and leases 6,880 6,612 7,194 % of loans and leases1 1.53 % 1.48 % 1.70 % # times annualized NCOs 3.77 x 3.14 x 5.52 x 14 3


 
• Net income of $3.1B increased 1% from 3Q21, as revenue improvement was partially offset by business investments and higher provision for credit losses – Pretax, pre-provision income1 of $4.8B increased 12% from 3Q21 – 6th consecutive quarter of operating leverage; efficiency ratio improved to 51% • Revenue of $9.9B improved 12% from 3Q21, due to increased NII driven by higher balances and interest rates, partially offset by the impact of reduced customer non- sufficient funds and overdraft fees • Provision for credit losses was $738MM, primarily driven by loan growth, and increased $491MM from 3Q21 – The prior year benefited from a reserve release of $242MM • Noninterest expense of $5.1B increased 12% from 3Q21, primarily driven by investments in the business, including marketing and technology, and compensation and benefits • Average deposits exceeded $1T and were $68B, or 7%, higher than 3Q21 – 56% of deposits in checking accounts; 92% primary accounts5 • Average loans and leases of $295B increased $14B, or 5%, from 3Q21 • Combined credit / debit card spend4 of $218B increased 9% from 3Q21, with credit up 13% and debit up 6% • Consumer investment assets3 of $302B declined $51B, or 14%, from 3Q21, driven by lower market valuations, partially offset by $24B of strong client flows from new and existing clients – Record 3.4MM consumer investment accounts, up 6% • 10.1MM Total clients6 enrolled in Preferred Rewards, up 10% from 3Q21; 99% annualized retention rate Consumer Banking 1 Represents a non-GAAP financial measure. For more information and a reconciliation to GAAP, see note B on slide 32. For important presentation information, see slide 35. 2 Cost of deposits calculated as annualized noninterest expense as a percentage of total average deposits within the Deposits sub-segment. 3 Consumer investment assets includes client brokerage assets, deposit sweep balances and assets under management (AUM) in Consumer Banking. 4 Includes consumer credit card portfolios in Consumer Banking and GWIM. 5 Represents the percentage of consumer checking accounts that are estimated to be the customer’s primary account based on multiple relationship factors (e.g., linked to their direct deposit). 6 As of August, 2022. Includes clients in Consumer, Small Business and GWIM. Inc / (Dec) Summary Income Statement ($MM) 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Total revenue, net of interest expense $9,904 $768 $1,066 Provision (benefit) for credit losses 738 388 491 Noninterest expense 5,097 138 539 Pretax income 4,069 242 36 Pretax, pre-provision income1 4,807 630 527 Income tax expense 997 59 9 Net income $3,072 $183 $27 Key Indicators ($B) 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Average deposits $1,069.1 $1,078.0 $1,000.8 Rate paid on deposits 0.03 % 0.02 % 0.02 % Cost of deposits2 1.17 1.14 1.09 Average loans and leases $295.2 $289.6 $281.4 Net charge-off ratio 0.69 % 0.70 % 0.69 % Net charge-offs ($MM) $512 $502 $489 Reserve build (release) ($MM) 226 (152) (242) Consumer investment assets3 $302.4 $315.2 $353.3 Active mobile banking users (MM) 34.9 34.2 32.5 % Consumer sales through digital channels 48 % 48 % 43 % Number of financial centers 3,932 3,984 4,215 Combined credit /debit purchase volumes4 $218.2 $220.5 $200.6 Total consumer credit card risk-adjusted margin4 10.07 % 9.95 % 10.70 % Return on average allocated capital 30 29 31 Allocated capital $40.0 $40.0 $38.5 Efficiency ratio 51 % 54 % 52 % 15


 
• Net income of $1.2B decreased 3% from 3Q21 – Pretax, pre-provision income1 of $1.6B increased 3% from 3Q21 – 6th consecutive quarter of operating leverage – Pretax margin of 29% • Revenue of $5.4B increased 2% compared to 3Q21, driven by higher NII, partially offset by the impact of lower market valuations on noninterest income • Noninterest expense of $3.8B increased 2% vs. 3Q21, driven by investments in the business, partially offset by lower revenue-related incentives • Client balances of $3.2T decreased 12% from 3Q21, driven by lower market valuations, partially offset by net client flows – AUM flows of $42B since 3Q21 • Average deposits of $339B were relatively flat compared to 3Q21 – Record number of new bank accounts opened in 3Q22 • Average loans and leases of $224B increased $24B, or 12%, from 3Q21, driven by residential mortgage lending, custom lending, and securities-based lending – 50th consecutive quarter of average loan and lease balance growth • Added more than 5,700 net new relationships across Merrill and Private Bank in 3Q22 • 80% of GWIM households / relationships are digitally active across the enterprise, up from 78% in 3Q21 Global Wealth & Investment Management 1 Represents a non-GAAP financial measure. For more information and a reconciliation to GAAP, see note B on slide 32. For important presentation information, see slide 35. Inc / (Dec) Summary Income Statement ($MM) 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Total revenue, net of interest expense $5,429 ($4) $119 Provision (benefit) for credit losses 37 4 95 Noninterest expense 3,816 (59) 72 Pretax income 1,576 51 (48) Pretax, pre-provision income1 1,613 55 47 Income tax expense 386 12 (12) Net income $1,190 $39 ($36) Key Indicators ($B) 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Average deposits $339.5 $363.9 $339.4 Rate paid on deposits 0.57 % 0.11 % 0.03 % Average loans and leases $223.7 $219.3 $199.7 Net charge-off ratio 0.01 % 0.02 % 0.01 % Net charge-offs ($MM) $5 $9 $7 Reserve build (release) ($MM) 32 24 (65) AUM flows $4.1 $1.0 $14.8 Pretax margin 29 % 28 % 31 % Return on average allocated capital 27 26 30 Allocated capital $17.5 $17.5 $16.5 16


 
• Net income of $2.0B decreased 20% from 3Q21 – Pretax, pre-provision income2 of $2.9B increased 8% from 3Q21 • Revenue of $5.6B increased $0.3B vs. 3Q21 – NII of $3.3B increased $1.1B from 3Q21, driven by benefits from higher interest rates and strong loan growth – Noninterest income of $2.3B decreased $0.8B from 3Q21, driven by lower investment banking fees and leasing-related revenue as well as lower treasury service charges due to higher earnings credit rates • Total Corporation investment banking fees (excl. self- led) of $1.2B decreased $1.0B, or 46%, from 3Q21 • Provision for credit losses was $170MM, primarily driven by a dampening macroeconomic outlook, and increased $951MM from 3Q21 – The prior year benefited from a reserve release of $789MM • Noninterest expense of $2.7B increased 5% from 3Q21, primarily reflecting continued investments in the business, including strategic hiring • Average deposits of $495B decreased $39B, or 7%, from 3Q21 • Average loans and leases of $384B increased 18% from 3Q21, reflecting strong client demand Global Banking 1 Global Banking and Global Markets share in certain deal economics from investment banking, loan origination activities, and sales and trading activities. 2 Represents a non-GAAP financial measure. For more information and a reconciliation to GAAP, see note B on slide 32. For important presentation information, see slide 35. 3 Prior periods have been revised to conform to current-period presentation. Inc / (Dec) Summary Income Statement ($MM) 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Total revenue, net of interest expense1 $5,591 $585 $346 Provision (benefit) for credit losses 170 13 951 Noninterest expense 2,651 (148) 117 Pretax income 2,770 720 (722) Pretax, pre-provision income2 2,940 733 229 Income tax expense 734 191 (209) Net income $2,036 $529 ($513) Selected Revenue Items ($MM) 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Total Corporation IB fees (excl. self-led)1 $1,167 $1,128 $2,168 Global Banking IB fees1 726 692 1,297 Business Lending revenue 2,079 2,032 1,862 Global Transaction Services revenue3 2,803 2,381 1,945 Key Indicators ($B) 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Average deposits $495.2 $509.3 $534.2 Average loans and leases 384.3 377.2 324.7 Net charge-off ratio 0.03 % 0.01 % 0.01 % Net charge-offs ($MM) $26 $14 $8 Reserve build (release) ($MM) 144 143 (789) Return on average allocated capital 18 % 14 % 24 % Allocated capital $44.5 $44.5 $42.5 Efficiency ratio 47 % 56 % 48 % 17


 
Global Markets1 • Net income of $1.1B increased 15% from 3Q21 – Excluding net DVA, net income of $1.1B increased 14%3 • Revenue of $4.5B decreased 1% from 3Q21, primarily driven by lower investment banking fees, partially offset by higher sales and trading revenue • Reported sales and trading revenue of $4.1B increased 13% from 3Q21 – Fixed income, currencies, and commodities (FICC) revenue increased to $2.6B, driven by improved performance across all macro products,5 partially offset by a weaker trading performance for credit and mortgage products – Equities revenue decreased to $1.5B, driven by lower client activity in Asia and a weaker trading performance in cash, partially offset by increased client activity in derivatives • Excluding net DVA, sales and trading revenue of $4.1B increased 13% from 3Q213 – FICC revenue of $2.6B increased 27%3 – Equities revenue of $1.5B decreased 4%3 • Noninterest expense of $3.0B decreased 7% vs. 3Q21, primarily driven by the absence of expenses related to a liquidating business activity, which was realigned from Global Markets to All Other6 in 4Q21 • Average VaR of $117MM in 3Q227 1 The explanations for current period-over-period changes for Global Markets are the same for amounts including and excluding net DVA. 2 Global Banking and Global Markets share in certain deal economics from investment banking, loan origination activities, and sales and trading activities. 3 Represents a non-GAAP financial measure. Reported FICC sales and trading revenue was $2.6B, $2.5B and $2.0B for 3Q22, 2Q22 and 3Q21, respectively. Reported Equities sales and trading revenue was $1.5B, $1.7B and $1.6B for 3Q22, 2Q22 and 3Q21, respectively. See note E on slide 32 and slide 35 for important presentation information. 4 Represents a non-GAAP financial measure. For more information and a reconciliation to GAAP, see note B on slide 32. For important presentation information, see slide 35. 5 Macro products include currencies, interest rates and commodities products. 6 For more information on the liquidating business realignment, see note F on slide 32. 7 See note G on slide 32 for the definition of VaR. Inc / (Dec) Summary Income Statement ($MM) 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Total revenue, net of interest expense2 $4,483 ($19) ($36) Net DVA (14) (172) 6 Total revenue (excl. net DVA)2,3 4,497 153 (42) Provision (benefit) for credit losses 11 3 (5) Noninterest expense 3,023 (86) (229) Pretax income 1,449 64 198 Pretax, pre-provision income4 1,460 67 193 Income tax expense 384 17 59 Net income $1,065 $47 $139 Net income (excl. net DVA)3 $1,076 $178 $135 Selected Revenue Items ($MM)2 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Sales and trading revenue $4,092 $4,153 $3,614 Sales and trading revenue (excl. net DVA)3 4,106 3,995 3,634 FICC (excl. net DVA)3 2,567 2,340 2,025 Equities (excl. net DVA)3 1,539 1,655 1,609 Global Markets IB fees 430 461 844 Key Indicators ($B) 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Average total assets $847.9 $866.7 $804.9 Average trading-related assets 592.4 606.1 563.7 Average 99% VaR ($MM)7 117 118 78 Average loans and leases 120.4 114.4 97.1 Net charge-offs ($MM) (1) (4) — Reserve build (release) ($MM) 12 12 16 Return on average allocated capital 10 % 10 % 10 % Allocated capital $42.5 $42.5 $38.0 Efficiency ratio 67 % 69 % 72 % 18


 
All Other1 • Net loss of $281MM, compared to net loss of $55MM in 3Q21, driven primarily by higher litigation expense as a result of the legacy monoline insurance settlement and the realignment of a liquidating business activity from Global Markets to All Other3 in 4Q21 • Total corporate effective tax rate (ETR) for the quarter was 14.7%, driven by recurring ESG tax credit benefits – ETR includes $152MM net reduction in tax credit benefits, as certain solar investment tax credits recognized in 1H22 were reversed and replaced with production tax credits, which are now available under the Inflation Reduction Act and are expected to be claimed – Excluding ESG tax credits, the ETR would have been approximately 24% 1 All Other primarily consists of asset and liability management (ALM) activities, liquidating businesses, and certain expenses not otherwise allocated to a business segment. ALM activities encompass interest rate and foreign currency risk management activities for which substantially all of the results are allocated to our business segments. 2 Represents a non-GAAP financial measure. For more information and a reconciliation to GAAP, see note B on slide 32. For important presentation information, see slide 35. 3 For more information on the liquidating business realignment, see note F on slide 32. Inc/(Dec) Summary Income Statement ($MM) 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Total revenue, net of interest expense ($799) $487 $246 Provision (benefit) for credit losses (58) (33) (10) Noninterest expense 716 185 364 Pretax income (1,457) 335 (108) Pretax, pre-provision income2 (1,515) 302 (118) Income tax (benefit) (1,176) 298 118 Net income (loss) ($281) $37 ($226) 19


 
Supplemental Business Segment Trends


 
Total Expense ($B) and Efficiency Business Leadership1 • No. 1 in estimated U.S. Retail Deposits(A) • No. 1 Online Banking and Mobile Banking Functionality(B) • No. 1 in customer satisfaction with Merchant Services by J.D. Power(C) • No. 1 Small Business Lender(D) • Best Bank in the U.S.(E) • Best Consumer Digital Bank in the U.S.(F) • Certified by J.D. Power for providing outstanding client satisfaction for financial wellness support(G) Total Revenue ($B) Average Deposits ($B) Consumer Investment Assets ($B)3 and Accounts (MM) Average Loans and Leases ($B)2 Consumer Banking Trends Note: Amounts may not total due to rounding. 1 See slide 33 for business leadership sources. 2 Average loans and leases includes PPP balances of $1B in 3Q22, $2B in 2Q22, $2B in 1Q22, $4B in 4Q21 and $8B in 3Q21. 3 End of period. Consumer investment assets includes client brokerage assets, deposit sweep balances, and AUM in Consumer Banking. $8.8 $8.9 $8.8 $9.1 $9.9 6.5 6.5 6.7 7.1 7.8 2.3 2.4 2.1 2.0 2.1 Net interest income Noninterest income 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0.0 $2.5 $5.0 $7.5 $10.0 $4.6 $4.7 $4.9 $5.0 $5.1 52% 53% 56% 54% 51% Noninterest expense Efficiency ratio 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0.0 $2.0 $4.0 $6.0 40% 50% 60% 70% $1,001$1,027$1,056$1,078$1,069 562 578 593 606 599 439 449 463 472 470 Checking Other 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $300 $600 $900 $1,200 $281 $282 $284 $290 $295 111 113 115 117 118 73 76 76 78 82 48 49 50 51 5224 23 22 22 2227 22 21 21 21 Residential mortgage Consumer credit card Vehicle lending Home equity Small business / other 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $100 $200 $300 $400 21 $353 $369 $358 $315 $302 3.2 3.3 3.3 3.4 3.4 Assets Accounts 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $100 $200 $300 $400 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5


 
Checks vs. Zelle® Sent Transactions (MM) Digital SalesDigital Users1 and Households2 Digital Channel Usage3,4 1,027 1,074 1,367 1,855 29% 44% 43% 48% Digital unit sales (K) Digital as a % of total sales 3Q19 3Q20 3Q21 3Q22 0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 0% 25% 50% 75% 100% 2,077 2,259 2,635 2,954 613 688 853 923 Digital channel usage (MM) Digital appointments (K) 3Q19 3Q20 3Q21 3Q22 1,000 1,500 2,000 2,500 3,000 250 500 750 1,000 1,250 38 39 41 43 49 52 54 56 66% 69% 70% 72% Active users (MM) Verified users (MM) Household adoption % 3Q19 3Q20 3Q21 3Q22 20 30 40 50 60 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Client Engagement Person-to-Person Payments (Zelle®)6 Digital Volumes 81 140 202 255 $21 $39 $60 $77 Transactions (MM) Volume ($B) 3Q19 3Q20 3Q21 3Q22 0 100 200 300 $0 $25 $50 $75 $100 Record 56MM Verified and 43MM Active Digital Users1 in 3Q22 Note: Amounts may not total due to rounding. 1 Digital active users represents mobile and/or online 90-day active users; verified users represent those with a digital identification and password. 2 Household adoption represents households with consumer bank login activities in a 90-day period, as of August, 2022. 3 Digital channel usage represents the total number of desktop and mobile banking sessions. 4 Digital appointments represent the number of client-scheduled appointments made via online, smartphone, or tablet. 5 3Q22 Erica® engagement represents activity across all platforms powered by Erica: BofA mobile app, online search, and Benefits OnLine mobile app. Prior periods represent activity on BofA mobile app only. 6 Includes Bank of America person-to-person payments sent and received through e-mail or mobile identification. Zelle® users represent 90-day active users. Total Erica® Users and Interactions5 (MM) 8.9 12.2 15.1 17.7 users (MM) 22 Digital Adoption 171 137 127 116 56 94 133 167 Checks written Zelle® sent transactions 3Q19 3Q20 3Q21 3Q22 0 50 100 150 200 9.0 15.9 22.9 31.7 19.1 34.3 104.6 133.6 Erica® users Erica® interactions 3Q19 3Q20 3Q21 3Q22 0.0 10.0 20.0 30.0 40.0 0.0 50.0 100.0 150.0 200.0 250.0


 
1,049 940 977 1,068 1,255 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 0 500 1,000 1,500 Home Equity1 New Originations ($B)4 Consumer Creditworthiness Remains Strong 1 Includes loan production within Consumer Banking and GWIM. Consumer credit card balances include average balances of $2.9B, $2.8B and $2.6B in 3Q22, 2Q22 and 3Q21, respectively, within GWIM. 2 Calculated as the difference between total revenue, net of interest expense, and net credit losses divided by average loans. 3 Represents Consumer Banking only. 4 Amounts represent the unpaid principal balance of loans and in the case of home equity, the principal amount of the total line of credit. Consumer Vehicle Lending3 New Originations ($B) Consumer Credit Card1 New Accounts (000s) 23 Residential Mortgage1 New Originations ($B)4 Key Stats 3Q21 2Q22 3Q22 Average outstandings ($B) 75.6 81.0 85.0 NCO ratio 1.69% 1.60% 1.53% Risk-adjusted margin2 10.70% 9.95% 10.07% Average line FICO 768 771 770 $6.8 $6.8 $7.1 $7.1 $5.9 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0.0 $2.5 $5.0 $7.5 $10.0 Key Stats 3Q21 2Q22 3Q22 Average outstandings ($B) 47.5 51.2 52.0 NCO ratio (0.15%) 0.02% 0.07% Average booked FICO 783 791 789 $21.2 $23.0 $16.4 $14.5 $8.7 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0.0 $10.0 $20.0 $30.0 Key Stats 3Q21 2Q22 3Q22 Average outstandings ($B)3 110.5 117.4 118.2 NCO ratio3 0.01% 0.03% 0.01% Average FICO 775 771 768 Average booked loan-to-value (LTV) 65% 70% 72% $1.5 $1.7 $2.0 $2.5 $2.4 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0.0 $1.0 $2.0 $3.0 $4.0 Key Stats 3Q21 2Q22 3Q22 Average outstandings ($B)3 23.6 21.8 21.9 NCO ratio3 (0.06%) (0.00%) (0.04%) Average FICO 798 797 792 Average booked combined LTV 60% 58% 58%


 
Average Deposits ($B) Global Wealth & Investment Management Trends Business Leadership1 • No. 1 on Forbes’ Best-in-State Wealth Advisors (2022), Top Women Wealth Advisors (2022), Top Women Wealth Advisors Best-in State (2022), and Top Next Generation Advisors (2022) • No. 1 on Barron’s Top 100 Women Financial Advisors List (2022) • No. 1 on Financial Planning's 'Top 40 Advisors Under 40' List (2022) • Celent Model Wealth Manager award for Client Experience (2022) • Aite-Novarica award for Digital Client Experience (2022) • No. 1 in personal trust AUM(H) • Best Private Bank in the U.S. by Family Wealth Report(I) and Global Private Banker(J) • Best Philanthropy Offering in the U.S. by WealthBriefing(K) Note: Amounts may not total due to rounding. 1 See slide 33 for business leadership sources. 2 Average loans and leases includes PPP balances of $49MM in 3Q22, $81MM in 2Q22, $128MM in 1Q22, $244MM in 4Q21 and $527MM in 3Q21. 3 End of period. Loans and leases includes margin receivables which are classified in customer and other receivables on the Consolidated Balance Sheet. 4 Managed deposits in investment accounts of $48B, $55B, $53B, $56B and $49B for 3Q22, 2Q22, 1Q22, 4Q21 and 3Q21, respectively, are included in both AUM and Deposits. Total client balances only include these balances once. Average Loans and Leases ($B)2 Total Revenue ($B) Client Balances ($B)3,4 $5.3 $5.4 $5.5 $5.4 $5.4 1.5 1.5 1.7 1.8 2.0 3.2 3.2 3.2 3.1 2.9 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 Net interest income Asset management fees Brokerage / Other 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0.0 $2.0 $4.0 $6.0 1,579 1,639 1,572 1,411 1,330 1,612 1,655 1,593 1,438 1,414 346 390 385 348 325 205 212 217 225 228 $3,693 $3,840 $3,714 $3,367 $3,249 AUM Brokerage / Other Deposits Loans and leases 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $1,000 $2,000 $3,000 $4,000 $200 $205 $211 $219 $224 94 96 99 102 105 50 53 55 57 56 53 54 55 57 60 Consumer real estate Securities-based lending Custom lending Credit card 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $50 $100 $150 $200 $250 $339 $361 $385 $364 $339 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $100 $200 $300 $400 24


 
Global Wealth & Investment Management Digital Update1 GWIM2 80%, up from 78% 80% of Merrill households3 digitally active across the enterprise, up from 78% in 3Q21 86% of Private Bank4 relationships digitally active across the enterprise, up from 83% in 3Q21 Digital Adoption 57% 3Q GWIM Mobile Engagement5 up 314 bps YoY Merrill 56%, up 302 bps YoY Private Bank 71%, up 381 bps YoY +36% 3Q GWIM Erica® interactions YoY growth Merrill advisors received 1.2MM client insights Merrill 1.9MM, up 35% YoY Private Bank 145K, up 62% YoY 77% Merrill households enrolled in eDelivery Up from 74% last year 32K+ of eligible brokerage/bank accounts opened digitally through our Client Onboarding Experience (COBE) 75% Private Bank check-only deposit transactions through automated channels 152K+ Mobile Check Deposits Up 90 bps YoY Client Engagement Online Mobile Digital Volume 1 Except where otherwise noted, reflects figures for 3Q22. 2 GWIM digital adoption is Merrill digital households, plus digital Private Bank relationships out of total Merrill primary households, plus Private Bank core relationships as of August, 2022 vs. August, 2021. 3 Merrill households represent those households $250K+ as of September, 2022. 4 Private Banking core relationships reflect relationships $3MM+ and excludes: irrevocable trust-only relationships; institutional philanthropic relationships; exiting relationships as of August, 2022. 5 GWIM mobile engagement is Merrill mobile households, plus mobile Private Bank relationships out of total Merrill primary households, plus Private Bank core relationships as of August, 2022 vs. August, 2021. Advisor-led Client Interactions, Powered by Digital 25


 
Global Banking Trends Note: Amounts may not total due to rounding. 1 See slide 33 for business leadership sources. 2 Average loans and leases includes PPP balances of $0.6B in 3Q22, $0.9B in 2Q22, $1.5B in 1Q22, $2.4B in 4Q21 and $4.1B in 3Q21. 3 Global Banking and Global Markets share in certain deal economics from investment banking, loan origination activities, and sales and trading activities. 4 Self-led deals of $37MM, $65MM, $72MM, $28MM and $56MM for 3Q22, 2Q22, 1Q22, 4Q21 and 3Q21, respectively are embedded within Debt, Equity, and Advisory. Total Corporation IB fees excludes self-led deals. 5 Advisory includes fees on debt and equity advisory and mergers and acquisitions. Average Deposits ($B)Business Leadership1 • Global Most Innovative Financial Institution – 2022(L) • World's Best Bank, North America’s Best Bank for Small to Medium-sized Enterprises, and Best Bank in the US(M) • Best Global Bank for Payments & Collections(N) • Model Bank for Corporate Digital Banking – For CashPro App(O) • Best Bank for Cash Management in North America(N) • Impact Awards in Cash Management and Payments – Product Development for CashPro Forecasting(P) • World’s Best Bank for Payments and Treasury and North America’s Best Bank for Transaction Services(M) • Outstanding Global Leader in Social Bonds, Outstanding Leader in Social Bonds and Sustainable Loans for North America(Q) • Relationships with 73% of the Global Fortune 500; 95% of the U.S. Fortune 1,000 (2022) Average Loans and Leases ($B)2 Total Revenue ($B)3 Total Corporation IB Fees ($MM)4 $5.2 $5.9 $5.2 $5.0 $5.6 2.2 2.4 2.3 2.6 3.3 1.3 1.5 0.9 0.7 0.7 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.8 0.9 1.2 1.1 0.7 0.8 Net interest income IB fees Service charges All other income 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0.0 $1.0 $2.0 $3.0 $4.0 $5.0 $6.0 933 984 831 662 616 637 545 225 139 156 654 850 473 392 432 $2,168 $2,351 $1,457 $1,128 $1,167 Debt Equity Advisory 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $500 $1,000 $1,500 $2,000 $2,500 160 167 177 186 194 148 156 167 177 177 13 13 13 13 13 $325 $339 $359 $377 $384 Commercial Corporate Business Banking 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $100 $200 $300 $400 5 $534 $562 $540 $509 $495 Noninterest-bearing Interest-bearing 3Q21 4Q21 1Q22 2Q22 3Q22 $0 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $600 26 69% 71% 71% 72% 65% 31% 29% 29% 28% 35%


 
Global Banking Digital Update 76% Digitally active clients across commercial, corporate, and business banking clients (CashPro® & BA360 platforms) 186 bps YoY1 Digital Adoption 2.0MM Sign-ins on the CashPro® App, rolling 12 months2 41% YoY $602B Payment approvals on the CashPro® App, rolling 12 months2 100% YoY ~43MM Intelligent Receivables® (digitally matched), rolling 12 months1 49% YoY 101K Global digital wallet account enrollment for commercial cards 95% YoY1 ~66MM Proactive alerts and insights from CashPro®, rolling 12 months2 11% YoY 1.6MM Global payments to digital wallets, rolling 12 months1 16% YoY Client Engagement Online Mobile Connect API Digital Volumes 1 As of August, 2022. 2 As of September, 2022. Creating an innovative digital experience for our clients 27


 
Global Markets Trends and Revenue Mix Note: Amounts may not total due to rounding. 1 See slide 33 for business leadership sources. 2 Represents a non-GAAP financial measure. Reported Global Markets revenue was $14.3B for 2022 YTD. Reported sales and trading revenue was $13.0B, $12.3B, $12.0B, and $9.9B for 2022 YTD, 2021 YTD, 2020 YTD, and 2019 YTD, respectively. Reported FICC sales and trading revenue was $7.8B, $7.2B, $7.9B and $6.4B for 2022 YTD, 2021 YTD, 2020 YTD, and 2019 YTD, respectively. Reported Equities sales and trading revenue was $5.2B, $5.1B, $4.1B, and $3.5B for 2022 YTD, 2021 YTD, 2020 YTD, and 2019 YTD, respectively. See note E on slide 32 and slide 35 for important presentation information. 3 S&T stands for sales & trading. Macro products include currencies, interest rates and commodities products. 4 See note G on slide 32 for definition of VaR. 2022 YTD Global Markets Revenue Mix (excl. net DVA)2 Business Leadership1 • Americas Derivatives House of the Year and Americas House of the Year for Equity Derivatives, FX Derivatives, Interest Rate Derivatives, and Commodities Derivatives(R) • Interest Rate Derivatives House of the Year(S) • Global Leader for Sustainable Project Finance(L) • Overall Leader for North America in Sustainable Finance(L) • No. 2 Global Research Firm(T) • No. 2 Global Fixed Income Research Team(T) • Securitization Research Team of the Year(R) • Most Impressive Corporate Bond House in Dollars(R) • No. 1 Municipal Bonds Underwriter(U) 2022 YTD Total FICC S&T3 Revenue Mix (excl. net DVA)2 Total Sales and Trading Revenue (excl. net DVA) ($B)2 Average Trading-Related Assets ($B) and VaR ($MM)4 $10.0 $12.1 $12.3 $12.8 6.6 8.0 7.2 7.6 3.5 4.1 5.1 5.2 FICC Equities 2019 YTD 2020 YTD 2021 YTD 2022 YTD $0.0 $2.5 $5.0 $7.5 $10.0 $12.5 $15.0 $490 $485 $544 $598 $35 $79 $76 $105 Avg. trading-related assets Avg. VaR 2019 YTD 2020 YTD 2021 YTD 2022 YTD $0 $250 $500 $750 $0 $50 $100 $150 60% 40% U.S. / Canada International 35% 65% Credit / Other Macro 3 28


 
Additional Presentation Information


 
$675 $451 257 229 154 27 161 87 44 51 56 46 Residential mortgage Home equity Consumer credit card Consumer vehicle lending Securities based lending Other consumer 4Q09 3Q22 $0 $250 $500 $750 Credit Risk Transformation Reflects Responsible Growth (EOP) Note: Amounts may not total due to rounding. 1 4Q09 reflects December 31, 2009 information adjusted to include the January 1, 2010 adoption of FAS 166/167 as reported in our Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filings. 2 Nine-quarter loss rate from Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review (CCAR) severely adverse scenario. Consumer Loan Portfolio ($B)1 Commercial Loan Portfolio ($B)1 Federal Reserve Stress Test Loan Loss Rates (%)2 Loan Mix1 30 $328 $582 207 376 29 125 69 68 22 13 U.S. commercial Non-U.S. commercial Commercial real estate Other 4Q09 3Q22 $0 $200 $400 $600 4Q09 67% 33% 3Q22 44% 56% $1,032B$1,003B 6.9% 5.2% 7.7% 6.0% 9.2% 6.4% 7.1% BAC Peer 1 Peer 2 Peer 3 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 (46%) (82%) ~2x >4x Commercial Consumer


 
Metric 4Q09 4Q19 3Q22 Total loans and leases1 $1,003B $983B $1,032B % consumer 67% 47% 44% Consumer credit card $161B $98B $87B Home equity $154B $41B $27B GWIM loans $100B $177B $225B Commercial real estate of which Construction (%) $69B 39% $63B 12% $68B 14% Nonperforming loans 3.75% 0.36% 0.39% NCOs1 $11B $959MM $520MM Nine-quarter stressed net credit losses2 $104B / 10.0% $44B / 4.4% $53B / 5.2% Tangible common shareholders’ equity1,3 $112B $172B $170B Global Liquidity Sources4 $214B $576B $941B Balance Sheet Transformation Highlights (EOP basis unless noted) 31 Transformation through Responsible Growth • Our loan portfolio is more balanced today and has less inherent risk – Lower concentration in the consumer portfolio – Less exposure to unsecured consumer credit and home equity loans – More than doubled GWIM loans – Commercial Real Estate portfolio more balanced, with less concentration in construction loans – CCAR stress test results indicate significantly lower credit losses expected in a severe downturn • Our capital base and liquidity have also increased significantly – ~$60B higher tangible common equity3 – Global Liquidity Sources4 are more than four times higher than 4Q09 1 4Q09 reflects December 31, 2009 information adjusted to include the January 1, 2010 adoption of FAS 166/167 as reported in our SEC filings. Amounts include loans accounted for under the fair value option (FVO). 2 Nine-quarter losses and loss rate for 4Q09 based on the 2009 Supervisory Capital Assessment Program; 4Q19 and 3Q22 represent 2019 and 2022 Federal Reserve CCAR stress test results, respectively. 3 Represent non-GAAP financial measures. Tangible common shareholders’ equity is calculated as common shareholders’ equity of $240.4B, $241.4B, and $207.2B for 3Q22, 4Q19, and 4Q09, which has been reduced by goodwill of $69.0B for 3Q22 and 4Q19 and $86.3B for 4Q09 and intangible assets (excluding mortgage servicing rights) of $2.1B, $1.7B, and 12.0B for 3Q22, 4Q19, and 4Q09, net of related deferred tax liabilities of $0.9B, $0.7B, and $3.5B for 3Q22, 4Q19, and 4Q09. For important presentation information, see slide 35. 4 4Q09 GLS shown on ending basis. The Corporation adopted the disclosure of average liquidity sources in 2017. See note C on slide 32 for definition of Global Liquidity Sources.


 
A Reserve Build (or Release) is calculated by subtracting net charge-offs for the period from the provision for credit losses recognized in that period. The period-end allowance, or reserve, for credit losses reflects the beginning of the period allowance adjusted for net charge-offs recorded in that period plus the provision for credit losses recognized in that period. B Pretax, pre-provision income (PTPI) at the consolidated level is a non-GAAP financial measure calculated by adjusting consolidated pretax income to add back provision for credit losses. Similarly, PTPI at the segment level is a non-GAAP financial measure calculated by adjusting the segments’ pretax income to add back provision for credit losses. Management believes that PTPI (both at the consolidated and segment level) is a useful financial measure as it enables an assessment of the Corporation’s ability to generate earnings to cover credit losses through a credit cycle as well as provides an additional basis for comparing the Corporation's results of operations between periods by isolating the impact of provision for credit losses, which can vary significantly between periods. See reconciliation below. C Global Liquidity Sources (GLS) include cash and high-quality, liquid, unencumbered securities, inclusive of U.S. government securities, U.S. agency securities, U.S. agency MBS, and a select group of non-U.S. government and supranational securities, and other investment-grade securities, and are readily available to meet funding requirements as they arise. It does not include Federal Reserve Discount Window or Federal Home Loan Bank borrowing capacity. Transfers of liquidity among legal entities may be subject to certain regulatory and other restrictions. D Interest rate sensitivity as of September 30, 2022, reflects the pretax impact to forecasted net interest income over the next 12 months from September 30, 2022 resulting from an instantaneous parallel shock to the market-based forward curve. The sensitivity analysis assumes that we take no action in response to this rate shock and does not assume any change in other macroeconomic variables normally correlated with changes in interest rates. As part of our asset and liability management activities, we use securities, certain residential mortgages, and interest rate and foreign exchange derivatives in managing interest rate sensitivity. The behavior of our deposits portfolio in the forecast is a key assumption in our projected estimate of net interest income. The sensitivity analysis assumes no change in deposit portfolio size or mix from our baseline forecast to the alternate rate environment. In higher rate scenarios, any customer activity resulting in the replacement of low-cost or noninterest-bearing deposits with higher yielding deposits or market-based funding would reduce our benefit in those scenarios. E Revenue for all periods included net debit valuation adjustments (DVA) on derivatives, as well as amortization of own credit portion of purchase discount and realized DVA on structured liabilities. Net DVA gains (losses) were ($14MM), $158MM and ($20MM) for 3Q22, 2Q22 and 3Q21, respectively, and $213MM, ($56MM), ($77MM) and ($136MM) for 2022 YTD, 2021 YTD, 2020 YTD and 2019 YTD, respectively. Net DVA gains (losses) included in FICC revenue were ($15MM), $160MM and ($16MM) for 3Q22, 2Q22 and 3Q21, respectively, and $205MM, ($53MM), ($78MM) and ($127MM) for 2022 YTD, 2021 YTD, 2020 YTD and 2019 YTD, respectively. Net DVA gains (losses) included in Equities revenue were $1MM, ($2MM) and ($4MM) for 3Q22, 2Q22 and 3Q21, respectively, and $8MM, ($3MM), $1MM and ($9MM) for 2022 YTD, 2021 YTD, 2020 YTD and 2019 YTD, respectively. F Effective October 1, 2021, a business activity previously included in the Global Markets segment is being reported as a liquidating business in All Other, consistent with a realignment in performance reporting to senior management. The activity was not material to Global Market's results of operations and historical results for 3Q21 were not restated. G VaR model uses a historical simulation approach based on three years of historical data and an expected shortfall methodology equivalent to a 99% confidence level. Using a 95% confidence level, average VaR was $34MM, $36MM, $28MM, $22MM and $19MM for 3Q22, 2Q22, 3Q21, 3Q20 and 3Q19, respectively, and $33MM, $29MM, $23MM and $20MM for 2022 YTD, 2021 YTD, 2020 YTD and 2019 YTD, respectively. Notes $ Millions 3Q22 2Q22 3Q21 Pretax Income (GAAP) Provision for Credit Losses (GAAP) Pretax, Pre-provision Income Pretax Income (GAAP) Provision for Credit Losses (GAAP) Pretax, Pre-provision Income Pretax Income (GAAP) Provision for Credit Losses (GAAP) Pretax, Pre-provision Income Consumer Banking $ 4,069 $ 738 $ 4,807 $ 3,827 $ 350 $ 4,177 $ 4,033 $ 247 $ 4,280 Global Wealth & Investment Management 1,576 37 1,613 1,525 33 1,558 1,624 (58) 1,566 Global Banking 2,770 170 2,940 2,050 157 2,207 3,492 (781) 2,711 Global Markets 1,449 11 1,460 1,385 8 1,393 1,251 16 1,267 All Other (1,457) (58) (1,515) (1,792) (25) (1,817) (1,349) (48) (1,397) Total Corporation $ 8,301 $ 898 $ 9,199 $ 6,892 $ 523 $ 7,415 $ 8,950 $ (624) $ 8,326 32


 
Business Leadership Sources (A) Estimated U.S. retail deposits based on June 30, 2022 FDIC deposit data. (B) Javelin 2022 Online and Mobile Banking Scorecards. (C) Bank of America received the highest score in the J.D. Power 2022 Merchant Services Satisfaction Study of customers’ satisfaction with credit card/debit payment processors among small business owners/operators. Visit jdpower.com/awards for more details. (D) FDIC, 2Q22. (E) Global Finance, May 2022. (F) Global Finance, August 2022. (G) J.D. Power 2022 Financial Health Support CertificationSM is based on exceeding customer experience benchmarks using client surveys and a best practices verification. For more information, visit jdpower.com/awards. (H) Industry Q2-22 FDIC call reports. (I) Family Wealth Report, 2022. (J) Global Private Banking, The Digital Banker, 2021. (K) WealthBriefing, 2022. (L) Global Finance, 2022. (M) Euromoney, 2022. (N) Global Finance Treasury & Cash Management Awards, 2022. (O) Celent, 2022. (P) Aite-Novarica Group, 2022. (Q) Global Finance, 2021. (R) GlobalCapital, 2022. (S) Risk.net, 2022. (T) Institutional Investor, 2021. (U) Refinitiv, 2022 YTD. 33


 
Forward-Looking Statements Bank of America Corporation (the “Corporation”) and its management may make certain statements that constitute “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements can be identified by the fact that they do not relate strictly to historical or current facts. Forward- looking statements often use words such as “anticipates,” “targets,” “expects,” “hopes,” “estimates,” “intends,” “plans,” “goals,” “believes,” “continue” and other similar expressions or future or conditional verbs such as “will,” “may,” “might,” “should,” “would” and “could.” Forward-looking statements represent the Corporation’s current expectations, plans or forecasts of its future results, revenues, provision for credit losses, expenses, efficiency ratio, capital measures, strategy, and future business and economic conditions more generally, and other future matters. These statements are not guarantees of future results or performance and involve certain known and unknown risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict and are often beyond the Corporation’s control. Actual outcomes and results may differ materially from those expressed in, or implied by, any of these forward-looking statements. You should not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statement and should consider the following uncertainties and risks, as well as the risks and uncertainties more fully discussed under Item 1A. Risk Factors of the Corporation’s 2021 Annual Report on Form 10-K and in any of the Corporation’s subsequent Securities and Exchange Commission filings: the Corporation’s potential judgments, orders, settlements, penalties, fines and reputational damage resulting from pending or future litigation and regulatory investigations, proceedings and enforcement actions, including as a result of our participation in and execution of government programs related to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, such as the processing of unemployment benefits for California and certain other states; the possibility that the Corporation's future liabilities may be in excess of its recorded liability and estimated range of possible loss for litigation, and regulatory and government actions; the possibility that the Corporation could face increased claims from one or more parties involved in mortgage securitizations; the Corporation’s ability to resolve representations and warranties repurchase and related claims; the risks related to the discontinuation of the London Interbank Offered Rate and other reference rates, including increased expenses and litigation and the effectiveness of hedging strategies; uncertainties about the financial stability and growth rates of non-U.S. jurisdictions, the risk that those jurisdictions may face difficulties servicing their sovereign debt, and related stresses on financial markets, currencies and trade, and the Corporation’s exposures to such risks, including direct, indirect and operational; the impact of U.S. and global interest rates, inflation, currency exchange rates, economic conditions, trade policies and tensions, including tariffs, and potential geopolitical instability; the impact of the interest rate, inflationary and macroeconomic environment on the Corporation’s business, financial condition and results of operations; the possibility that future credit losses may be higher than currently expected due to changes in economic assumptions, customer behavior, adverse developments with respect to U.S. or global economic conditions and other uncertainties, including the impact of supply chain disruptions, inflationary pressures and labor shortages on economic conditions and our business; potential losses related to the Corporation’s concentration of credit risk; the Corporation's ability to achieve its expense targets and expectations regarding revenue, net interest income, provision for credit losses, net charge-offs, effective tax rate, loan growth or other projections; adverse changes to the Corporation’s credit ratings from the major credit rating agencies; an inability to access capital markets or maintain deposits or borrowing costs; estimates of the fair value and other accounting values, subject to impairment assessments, of certain of the Corporation’s assets and liabilities; the estimated or actual impact of changes in accounting standards or assumptions in applying those standards; uncertainty regarding the content, timing and impact of regulatory capital and liquidity requirements; the impact of adverse changes to total loss-absorbing capacity requirements, stress capital buffer requirements and/or global systemically important bank surcharges; the potential impact of actions of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System on the Corporation’s capital plans; the effect of changes in or interpretations of income tax laws and regulations; the impact of implementation and compliance with U.S. and international laws, regulations and regulatory interpretations, including, but not limited to, recovery and resolution planning requirements, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation assessments, the Volcker Rule, fiduciary standards, derivatives regulations and the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act and any similar or related rules and regulations; a failure or disruption in or breach of the Corporation’s operational or security systems or infrastructure, or those of third parties, including as a result of cyber-attacks or campaigns; the risks related to the transition and physical impacts of climate change; our ability to achieve environmental, social and governance goals and commitments or the impact of any changes in the Corporation's sustainability strategy or commitments generally; the impact of any future federal government shutdown and uncertainty regarding the federal government’s debt limit or changes in fiscal, monetary or regulatory policy; the emergence of widespread health emergencies or pandemics, including the magnitude and duration of the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on U.S. and/or global financial market conditions and our business, results of operations, financial condition and prospects; the impact of natural disasters, extreme weather events, military conflict (including the Russia/ Ukraine conflict, the possible expansion of such conflict and potential geopolitical consequences), terrorism or other geopolitical events; and other matters. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made, and the Corporation undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statement to reflect the impact of circumstances or events that arise after the date the forward-looking statement was made. 34


 
Important Presentation Information 35 • The information contained herein is preliminary and based on Corporation data available at the time of the earnings presentation. It speaks only as of the particular date or dates included in the accompanying slides. Bank of America does not undertake an obligation to, and disclaims any duty to, update any of the information provided. • The Corporation may present certain metrics and ratios, including year-over-year comparisons of revenue, noninterest expense and pretax income, excluding certain items (e.g., DVA) that are non-GAAP financial measures. The Corporation believes the use of these non-GAAP financial measures provides additional clarity in understanding its results of operations and trends. For more information about the non-GAAP financial measures contained herein, please see the presentation of the most directly comparable financial measures calculated in accordance with GAAP and accompanying reconciliations in the earnings press release for the quarter ended September 30, 2022, and other earnings-related information available through the Bank of America Investor Relations website at: https://investor.bankofamerica.com/quarterly-earnings. • The Corporation presents certain key financial and nonfinancial performance indicators that management uses when assessing consolidated and/or segment results. The Corporation believes this information is useful because it provides management with information about underlying operational performance and trends. KPIs are presented in 3Q22 Financial Results on slide 2 and on the Summary Income Statement for each segment. • The Corporation views net interest income and related ratios and analyses on a fully taxable-equivalent (FTE) basis, which when presented on a consolidated basis are non-GAAP financial measures. The Corporation believes managing the business with net interest income on an FTE basis provides investors with meaningful information on the interest margin for comparative purposes. The Corporation believes that the presentation allows for comparison of amounts from both taxable and tax-exempt sources and is consistent with industry practices. The FTE adjustment was $106MM, $103MM, $106MM, $105MM and $101MM for 3Q22, 2Q22, 1Q22, 4Q21 and 3Q21, respectively. • The Corporation allocates capital to its business segments using a methodology that considers the effect of regulatory capital requirements in addition to internal risk-based capital models. The Corporation's internal risk-based capital models use a risk-adjusted methodology incorporating each segment's credit, market, interest rate, business and operational risk components. Allocated capital is reviewed periodically and refinements are made based on multiple considerations that include, but are not limited to, risk-weighted assets measured under Basel 3 Standardized and Advanced approaches, business segment exposures and risk profile, and strategic plans. As a result of this process, in the first quarter of 2022, the Corporation adjusted the amount of capital being allocated to its business segments.


 


 






Supplemental Information
Third Quarter 2022
        











Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the earnings presentation. It speaks only as of the particular date or dates included in the accompanying pages. Bank of America Corporation (the Corporation) does not undertake an obligation to, and disclaims any duty to, update any of the information provided. Any forward-looking statements in this information are subject to the forward-looking language contained in the Corporation’s reports filed with the SEC pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, which are available at the SEC’s website (www.sec.gov) or at the Corporation’s website (www.bankofamerica.com). The Corporation’s future financial performance is subject to risks and uncertainties as described in its SEC filings.



Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Table of ContentsPage
 
Consumer Banking
Global Wealth & Investment Management
Global Banking
Global Markets
All Other
Key Performance Indicators
The Corporation presents certain key financial and nonfinancial performance indicators that management uses when assessing consolidated and/or segment results. The Corporation believes this information is useful because it provides management with information about underlying operational performance and trends. Key performance indicators are presented in Consolidated Financial Highlights on page 2 and on the Key Indicators pages for each segment.
Business Segment Operations
The Corporation reports the results of operations of its four business segments and All Other on a fully taxable-equivalent (FTE) basis. Additionally, the results for the total Corporation as presented on pages 11 - 13 are reported on an FTE basis.




Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Financial Highlights
(In millions, except per share information)
 Nine Months Ended
September 30
Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
 20222021
Income statement
Net interest income$37,781 $31,524 $13,765 $12,444 $11,572 $11,410 $11,094 
Noninterest income32,637 35,529 10,737 10,244 11,656 10,650 11,672 
Total revenue, net of interest expense70,418 67,053 24,502 22,688 23,228 22,060 22,766 
Provision for credit losses1,451 (4,105)898 523 30 (489)(624)
Noninterest expense45,895 45,000 15,303 15,273 15,319 14,731 14,440 
Income before income taxes23,072 26,158 8,301 6,892 7,879 7,818 8,950 
Pretax, pre-provision income (1)
24,523 22,053 9,199 7,415 7,909 7,329 8,326 
Income tax expense2,676 1,193 1,219 645 812 805 1,259 
Net income 20,396 24,965 7,082 6,247 7,067 7,013 7,691 
Preferred stock dividends1,285 1,181 503 315 467 240 431 
Net income applicable to common shareholders19,111 23,784 6,579 5,932 6,600 6,773 7,260 
Diluted earnings per common share2.34 2.75 0.81 0.73 0.80 0.82 0.85 
Average diluted common shares issued and outstanding8,173.3 8,702.2 8,160.8 8,163.1 8,202.1 8,304.7 8,492.8 
Dividends paid per common share$0.64 $0.57 $0.22 $0.21 $0.21 $0.21 $0.21 
Performance ratios
Return on average assets0.86 %1.12 %0.90 %0.79 %0.89 %0.88 %0.99 %
Return on average common shareholders’ equity10.58 12.67 10.79 9.93 11.02 10.90 11.43 
Return on average shareholders’ equity10.12 12.15 10.37 9.34 10.64 10.27 11.08 
Return on average tangible common shareholders’ equity (2)
14.93 17.61 15.21 14.05 15.51 15.25 15.85 
Return on average tangible shareholders’ equity (2)
13.68 16.33 13.99 12.66 14.40 13.87 14.87 
Efficiency ratio 65.17 67.11 62.45 67.32 65.95 66.78 63.43 
At period end
Book value per share of common stock$29.96 $30.22 $29.96 $29.87 $29.70 $30.37 $30.22 
Tangible book value per share of common stock (2)
21.21 21.69 21.21 21.13 20.99 21.68 21.69 
Market capitalization242,338 349,841 242,338 250,136 332,320 359,383 349,841 
Number of financial centers - U.S.3,932 4,215 3,932 3,984 4,056 4,173 4,215 
Number of branded ATMs - U.S.15,572 16,513 15,572 15,730 15,959 16,209 16,513 
Headcount213,270 209,407 213,270 209,824 208,139 208,248 209,407 
(1)    Pretax, pre-provision income (PTPI) is a non-GAAP financial measure calculated by adjusting pretax income to add back provision for credit losses. Management believes that PTPI is a useful financial measure because it enables an assessment of the Corporation's ability to generate earnings to cover credit losses through a credit cycle. (See Exhibit A: Non-GAAP Reconciliations - Reconciliations to GAAP Financial Measures on page 33.)
(2)    Tangible equity ratios and tangible book value per share of common stock are non-GAAP financial measures. We believe the use of ratios that utilize tangible equity provides additional useful information because they present measures of those assets that can generate income. Tangible book value per share provides additional useful information about the level of tangible assets in relation to outstanding shares of common stock. (See Exhibit A: Non-GAAP Reconciliations - Reconciliations to GAAP Financial Measures on page 33.)



Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
2


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Statement of Income
(In millions, except per share information)
 Nine Months Ended September 30Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
 20222021
Net interest income
Interest income$47,490 $35,118 $19,621 $14,975 $12,894 $12,554 $12,336 
Interest expense9,709 3,594 5,856 2,531 1,322 1,144 1,242 
Net interest income37,781 31,524 13,765 12,444 11,572 11,410 11,094 
Noninterest income
Fees and commissions25,477 29,156 8,001 8,491 8,985 10,143 9,915 
Market making and similar activities9,023 7,360 3,068 2,717 3,238 1,331 2,005 
Other income (loss)(1,863)(987)(332)(964)(567)(824)(248)
Total noninterest income32,637 35,529 10,737 10,244 11,656 10,650 11,672 
Total revenue, net of interest expense70,418 67,053 24,502 22,688 23,228 22,060 22,766 
Provision for credit losses1,451 (4,105)898 523 30 (489)(624)
Noninterest expense
Compensation and benefits27,286 27,103 8,887 8,917 9,482 9,037 8,714 
Occupancy and equipment5,285 5,353 1,777 1,748 1,760 1,785 1,764 
Information processing and communications4,621 4,289 1,546 1,535 1,540 1,480 1,416 
Product delivery and transaction related2,749 2,940 892 924 933 941 987 
Marketing1,365 1,528 505 463 397 411 347 
Professional fees1,493 1,263 525 518 450 512 434 
Other general operating3,096 2,524 1,171 1,168 757 565 778 
Total noninterest expense45,895 45,000 15,303 15,273 15,319 14,731 14,440 
Income before income taxes23,072 26,158 8,301 6,892 7,879 7,818 8,950 
Income tax expense2,676 1,193 1,219 645 812 805 1,259 
Net income$20,396 $24,965 $7,082 $6,247 $7,067 $7,013 $7,691 
Preferred stock dividends1,285 1,181 503 315 467 240 431 
Net income applicable to common shareholders$19,111 $23,784 $6,579 $5,932 $6,600 $6,773 $7,260 
Per common share information
Earnings$2.35 $2.77 $0.81 $0.73 $0.81 $0.82 $0.86 
Diluted earnings2.34 2.75 0.81 0.73 0.80 0.82 0.85 
Average common shares issued and outstanding8,122.2 8,583.1 8,107.7 8,121.6 8,136.8 8,226.5 8,430.7 
Average diluted common shares issued and outstanding8,173.3 8,702.2 8,160.8 8,163.1 8,202.1 8,304.7 8,492.8 

Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income
(Dollars in millions)
Nine Months Ended September 30Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
20222021
Net income $20,396 $24,965 $7,082 $6,247 $7,067 $7,013 $7,691 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net-of-tax:
Net change in debt securities(6,381)(1,243)(1,112)(1,822)(3,447)(834)(153)
Net change in debit valuation adjustments1,298 292 462 575 261 64 27 
Net change in derivatives(10,890)(1,130)(3,703)(2,008)(5,179)(1,176)(431)
Employee benefit plan adjustments97 170 37 36 24 454 50 
Net change in foreign currency translation adjustments(47)(29)(37)(38)28 (16)(26)
Other comprehensive income (loss)(15,923)(1,940)(4,353)(3,257)(8,313)(1,508)(533)
Comprehensive income (loss)$4,473 $23,025 $2,729 $2,990 $(1,246)$5,505 $7,158 




Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
3


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Net Interest Income and Noninterest Income
(Dollars in millions) 
 Nine Months Ended September 30Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
 20222021
Net interest income
Interest income
Loans and leases$25,805 $21,859 $10,231 $8,222 $7,352 $7,423 $7,502 
Debt securities12,111 8,832 4,239 4,049 3,823 3,544 3,282 
Federal funds sold and securities borrowed or purchased under agreements to resell1,835 (43)1,446 396 (7)(47)
Trading account assets3,753 2,793 1,449 1,223 1,081 977 967 
Other interest income3,986 1,677 2,256 1,085 645 657 579 
Total interest income47,490 35,118 19,621 14,975 12,894 12,554 12,336 
Interest expense
Deposits1,719 394 1,235 320 164 143 133 
Short-term borrowings2,705 (205)2,264 553 (112)(153)(41)
Trading account liabilities1,117 824 383 370 364 304 285 
Long-term debt4,168 2,581 1,974 1,288 906 850 865 
Total interest expense9,709 3,594 5,856 2,531 1,322 1,144 1,242 
Net interest income$37,781 $31,524 $13,765 $12,444 $11,572 $11,410 $11,094 
Noninterest income
Fees and commissions
Card income
Interchange fees (1)
$3,067 $3,431 $1,060 $1,072 $935 $1,129 $1,154 
Other card income1,464 1,173 513 483 468 485 429 
Total card income4,531 4,604 1,573 1,555 1,403 1,614 1,583 
Service charges
Deposit-related fees4,109 4,671 1,162 1,417 1,530 1,600 1,619 
Lending-related fees907 923 304 300 303 310 309 
Total service charges5,016 5,594 1,466 1,717 1,833 1,910 1,928 
Investment and brokerage services
Asset management fees9,308 9,434 2,920 3,102 3,286 3,295 3,276 
Brokerage fees2,870 2,988 875 989 1,006 973 960 
Total investment and brokerage services 12,178 12,422 3,795 4,091 4,292 4,268 4,236 
Investment banking fees
Underwriting income1,559 4,028 452 435 672 1,049 1,168 
Syndication fees896 1,047 283 301 312 452 346 
Financial advisory services1,297 1,461 432 392 473 850 654 
Total investment banking fees3,752 6,536 1,167 1,128 1,457 2,351 2,168 
Total fees and commissions25,477 29,156 8,001 8,491 8,985 10,143 9,915 
Market making and similar activities9,023 7,360 3,068 2,717 3,238 1,331 2,005 
Other income (loss)(1,863)(987)(332)(964)(567)(824)(248)
Total noninterest income$32,637 $35,529 $10,737 $10,244 $11,656 $10,650 $11,672 
(1)Gross interchange fees and merchant income were $9.5 billion and $8.3 billion and are presented net of $6.4 billion and $4.9 billion of expenses for rewards and partner payments as well as certain other card costs for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021. Gross interchange fees and merchant income were $3.3 billion, $3.3 billion, $2.9 billion, $3.1 billion, and $3.0 billion and are presented net of $2.2 billion, $2.2 billion, $2.0 billion, $2.0 billion, and $1.8 billion of expenses for rewards and partner payments as well as certain other card costs for the third, second and first quarters of 2022, and the fourth and third quarters of 2021, respectively.
    



Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
4


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Consolidated Balance Sheet
(Dollars in millions)
September 30
2022
June 30
2022
September 30
2021
Assets
Cash and due from banks$27,802 $29,497 $28,689 
Interest-bearing deposits with the Federal Reserve, non-U.S. central banks and other banks177,174 168,505 251,165 
Cash and cash equivalents204,976 198,002 279,854 
Time deposits placed and other short-term investments7,449 6,841 6,518 
Federal funds sold and securities borrowed or purchased under agreements to resell275,247 272,430 261,934 
Trading account assets293,458 294,027 288,566 
Derivative assets72,386 62,047 40,829 
Debt securities:  
Carried at fair value236,245 274,665 285,377 
Held-to-maturity, at cost643,713 658,245 683,240 
Total debt securities879,958 932,910 968,617 
Loans and leases1,032,466 1,030,766 927,736 
Allowance for loan and lease losses(12,302)(11,973)(13,155)
Loans and leases, net of allowance1,020,164 1,018,793 914,581 
Premises and equipment, net11,117 11,016 10,684 
Goodwill69,022 69,022 69,023 
Loans held-for-sale7,629 6,654 9,415 
Customer and other receivables76,211 79,893 74,998 
Other assets155,766 159,971 160,427 
Total assets$3,073,383 $3,111,606 $3,085,446 
Liabilities
Deposits in U.S. offices:
Noninterest-bearing$696,976 $741,676 $753,107 
Interest-bearing1,143,317 1,134,876 1,108,490 
Deposits in non-U.S. offices:
Noninterest-bearing21,630 26,770 25,336 
Interest-bearing76,174 81,027 77,871 
Total deposits1,938,097 1,984,349 1,964,804 
Federal funds purchased and securities loaned or sold under agreements to repurchase215,627 204,307 207,428 
Trading account liabilities84,768 97,302 112,217 
Derivative liabilities50,586 38,425 38,062 
Short-term borrowings21,044 27,886 20,278 
Accrued expenses and other liabilities224,615 214,522 191,572 
Long-term debt269,122 275,697 278,621 
Total liabilities2,803,859 2,842,488 2,812,982 
Shareholders’ equity
Preferred stock, $0.01 par value; authorized – 100,000,000 shares; issued and outstanding – 4,117,652, 4,117,686 and 3,887,686 shares
29,134 29,134 23,441 
Common stock and additional paid-in capital, $0.01 par value; authorized – 12,800,000,000 shares; issued and outstanding – 8,024,450,244, 8,035,221,887 and 8,241,243,911 shares
59,460 59,499 69,612 
Retained earnings201,957 197,159 183,007 
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)(21,027)(16,674)(3,596)
Total shareholders’ equity269,524 269,118 272,464 
Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity$3,073,383 $3,111,606 $3,085,446 
Assets of consolidated variable interest entities included in total assets above (isolated to settle the liabilities of the variable interest entities)
Trading account assets$2,794 $2,294 $4,432 
Loans and leases16,073 16,170 16,857 
Allowance for loan and lease losses(802)(832)(994)
Loans and leases, net of allowance15,271 15,338 15,863 
All other assets93 177 136 
Total assets of consolidated variable interest entities$18,158 $17,809 $20,431 
Liabilities of consolidated variable interest entities included in total liabilities above
Short-term borrowings$82 $165 $330 
Long-term debt3,240 4,509 3,830 
All other liabilities9 12 10 
Total liabilities of consolidated variable interest entities$3,331 $4,686 $4,170 




Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
5


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Capital Management
(Dollars in millions)
September 30
2022
June 30
2022
September 30
2021
Risk-based capital metrics (1):
Standardized Approach
Common equity tier 1 capital$175,554 $171,754 $174,407 
Tier 1 capital204,675 200,872 197,842 
Total capital235,282 232,297 230,506 
Risk-weighted assets1,599,135 1,637,712 1,568,069 
Common equity tier 1 capital ratio11.0 %10.5 %11.1 %
Tier 1 capital ratio12.8 12.3 12.6 
Total capital ratio14.7 14.2 14.7 
Advanced Approaches
Common equity tier 1 capital$175,554 $171,754 $174,407 
Tier 1 capital204,675 200,872 197,842 
Total capital228,100 225,555 223,997 
Risk-weighted assets1,391,159 1,406,950 1,380,475 
Common equity tier 1 capital ratio12.6 %12.2 %12.6 %
Tier 1 capital ratio14.7 14.3 14.3 
Total capital ratio16.4 16.0 16.2 
Leverage-based metrics (1):
Adjusted average assets$3,028,175 $3,080,248 $2,999,663 
Tier 1 leverage ratio6.8 %6.5 %6.6 %
Supplementary leverage exposure$3,555,579 $3,620,789 $3,515,654 
Supplementary leverage ratio5.8 %5.5 %5.6 %
Total ending equity to total ending assets ratio8.8 8.6 8.8 
Common equity ratio7.8 7.7 8.1 
Tangible equity ratio (2)
6.6 6.5 6.7 
Tangible common equity ratio (2)
5.7 5.6 5.9 
(1)Regulatory capital ratios at September 30, 2022 are preliminary. We report regulatory capital ratios under both the Standardized and Advanced approaches. The approach that yields the lower ratio is used to assess capital adequacy.
(2)Tangible equity ratio equals period-end tangible shareholders’ equity divided by period-end tangible assets. Tangible common equity ratio equals period-end tangible common shareholders’ equity divided by period-end tangible assets. Tangible shareholders’ equity and tangible assets are non-GAAP financial measures. We believe the use of ratios that utilize tangible equity provides additional useful information because they present measures of those assets that can generate income. (See Exhibit A: Non-GAAP Reconciliations - Reconciliation to GAAP Financial Measures on page 33.)



Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
6


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Capital Composition under Basel 3
(Dollars in millions)
September 30
2022
June 30
2022
September 30
2021
Total common shareholders' equity$240,390 $239,984 $249,023 
CECL transitional amount (1)
1,881 1,881 2,722 
Goodwill, net of related deferred tax liabilities(68,641)(68,641)(68,638)
Deferred tax assets arising from net operating loss and tax credit carryforwards(7,658)(7,746)(7,638)
Intangibles, other than mortgage servicing rights, net of related deferred tax liabilities(1,561)(1,575)(1,644)
Defined benefit pension plan net assets(1,227)(1,236)(1,223)
Cumulative unrealized net (gain) loss related to changes in fair value of financial liabilities attributable to own creditworthiness, net-of-tax(239)303 1,477 
Accumulated net (gain) loss on certain cash flow hedges (2)
12,762 9,058 693 
Other(153)(274)(365)
Common equity tier 1 capital175,554 171,754 174,407 
Qualifying preferred stock, net of issuance cost29,134 29,134 23,440 
Other(13)(16)(5)
Tier 1 capital204,675 200,872 197,842 
Tier 2 capital instruments19,514 20,734 21,756 
Qualifying allowance for credit losses (3)
11,325 10,975 11,177 
Other(232)(284)(269)
Total capital under the Standardized approach235,282 232,297 230,506 
Adjustment in qualifying allowance for credit losses under the Advanced approaches (3)
(7,182)(6,742)(6,509)
Total capital under the Advanced approaches$228,100 $225,555 $223,997 
(1)September 30, 2021 includes the impact of the Corporation's adoption of the current expected credit losses (CECL) accounting standard on January 1, 2020 and 25 percent of the increase in reserves since the initial adoption. September 30, 2022 and June 30, 2022 include 75 percent of the transition provision's impact as of December 31, 2021.
(2)Includes amounts in accumulated other comprehensive income related to the hedging of items that are not recognized at fair value on the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
(3)Includes the impact of transition provisions related to the CECL accounting standard.



Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
7


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Quarterly Average Balances and Interest Rates – Fully Taxable-equivalent Basis
(Dollars in millions)
 Third Quarter 2022Second Quarter 2022Third Quarter 2021
Average
Balance
Interest
Income/
Expense (1)
Yield/
Rate
Average
Balance
Interest
Income/
Expense (1)
Yield/
Rate
Average
Balance
Interest
Income/
Expense (1)
Yield/
Rate
Earning assets
Interest-bearing deposits with the Federal Reserve,
   non-U.S. central banks and other banks
$184,263 $848 1.83 %$178,313 $282 0.63 %$240,054 $50 0.08 %
Time deposits placed and other short-term
    investments
10,352 34 1.33 7,658 12 0.62 6,419 0.24 
Federal funds sold and securities borrowed or
   purchased under agreements to resell
278,059 1,446 2.06 304,684 396 0.52 270,094 0.01 
Trading account assets163,744 1,465 3.55 147,442 1,241 3.37 147,196 979 2.64 
Debt securities901,654 4,259 1.88 945,927 4,067 1.72 949,009 3,296 1.39 
Loans and leases (2)
   
Residential mortgage 228,474 1,616 2.83 228,529 1,571 2.75 215,652 1,487 2.76 
Home equity27,282 229 3.32 27,415 235 3.44 30,069 263 3.47 
Credit card85,009 2,187 10.20 81,024 1,954 9.68 75,569 1,952 10.25 
Direct/Indirect and other consumer108,300 923 3.38 108,639 696 2.57 98,148 578 2.34 
Total consumer449,065 4,955 4.39 445,607 4,456 4.01 419,438 4,280 4.06 
U.S. commercial377,183 3,427 3.60 363,978 2,525 2.78 323,659 2,315 2.84 
Non-U.S. commercial127,793 1,028 3.19 128,237 696 2.18 101,967 446 1.73 
Commercial real estate66,707 738 4.39 63,072 476 3.02 59,881 378 2.51 
Commercial lease financing13,586 124 3.65 13,992 104 2.95 15,564 116 2.98 
Total commercial585,269 5,317 3.61 569,279 3,801 2.68 501,071 3,255 2.58 
Total loans and leases 1,034,334 10,272 3.94 1,014,886 8,257 3.26 920,509 7,535 3.25 
Other earning assets98,172 1,403 5.67 108,180 823 3.06 120,734 567 1.86 
Total earning assets2,670,578 19,727 2.94 2,707,090 15,078 2.23 2,654,015 12,437 1.86 
Cash and due from banks27,250 29,025  30,101 
Other assets, less allowance for loan and lease losses407,718 421,740   392,336 
Total assets$3,105,546 $3,157,855   $3,076,452 
Interest-bearing liabilities
U.S. interest-bearing deposits
Demand and money market deposits$981,145 $832 0.34 %$985,983 $189 0.08 %$931,964 $79 0.03 %
Time and savings deposits164,313 193 0.47 156,824 42 0.11 162,337 41 0.10 
Total U.S. interest-bearing deposits1,145,458 1,025 0.35 1,142,807 231 0.08 1,094,301 120 0.04 
Non-U.S. interest-bearing deposits79,383 210 1.05 79,471 89 0.45 84,098 13 0.06 
Total interest-bearing deposits1,224,841 1,235 0.40 1,222,278 320 0.11 1,178,399 133 0.04 
Federal funds purchased and securities loaned or sold
   under agreements to repurchase
211,346 1,338 2.51 214,777 454 0.85 216,869 147 0.27 
Short-term borrowings and other interest-bearing
    liabilities
137,253 926 2.68 134,790 99 0.30 107,713 (188)(0.69)
Trading account liabilities46,507 383 3.27 54,005 370 2.74 56,496 285 2.00 
Long-term debt250,204 1,974 3.14 245,781 1,288 2.10 248,988 865 1.37 
Total interest-bearing liabilities1,870,151 5,856 1.24 1,871,631 2,531 0.54 1,808,465 1,242 0.27 
Noninterest-bearing sources   
Noninterest-bearing deposits737,934 789,801   764,306 
Other liabilities (3)
226,444 228,226   228,197 
Shareholders’ equity271,017 268,197   275,484 
Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity$3,105,546 $3,157,855   $3,076,452 
Net interest spread1.70 %  1.69 %1.59 %
Impact of noninterest-bearing sources0.36   0.17 0.09 
Net interest income/yield on earning assets (4)
$13,871 2.06 % $12,547 1.86 %$11,195 1.68 %
(1)Includes the impact of interest rate risk management contracts.
(2)Nonperforming loans are included in the respective average loan balances. Income on these nonperforming loans is generally recognized on a cost recovery basis.
(3)Includes $29.2 billion, $29.7 billion and $29.6 billion of structured notes and liabilities for the third and second quarters of 2022 and the third quarter of 2021, respectively.
(4)Net interest income includes FTE adjustments of $106 million, $103 million and $101 million for the third and second quarters of 2022 and the third quarter of 2021, respectively.



Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
8


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Debt Securities
(Dollars in millions)
 September 30, 2022
 Amortized
Cost
Gross
Unrealized
Gains
Gross
Unrealized
Losses
Fair
Value
Available-for-sale debt securities
Mortgage-backed securities:
Agency$25,743 $5 $(2,144)$23,604 
Agency-collateralized mortgage obligations2,589  (220)2,369 
Commercial6,248 24 (499)5,773 
Non-agency residential467 16 (83)400 
Total mortgage-backed securities35,047 45 (2,946)32,146 
U.S. Treasury and government agencies169,368 42 (1,797)167,613 
Non-U.S. securities11,046 1 (44)11,003 
Other taxable securities3,481  (76)3,405 
Tax-exempt securities12,544  (372)12,172 
Total available-for-sale debt securities231,486 88 (5,235)226,339 
Other debt securities carried at fair value (1)
10,223 54 (371)9,906 
Total debt securities carried at fair value241,709 142 (5,606)236,245 
Held-to-maturity debt securities
Agency mortgage-backed securities513,977  (94,111)419,866 
U.S. Treasury and government agencies121,585  (21,089)100,496 
Other taxable securities8,181  (990)7,191 
Total held-to-maturity debt securities643,743  (116,190)527,553 
Total debt securities$885,452 $142 $(121,796)$763,798 
 June 30, 2022
Available-for-sale debt securities
Mortgage-backed securities:   
Agency$29,999 $46 $(1,320)$28,725 
Agency-collateralized mortgage obligations2,741 (132)2,613 
Commercial13,038 130 (608)12,560 
Non-agency residential477 16 (63)430 
Total mortgage-backed securities46,255 196 (2,123)44,328 
U.S. Treasury and government agencies195,527 540 (2,012)194,055 
Non-U.S. securities11,879 — (43)11,836 
Other taxable securities3,318 (54)3,270 
Tax-exempt securities12,976 44 (255)12,765 
Total available-for-sale debt securities269,955 786 (4,487)266,254 
Other debt securities carried at fair value (1)
8,645 41 (275)8,411 
Total debt securities carried at fair value278,600 827 (4,762)274,665 
Held-to-maturity debt securities
Agency mortgage-backed securities528,297 21 (67,193)461,125 
U.S. Treasury and government agencies121,574 — (14,896)106,678 
Other taxable securities8,413 (675)7,739 
Total held-to-maturity debt securities658,284 22 (82,764)575,542 
Total debt securities$936,884 $849 $(87,526)$850,207 
(1)    Primarily includes non-U.S. securities used to satisfy certain international regulatory requirements.



Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
9


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Supplemental Financial Data
(Dollars in millions)
Nine Months Ended September 30Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
 20222021
FTE basis data (1)
Net interest income$38,096 $31,846 $13,871 $12,547 $11,678 $11,515 $11,195 
Total revenue, net of interest expense 70,733 67,375 24,608 22,791 23,334 22,165 22,867 
Net interest yield1.87 %1.66 %2.06 %1.86 %1.69 %1.67 %1.68 %
Efficiency ratio 64.88 66.79 62.18 67.01 65.65 66.46 63.14 
(1)FTE basis is a non-GAAP financial measure. FTE basis is a performance measure used by management in operating the business that management believes provides investors with meaningful information on the interest margin for comparative purposes. The Corporation believes that this presentation allows for comparison of amounts from both taxable and tax-exempt sources and is consistent with industry practices. Net interest income includes FTE adjustments of $315 million and $322 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, $106 million, $103 million and $106 million for the third, second and first quarters of 2022, and $105 million and $101 million for the fourth and third quarters of 2021, respectively.



Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
10


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Quarterly Results by Business Segment and All Other
(Dollars in millions)
 Third Quarter 2022
 Total
Corporation
Consumer BankingGWIMGlobal BankingGlobal MarketsAll
Other
Net interest income$13,871 $7,784 $1,981 $3,326 $743 $37 
Noninterest income
Fees and commissions:
Card income1,573 1,331 16 206 18 2 
Service charges1,466 597 18 771 81 (1)
Investment and brokerage services3,795 73 3,255 11 457 (1)
Investment banking fees1,167  47 726 430 (36)
Total fees and commissions8,001 2,001 3,336 1,714 986 (36)
Market making and similar activities3,068 3 30 52 2,874 109 
Other income (loss)
(332)116 82 499 (120)(909)
Total noninterest income (loss)10,737 2,120 3,448 2,265 3,740 (836)
Total revenue, net of interest expense 24,608 9,904 5,429 5,591 4,483 (799)
Provision for credit losses898 738 37 170 11 (58)
Noninterest expense15,303 5,097 3,816 2,651 3,023 716 
Income (loss) before income taxes8,407 4,069 1,576 2,770 1,449 (1,457)
Income tax expense (benefit)1,325 997 386 734 384 (1,176)
Net income (loss)$7,082 $3,072 $1,190 $2,036 $1,065 $(281)
Average
Total loans and leases$1,034,334 $295,231 $223,734 $384,305 $120,435 $10,629 
Total assets (1)
3,105,546 1,145,846 383,468 585,683 847,899 142,650 
Total deposits1,962,775 1,069,093 339,487 495,154 38,820 20,221 
Quarter end
Total loans and leases$1,032,466 $297,825 $224,858 $377,711 $121,721 $10,351 
Total assets (1)
3,073,383 1,149,918 370,790 575,082 849,542 128,051 
Total deposits1,938,097 1,072,580 324,859 484,309 37,318 19,031 
 Second Quarter 2022
 Total
Corporation
Consumer BankingGWIMGlobal BankingGlobal MarketsAll
Other
Net interest income$12,547 $7,087 $1,802 $2,634 $981 $43 
Noninterest income
Fees and commissions:
Card income1,555 1,320 17 196 17 
Service charges1,717 679 19 933 83 
Investment and brokerage services4,091 76 3,486 13 518 (2)
Investment banking fees1,128 — 41 692 461 (66)
Total fees and commissions8,491 2,075 3,563 1,834 1,079 (60)
Market making and similar activities2,717 23 80 2,657 (45)
Other income (loss)(964)(28)45 458 (215)(1,224)
Total noninterest income (loss)10,244 2,049 3,631 2,372 3,521 (1,329)
Total revenue, net of interest expense22,791 9,136 5,433 5,006 4,502 (1,286)
Provision for credit losses523 350 33 157 (25)
Noninterest expense15,273 4,959 3,875 2,799 3,109 531 
Income (loss) before income taxes6,995 3,827 1,525 2,050 1,385 (1,792)
Income tax expense (benefit)748 938 374 543 367 (1,474)
Net income (loss)$6,247 $2,889 $1,151 $1,507 $1,018 $(318)
Average
Total loans and leases$1,014,886 $289,595 $219,277 $377,248 $114,375 $14,391 
Total assets (1)
3,157,855 1,154,773 409,472 601,945 866,742 124,923 
Total deposits2,012,079 1,078,020 363,943 509,261 41,192 19,663 
Quarter end
Total loans and leases$1,030,766 $294,570 $221,705 $385,376 $118,290 $10,825 
Total assets (1)
3,111,606 1,154,366 393,948 591,490 835,129 136,673 
Total deposits1,984,349 1,077,215 347,991 499,714 40,055 19,374 
(1)Total assets include asset allocations to match liabilities (i.e., deposits).





Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
11


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Quarterly Results by Business Segment and All Other (continued)
(Dollars in millions)
 Third Quarter 2021
 Total
Corporation
Consumer BankingGWIMGlobal BankingGlobal MarketsAll
Other
Net interest income$11,195 $6,493 $1,452 $2,185 $1,000 $65 
Noninterest income
Fees and commissions:
Card income1,583 1,317 23 185 59 (1)
Service charges1,928 935 18 889 83 
Investment and brokerage services4,236 81 3,682 471 (7)
Investment banking fees2,168 — 83 1,297 844 (56)
Total fees and commissions9,915 2,333 3,806 2,380 1,457 (61)
Market making and similar activities2,005 — 40 2,014 (58)
Other income (loss)(248)12 43 640 48 (991)
Total noninterest income (loss)11,672 2,345 3,858 3,060 3,519 (1,110)
Total revenue, net of interest expense22,867 8,838 5,310 5,245 4,519 (1,045)
Provision for credit losses(624)247 (58)(781)16 (48)
Noninterest expense14,440 4,558 3,744 2,534 3,252 352 
Income (loss) before income taxes9,051 4,033 1,624 3,492 1,251 (1,349)
Income tax expense (benefit)1,360 988 398 943 325 (1,294)
Net income (loss)$7,691 $3,045 $1,226 $2,549 $926 $(55)
Average
Total loans and leases$920,509 $281,380 $199,664 $324,736 $97,148 $17,581 
Total assets (1)
3,076,452 1,076,236 386,346 621,699 804,938 187,233 
Total deposits1,942,705 1,000,765 339,357 534,166 54,650 13,767 
Quarter end
Total loans and leases$927,736 $280,803 $202,268 $328,893 $98,892 $16,880 
Total assets (1)
3,085,446 1,091,431 393,708 623,640 776,929 199,738 
Total deposits1,964,804 1,015,276 345,590 536,476 54,941 12,521 
(1)Total assets include asset allocations to match liabilities (i.e., deposits).




Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
12


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Year-to-Date Results by Business Segment and All Other
(Dollars in millions) 
 Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022
 Total
Corporation
Consumer BankingGWIMGlobal BankingGlobal MarketsAll
Other
Net interest income$38,096 $21,551 $5,451 $8,304 $2,717 $73 
Noninterest income
Fees and commissions:
Card income4,531 3,836 51 578 49 17 
Service charges5,016 2,120 56 2,590 246 4 
Investment and brokerage services12,178 232 10,395 36 1,520 (5)
Investment banking fees3,752  154 2,298 1,473 (173)
Total fees and commissions25,477 6,188 10,656 5,502 3,288 (157)
Market making and similar activities9,023 5 66 181 8,721 50 
Other income (loss)(1,863)109 165 1,804 (449)(3,492)
Total noninterest income (loss)32,637 6,302 10,887 7,487 11,560 (3,599)
Total revenue, net of interest expense70,733 27,853 16,338 15,791 14,277 (3,526)
Provision for credit losses1,451 1,036 29 492 24 (130)
Noninterest expense45,895 14,977 11,706 8,133 9,249 1,830 
Income (loss) before income taxes23,387 11,840 4,603 7,166 5,004 (5,226)
Income tax expense (benefit)2,991 2,901 1,128 1,899 1,326 (4,263)
Net income (loss)$20,396 $8,939 $3,475 $5,267 $3,678 $(963)
Average
Total loans and leases$1,009,211 $289,672 $218,030 $373,547 $114,505 $13,457 
Total assets (1)
3,156,657 1,144,587 407,819 605,884 857,747 140,620 
Total deposits2,006,584 1,067,785 362,611 514,612 41,448 20,128 
Period end
Total loans and leases $1,032,466 $297,825 $224,858 $377,711 $121,721 $10,351 
Total assets (1)
3,073,383 1,149,918 370,790 575,082 849,542 128,051 
Total deposits1,938,097 1,072,580 324,859 484,309 37,318 19,031 
 Nine Months Ended September 30, 2021
 Total
Corporation
Consumer BankingGWIMGlobal BankingGlobal MarketsAll
Other
Net interest income$31,846 $18,386 $4,137 $6,150 $2,980 $193 
Noninterest income
Fees and commissions:
Card income4,604 3,818 62 515 208 
Service charges5,594 2,617 54 2,637 280 
Investment and brokerage services12,422 236 10,610 90 1,504 (18)
Investment banking fees6,536 — 305 3,642 2,784 (195)
Total fees and commissions29,156 6,671 11,031 6,884 4,776 (206)
Market making and similar activities7,360 31 99 7,448 (219)
Other income (loss)(987)35 147 1,834 233 (3,236)
Total noninterest income (loss)35,529 6,707 11,209 8,817 12,457 (3,661)
Total revenue, net of interest expense67,375 25,093 15,346 14,967 15,437 (3,468)
Provision for credit losses(4,105)(1,067)(185)(2,738)33 (148)
Noninterest expense45,000 14,548 11,425 7,915 10,150 962 
Income (loss) before income taxes26,480 11,612 4,106 9,790 5,254 (4,282)
Income tax expense (benefit)1,515 2,845 1,006 2,643 1,366 (6,345)
Net income (loss)$24,965 $8,767 $3,100 $7,147 $3,888 $2,063 
Average
Total loans and leases$912,091 $284,644 $194,090 $326,632 $87,535 $19,190 
Total assets (1)
2,990,984 1,043,787 379,802 597,947 775,552 193,896 
Total deposits1,879,597 968,272 333,119 509,445 54,699 14,062 
Period end
Total loans and leases$927,736 $280,803 $202,268 $328,893 $98,892 $16,880 
Total assets (1)
3,085,446 1,091,431 393,708 623,640 776,929 199,738 
Total deposits1,964,804 1,015,276 345,590 536,476 54,941 12,521 
(1)Total assets include asset allocations to match liabilities (i.e., deposits).





Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
13


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Consumer Banking Segment Results
(Dollars in millions)
Nine Months Ended September 30Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
20222021
Net interest income$21,551 $18,386 $7,784 $7,087 $6,680 $6,543 $6,493 
Noninterest income:
Card income3,836 3,818 1,331 1,320 1,185 1,354 1,317 
Service charges2,120 2,617 597 679 844 921 935 
All other income346 272 192 50 104 94 93 
Total noninterest income6,302 6,707 2,120 2,049 2,133 2,369 2,345 
Total revenue, net of interest expense27,853 25,093 9,904 9,136 8,813 8,912 8,838 
Provision for credit losses1,036 (1,067)738 350 (52)32 247 
Noninterest expense14,977 14,548 5,097 4,959 4,921 4,742 4,558 
Income before income taxes11,840 11,612 4,069 3,827 3,944 4,138 4,033 
Income tax expense2,901 2,845 997 938 966 1,014 988 
Net income$8,939 $8,767 $3,072 $2,889 $2,978 $3,124 $3,045 
Net interest yield2.61 %2.45 %2.79 %2.55 %2.48 %2.44 %2.49 %
Return on average allocated capital (1)
30 30 30 29 30 32 31 
Efficiency ratio53.77 57.97 51.47 54.28 55.84 53.22 51.56 
Balance Sheet
Average
Total loans and leases$289,672 $284,644 $295,231 $289,595 $284,068 $282,332 $281,380 
Total earning assets (2)
1,104,653 1,001,590 1,106,513 1,114,552 1,092,742 1,061,742 1,034,471 
Total assets (2)
1,144,587 1,043,787 1,145,846 1,154,773 1,133,001 1,102,444 1,076,236 
Total deposits1,067,785 968,272 1,069,093 1,078,020 1,056,100 1,026,810 1,000,765 
Allocated capital (1)
40,000 38,500 40,000 40,000 40,000 38,500 38,500 
Period end
Total loans and leases$297,825 $280,803 $297,825 $294,570 $286,322 $286,511 $280,803 
Total earning assets (2)
1,110,524 1,050,331 1,110,524 1,114,524 1,125,963 1,090,331 1,050,331 
Total assets (2)
1,149,918 1,091,431 1,149,918 1,154,366 1,166,443 1,131,142 1,091,431 
Total deposits1,072,580 1,015,276 1,072,580 1,077,215 1,088,940 1,054,995 1,015,276 
(1)    Return on average allocated capital is calculated as net income, adjusted for cost of funds and earnings credits and certain expenses related to intangibles, divided by average allocated capital. Other companies may define or calculate these measures differently.
(2)    Total earning assets and total assets include asset allocations to match liabilities (i.e., deposits) and allocated shareholders’ equity.




Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
14


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Consumer Banking Key Indicators
(Dollars in millions)
 Nine Months Ended September 30Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
20222021
Average deposit balances
Checking$599,640 $542,525 $599,099 $606,331 $593,428 $577,703 $561,629 
Savings72,545 69,220 71,933 73,295 72,413 70,719 70,799 
MMS361,011 318,849 365,271 362,798 354,850 342,812 331,924 
CDs and IRAs29,730 33,921 28,731 29,796 30,685 31,584 32,578 
Other4,859 3,757 4,059 5,800 4,724 3,992 3,835 
Total average deposit balances$1,067,785 $968,272 $1,069,093 $1,078,020 $1,056,100 $1,026,810 $1,000,765 
Deposit spreads (excludes noninterest costs)
Checking1.94 %1.97 %1.98 %1.93 %1.91 %1.92 %1.95 %
Savings2.19 2.25 2.19 2.19 2.19 2.21 2.23 
MMS1.39 1.29 1.64 1.29 1.23 1.24 1.26 
CDs and IRAs1.09 0.41 1.85 0.98 0.46 0.32 0.34 
Other1.12 0.27 2.04 1.04 0.41 0.22 0.24 
Total deposit spreads1.74 1.70 1.88 1.70 1.65 1.66 1.68 
Consumer investment assets$302,413 $353,280 $302,413 $315,243 $357,593 $368,831 $353,280 
Active digital banking users (in thousands) (1)
43,496 40,911 43,496 42,690 42,269 41,365 40,911 
Active mobile banking users (in thousands) (2)
34,922 32,455 34,922 34,167 33,589 32,980 32,455 
Financial centers3,932 4,215 3,932 3,984 4,056 4,173 4,215 
ATMs15,572 16,513 15,572 15,730 15,959 16,209 16,513 
Total credit card (3)
Loans
Average credit card outstandings$81,505 $74,383 $85,009 $81,024 $78,409 $78,358 $75,569 
Ending credit card outstandings87,296 76,869 87,296 84,010 79,356 81,438 76,869 
Credit quality
Net charge-offs$948 $1,443 $328 $323 $297 $280 $321 
1.55 %2.59 %1.53 %1.60 %1.53 %1.42 %1.69 %
30+ delinquency$1,202 $934 $1,202 $1,008 $1,003 $997 $934 
1.38 %1.21 %1.38 %1.20 %1.26 %1.22 %1.21 %
90+ delinquency$547 $450 $547 $493 $492 $487 $450 
0.63 %0.58 %0.63 %0.59 %0.62 %0.60 %0.58 %
Other total credit card indicators (3)
Gross interest yield10.14 %10.24 %10.71 %9.76 %9.90 %9.96 %10.10 %
Risk-adjusted margin10.13 9.93 10.07 9.95 10.40 10.85 10.70 
New accounts (in thousands)3,301 2,654 1,256 1,068 977 940 1,049 
Purchase volumes$263,788 $223,900 $91,064 $91,810 $80,914 $87,671 $80,925 
Debit card data
Purchase volumes$373,426 $349,492 $127,135 $128,707 $117,584 $124,278 $119,680 
Loan production (4)
Consumer Banking:
First mortgage$18,695 $33,194 $4,028 $6,551 $8,116 $12,782 $12,510 
Home equity5,875 2,579 1,999 2,151 1,725 1,417 1,262 
Total (5):
First mortgage$39,548 $56,731 $8,724 $14,471 $16,353 $22,961 $21,232 
Home equity6,995 3,192 2,420 2,535 2,040 1,703 1,523 
(1)    Represents mobile and/or online active users over the past 90 days.
(2)    Represents mobile active users over the past 90 days.
(3)    In addition to the credit card portfolio in Consumer Banking, the remaining credit card portfolio is in GWIM.
(4)    Loan production amounts represent the unpaid principal balance of loans and, in the case of home equity, the principal amount of the total line of credit.
(5)    In addition to loan production in Consumer Banking, there is also first mortgage and home equity loan production in GWIM.



Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
15


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Consumer Banking Quarterly Results
(Dollars in millions)
Third Quarter 2022Second Quarter 2022
Total Consumer BankingDepositsConsumer
Lending
Total Consumer BankingDepositsConsumer
Lending
Net interest income$7,784 $5,006 $2,778 $7,087 $4,477 $2,610 
Noninterest income:
Card income1,331 (10)1,341 1,320 (9)1,329 
Service charges597 597  679 678 
All other income 192 141 51 50 55 (5)
Total noninterest income2,120 728 1,392 2,049 724 1,325 
Total revenue, net of interest expense9,904 5,734 4,170 9,136 5,201 3,935 
Provision for credit losses738 173 565 350 142 208 
Noninterest expense5,097 3,141 1,956 4,959 3,055 1,904 
Income before income taxes4,069 2,420 1,649 3,827 2,004 1,823 
Income tax expense997 593 404 938 491 447 
Net income $3,072 $1,827 $1,245 $2,889 $1,513 $1,376 
Net interest yield2.79 %1.87 %3.76 %2.55 %1.67 %3.64 %
Return on average allocated capital (1)
30 56 18 29 47 20 
Efficiency ratio51.47 54.78 46.92 54.28 58.74 48.38 
Balance Sheet
Average
Total loans and leases$295,231 $4,153 $291,078 $289,595 $4,147 $285,448 
Total earning assets (2)
1,106,513 1,064,585 293,366 1,114,552 1,072,773 287,512 
Total assets (2)
1,145,846 1,096,911 300,374 1,154,773 1,106,098 294,407 
Total deposits1,069,093 1,063,075 6,018 1,078,020 1,072,166 5,854 
Allocated capital (1)
40,000 13,000 27,000 40,000 13,000 27,000 
Period end
Total loans and leases$297,825 $4,134 $293,691 $294,570 $4,123 $290,447 
Total earning assets (2)
1,110,524 1,068,130 295,637 1,114,524 1,072,291 292,657 
Total assets (2)
1,149,918 1,100,517 302,644 1,154,366 1,104,991 299,799 
Total deposits1,072,580 1,066,522 6,058 1,077,215 1,071,089 6,126 
Third Quarter 2021
Total Consumer BankingDepositsConsumer
Lending
Net interest income$6,493 $3,730 $2,763 
Noninterest income:
Card income1,317 (7)1,324 
Service charges935 934 
All other income93 58 35 
Total noninterest income2,345 985 1,360 
Total revenue, net of interest expense8,838 4,715 4,123 
Provision for credit losses247 53 194 
Noninterest expense4,558 2,724 1,834 
Income before income taxes4,033 1,938 2,095 
Income tax expense988 475 513 
Net income$3,045 $1,463 $1,582 
Net interest yield2.49 %1.49 %3.95 %
Return on average allocated capital (1)
31 48 24 
Efficiency ratio51.56 57.75 44.48 
Balance Sheet
Average
Total loans and leases$281,380 $4,387 $276,993 
Total earning assets (2)
1,034,471 991,186 277,491 
Total assets (2)
1,076,236 1,026,811 283,631 
Total deposits1,000,765 993,624 7,141 
Allocated capital (1)
38,500 12,000 26,500 
Period end
Total loans and leases$280,803 $4,345 $276,458 
Total earning assets (2)
1,050,331 1,006,593 277,056 
Total assets (2)
1,091,431 1,041,487 283,262 
Total deposits1,015,276 1,008,051 7,225 
(1)    Return on average allocated capital is calculated as net income, adjusted for cost of funds and earnings credits and certain expenses related to intangibles, divided by average allocated capital. Other companies may define or calculate these measures differently.
(2)    For presentation purposes, in segments or businesses where the total of liabilities and equity exceeds assets, the Corporation allocates assets from All Other to match the segments’ and businesses’ liabilities and allocated shareholders’ equity. As a result, total earning assets and total assets of the businesses may not equal total Consumer Banking.


Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
16


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Consumer Banking Year-to-Date Results
(Dollars in millions)
Nine Months Ended September 30
20222021
Total Consumer BankingDepositsConsumer
Lending
Total Consumer BankingDepositsConsumer
Lending
Net interest income$21,551 $13,535 $8,016 $18,386 $10,489 $7,897 
Noninterest income:
Card income3,836 (27)3,863 3,818 (19)3,837 
Service charges2,120 2,118 2 2,617 2,615 
All other income346 264 82 272 151 121 
Total noninterest income6,302 2,355 3,947 6,707 2,747 3,960 
Total revenue, net of interest expense27,853 15,890 11,963 25,093 13,236 11,857 
Provision for credit losses1,036 388 648 (1,067)174 (1,241)
Noninterest expense14,977 9,204 5,773 14,548 8,789 5,759 
Income before income taxes11,840 6,298 5,542 11,612 4,273 7,339 
Income tax expense2,901 1,543 1,358 2,845 1,047 1,798 
Net income$8,939 $4,755 $4,184 $8,767 $3,226 $5,541 
Net interest yield2.61 %1.70 %3.73 %2.45 %1.46 %3.76 %
Return on average allocated capital (1)
30 49 21 30 36 28 
Efficiency ratio53.77 57.92 48.26 57.97 66.40 48.57 
Balance Sheet
Average
Total loans and leases$289,672 $4,171 $285,501 $284,644 $4,479 $280,165 
Total earning assets (2)
1,104,653 1,062,668 287,422 1,001,590 957,561 280,617 
Total assets (2)
1,144,587 1,095,830 294,193 1,043,787 994,562 285,813 
Total deposits1,067,785 1,061,876 5,909 968,272 961,266 7,006 
Allocated capital (1)
40,000 13,000 27,000 38,500 12,000 26,500 
Period end
Total loans and leases$297,825 $4,134 $293,691 $280,803 $4,345 $276,458 
Total earning assets (2)
1,110,524 1,068,130 295,637 1,050,331 1,006,593 277,056 
Total assets (2)
1,149,918 1,100,517 302,644 1,091,431 1,041,487 283,262 
Total deposits1,072,580 1,066,522 6,058 1,015,276 1,008,051 7,225 
For footnotes, see page 16.


Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
17


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Global Wealth & Investment Management Segment Results
(Dollars in millions)
 Nine Months Ended
September 30
Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
 20222021
Net interest income $5,451 $4,137 $1,981 $1,802 $1,668 $1,526 $1,452 
Noninterest income:
Investment and brokerage services10,395 10,610 3,255 3,486 3,654 3,703 3,682 
All other income492 599 193 145 154 173 176 
Total noninterest income10,887 11,209 3,448 3,631 3,808 3,876 3,858 
Total revenue, net of interest expense 16,338 15,346 5,429 5,433 5,476 5,402 5,310 
Provision for credit losses29 (185)37 33 (41)(56)(58)
Noninterest expense11,706 11,425 3,816 3,875 4,015 3,834 3,744 
Income before income taxes 4,603 4,106 1,576 1,525 1,502 1,624 1,624 
Income tax expense 1,128 1,006 386 374 368 398 398 
Net income$3,475 $3,100 $1,190 $1,151 $1,134 $1,226 $1,226 
Net interest yield 1.84 %1.51 %2.12 %1.82 %1.62 %1.53 %1.54 %
Return on average allocated capital (1)
27 25 27 26 26 30 30 
Efficiency ratio71.65 74.45 70.28 71.34 73.31 70.95 70.51 
Balance Sheet
Average
Total loans and leases$218,030 $194,090 $223,734 $219,277 $210,937 $205,236 $199,664 
Total earning assets (2)
395,023 367,239 370,733 396,611 418,248 395,144 373,691 
Total assets (2)
407,819 379,802 383,468 409,472 431,040 408,033 386,346 
Total deposits362,611 333,119 339,487 363,943 384,902 360,912 339,357 
Allocated capital (1)
17,500 16,500 17,500 17,500 17,500 16,500 16,500 
Period end
Total loans and leases$224,858 $202,268 $224,858 $221,705 $214,273 $208,971 $202,268 
Total earning assets (2)
357,434 380,857 357,434 380,771 419,903 425,112 380,857 
Total assets (2)
370,790 393,708 370,790 393,948 433,122 438,275 393,708 
Total deposits324,859 345,590 324,859 347,991 385,288 390,143 345,590 
(1)Return on average allocated capital is calculated as net income, adjusted for cost of funds and earnings credits and certain expenses related to intangibles, divided by average allocated capital. Other companies may define or calculate these measures differently.
(2)Total earning assets and total assets include asset allocations to match liabilities (i.e., deposits) and allocated shareholders’ equity.




Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
18


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Global Wealth & Investment Management Key Indicators
(Dollars in millions)
 Nine Months Ended
September 30
Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
 20222021
Revenue by Business
Merrill Wealth Management$13,649 $12,916 $4,524 $4,536 $4,589 $4,532 $4,471 
Bank of America Private Bank2,689 2,430 905 897 887 870 839 
Total revenue, net of interest expense $16,338 $15,346 $5,429 $5,433 $5,476 $5,402 $5,310 
Client Balances by Business, at period end
Merrill Wealth Management$2,710,985 $3,108,358 $2,710,985 $2,819,998 $3,116,052 $3,214,881 $3,108,358 
Bank of America Private Bank537,771 584,475 537,771 547,116 598,100 625,453 584,475 
Total client balances$3,248,756 $3,692,833 $3,248,756 $3,367,114 $3,714,152 $3,840,334 $3,692,833 
Client Balances by Type, at period end
Assets under management (1)
$1,329,557 $1,578,630 $1,329,557 $1,411,344 $1,571,605 $1,638,782 $1,578,630 
Brokerage and other assets1,413,946 1,612,472 1,413,946 1,437,562 1,592,802 1,655,021 1,612,472 
Deposits324,859 345,590 324,859 347,991 385,288 390,143 345,590 
Loans and leases (2)
228,129 205,055 228,129 224,847 217,461 212,251 205,055 
Less: Managed deposits in assets under management(47,735)(48,914)(47,735)(54,630)(53,004)(55,863)(48,914)
Total client balances$3,248,756 $3,692,833 $3,248,756 $3,367,114 $3,714,152 $3,840,334 $3,692,833 
Assets Under Management Rollforward
Assets under management, beginning balance$1,638,782 $1,408,465 $1,411,344 $1,571,605 $1,638,782 $1,578,630 $1,549,069 
Net client flows20,680 44,698 4,110 1,033 15,537 21,552 14,776 
Market valuation/other(329,905)125,467 (85,897)(161,294)(82,714)38,600 14,785 
Total assets under management, ending balance$1,329,557 $1,578,630 $1,329,557 $1,411,344 $1,571,605 $1,638,782 $1,578,630 
Advisors, at period end
Total wealth advisors (3)
18,841 18,855 18,841 18,449 18,571 18,846 18,855 
(1)Defined as managed assets under advisory and/or discretion of GWIM.
(2)Includes margin receivables which are classified in customer and other receivables on the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
(3)Includes advisors across all wealth management businesses in GWIM and Consumer Banking.





Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
19



Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Global Banking Segment Results
(Dollars in millions)
 Nine Months Ended
September 30
Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
 20222021
Net interest income $8,304 $6,150 $3,326 $2,634 $2,344 $2,362 $2,185 
Noninterest income:
Service charges2,590 2,637 771 933 886 887 889 
Investment banking fees2,298 3,642 726 692 880 1,465 1,297 
All other income2,599 2,538 768 747 1,084 1,193 874 
Total noninterest income7,487 8,817 2,265 2,372 2,850 3,545 3,060 
Total revenue, net of interest expense 15,791 14,967 5,591 5,006 5,194 5,907 5,245 
Provision for credit losses492 (2,738)170 157 165 (463)(781)
Noninterest expense8,133 7,915 2,651 2,799 2,683 2,717 2,534 
Income before income taxes 7,166 9,790 2,770 2,050 2,346 3,653 3,492 
Income tax expense 1,899 2,643 734 543 622 986 943 
Net income$5,267 $7,147 $2,036 $1,507 $1,724 $2,667 $2,549 
Net interest yield 2.05 %1.53 %2.53 %1.97 %1.68 %1.59 %1.55 %
Return on average allocated capital (1)
16 22 18 14 16 25 24 
Efficiency ratio 51.50 52.88 47.41 55.90 51.65 45.99 48.31 
Balance Sheet
Average
Total loans and leases$373,547 $326,632 $384,305 $377,248 $358,807 $338,627 $324,736 
Total earning assets (2)
541,670 537,037 521,555 537,660 566,277 587,472 560,181 
Total assets (2)
605,884 597,947 585,683 601,945 630,517 650,940 621,699 
Total deposits514,612 509,445 495,154 509,261 539,912 562,390 534,166 
Allocated capital (1)
44,500 42,500 44,500 44,500 44,500 42,500 42,500 
Period end
Total loans and leases$377,711 $328,893 $377,711 $385,376 $367,423 $352,933 $328,893 
Total earning assets (2)
511,494 561,239 511,494 526,879 558,639 574,583 561,239 
Total assets (2)
575,082 623,640 575,082 591,490 623,168 638,131 623,640 
Total deposits484,309 536,476 484,309 499,714 533,820 551,752 536,476 
(1)Return on average allocated capital is calculated as net income, adjusted for cost of funds and earnings credits and certain expenses related to intangibles, divided by average allocated capital. Other companies may define or calculate these measures differently.
(2)Total earning assets and total assets include asset allocations to match liabilities (i.e., deposits) and allocated shareholders’ equity.




Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
20


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Global Banking Key Indicators
(Dollars in millions)
 Nine Months Ended
September 30
Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
 20222021
Investment Banking fees (1)
Advisory (2)
$1,197 $1,341 $397 $361 $439 $798 $608 
Debt issuance915 1,306 273 283 359 430 401 
Equity issuance186 995 56 48 82 237 288 
Total Investment Banking fees (3)
$2,298 $3,642 $726 $692 $880 $1,465 $1,297 
Business Lending
Corporate$2,908 $2,528 $902 $946 $1,060 $1,195 $885 
Commercial3,128 2,688 1,111 1,024 993 987 923 
Business Banking186 165 66 62 58 59 54 
Total Business Lending revenue$6,222 $5,381 $2,079 $2,032 $2,111 $2,241 $1,862 
Global Transaction Services (4)
Corporate$3,456 $2,324 $1,369 $1,138 $949 $911 $850 
Commercial2,981 2,432 1,112 973 896 909 855 
Business Banking835 692 322 270 243 249 240 
Total Global Transaction Services revenue$7,272 $5,448 $2,803 $2,381 $2,088 $2,069 $1,945 
Average deposit balances
Interest-bearing$156,950 $164,420 $171,203 $142,366 $157,126 $164,522 $165,669 
Noninterest-bearing357,662 345,025 323,951 366,895 382,786 397,868 368,497 
Total average deposits$514,612 $509,445 $495,154 $509,261 $539,912 $562,390 $534,166 
Loan spread1.51 %1.59 %1.51 %1.49 %1.53 %1.58 %1.60 %
Provision for credit losses$492 $(2,738)$170 $157 $165 $(463)$(781)
Credit quality (5, 6)
Reservable criticized utilized exposure$15,809 $20,894 $15,809 $15,999 $18,304 $19,873 $20,894 
3.95 %5.99 %3.95 %3.92 %4.72 %5.34 %5.99 %
Nonperforming loans, leases and foreclosed properties$1,057 $1,504 $1,057 $1,126 $1,329 $1,351 $1,504 
0.28 %0.46 %0.28 %0.29 %0.37 %0.39 %0.46 %
Average loans and leases by product
U.S. commercial$223,550 $189,444 $233,027 $225,820 $211,568 $196,168 $187,047 
Non-U.S. commercial83,733 71,037 84,287 86,092 80,783 75,611 71,859 
Commercial real estate51,811 49,564 53,042 50,973 51,400 51,570 49,868 
Commercial lease financing14,451 16,585 13,948 14,362 15,055 15,261 15,961 
Other2 1 17 
Total average loans and leases$373,547 $326,632 $384,305 $377,248 $358,807 $338,627 $324,736 
Total Corporation Investment Banking fees
Advisory (2)
$1,297 $1,461 $432 $392 $473 $850 $654 
Debt issuance2,109 3,031 616 662 831 984 933 
Equity issuance520 2,239 156 139 225 545 637 
Total investment banking fees including self-led deals3,926 6,731 1,204 1,193 1,529 2,379 2,224 
Self-led deals(174)(195)(37)(65)(72)(28)(56)
Total Investment Banking fees$3,752 $6,536 $1,167 $1,128 $1,457 $2,351 $2,168 
(1)Investment banking fees represent total investment banking fees for Global Banking inclusive of self-led deals and fees included within Business Lending.
(2)Advisory includes fees on debt and equity advisory and mergers and acquisitions.
(3)Investment banking fees represent only the fee component in Global Banking and do not include certain other items shared with the Investment Banking Group under internal revenue sharing agreements.
(4)Prior periods have been revised to conform to current-period presentation.
(5)Criticized exposure corresponds to the Special Mention, Substandard and Doubtful asset categories defined by regulatory authorities. The reservable criticized exposure is on an end-of-period basis and is also shown as a percentage of total commercial reservable utilized exposure, including loans and leases, standby letters of credit, financial guarantees, commercial letters of credit and bankers’ acceptances.
(6)Nonperforming loans, leases and foreclosed properties are on an end-of-period basis. The nonperforming ratio is nonperforming assets divided by loans, leases and foreclosed properties.
Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
21





Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Global Markets Segment Results (1)
(Dollars in millions)
 Nine Months Ended
September 30
Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
 20222021
Net interest income$2,717 $2,980 $743 $981 $993 $1,031 $1,000 
Noninterest income:
Investment and brokerage services1,520 1,504 457 518 545 474 471 
Investment banking fees1,473 2,784 430 461 582 832 844 
Market making and similar activities8,721 7,448 2,874 2,657 3,190 1,312 2,014 
All other income(154)721 (21)(115)(18)169 190 
Total noninterest income11,560 12,457 3,740 3,521 4,299 2,787 3,519 
Total revenue, net of interest expense (2)
14,277 15,437 4,483 4,502 5,292 3,818 4,519 
Provision for credit losses24 33 11 32 16 
Noninterest expense9,249 10,150 3,023 3,109 3,117 2,882 3,252 
Income before income taxes5,004 5,254 1,449 1,385 2,170 904 1,251 
Income tax expense1,326 1,366 384 367 575 235 325 
Net income$3,678 $3,888 $1,065 $1,018 $1,595 $669 $926 
Return on average allocated capital (3)
12 %14 %10 %10 %15 %%10 %
Efficiency ratio64.78 65.75 67.42 69.07 58.90 75.49 71.94 
Balance Sheet
Average
Total trading-related assets$598,213 $544,343 $592,391 $606,135 $596,154 $564,282 $563,715 
Total loans and leases114,505 87,535 120,435 114,375 108,576 102,627 97,148 
Total earning assets600,477 528,113 591,883 598,832 610,926 580,794 557,333 
Total assets857,747 775,552 847,899 866,742 858,719 816,994 804,938 
Total deposits41,448 54,699 38,820 41,192 44,393 43,331 54,650 
Allocated capital (3)
42,500 38,000 42,500 42,500 42,500 38,000 38,000 
Period end
Total trading-related assets$593,368 $536,125 $593,368 $577,309 $616,811 $491,160 $536,125 
Total loans and leases121,721 98,892 121,721 118,290 110,037 114,846 98,892 
Total earning assets595,988 526,585 595,988 571,921 609,290 561,135 526,585 
Total assets 849,542 776,929 849,542 835,129 883,304 747,794 776,929 
Total deposits37,318 54,941 37,318 40,055 43,371 46,374 54,941 
Trading-related assets (average)
Trading account securities$301,690 $291,500 $308,514 $295,190 $301,285 $291,518 $304,133 
Reverse repurchases127,527 111,330 112,828 131,456 138,581 121,878 117,486 
Securities borrowed115,898 97,205 114,032 119,200 114,468 109,455 101,086 
Derivative assets53,098 44,308 57,017 60,289 41,820 41,431 41,010 
Total trading-related assets$598,213 $544,343 $592,391 $606,135 $596,154 $564,282 $563,715 
(1)Effective October 1, 2021, a business activity previously included in the Global Markets segment is being reported as a liquidating business in All Other, consistent with a realignment in performance reporting to senior management. The activity was not material to Global Markets’ results of operations, and historical results for the nine months ended September 30, 2021 and the third quarter of 2021 were not restated.
(2)Substantially all of Global Markets total revenue is sales and trading revenue and investment banking fees, with a small portion related to certain revenue sharing agreements with other business segments. For additional sales and trading revenue information, see page 23.
(3)Return on average allocated capital is calculated as net income, adjusted for cost of funds and earnings credits and certain expenses related to intangibles, divided by average allocated capital. Other companies may define or calculate these measures differently.





Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
22


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Global Markets Key Indicators
(Dollars in millions)
Nine Months Ended
September 30
Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
20222021
Sales and trading revenue (1)
Fixed-income, currencies and commodities$7,760 $7,188 $2,552 $2,500 $2,708 $1,573 $2,009 
Equities5,204 5,065 1,540 1,653 2,011 1,363 1,605 
Total sales and trading revenue$12,964 $12,253 $4,092 $4,153 $4,719 $2,936 $3,614 
Sales and trading revenue, excluding net debit valuation adjustment (2,3)
Fixed-income, currencies and commodities$7,555 $7,241 $2,567 $2,340 $2,648 $1,569 $2,025 
Equities5,196 5,068 1,539 1,655 2,002 1,365 1,609 
Total sales and trading revenue, excluding net debit valuation adjustment$12,751 $12,309 $4,106 $3,995 $4,650 $2,934 $3,634 
Sales and trading revenue breakdown
Net interest income$2,348 $2,733 $586 $851 $911 $954 $920 
Commissions1,479 1,469 444 504 531 464 459 
Trading8,719 7,447 2,873 2,656 3,190 1,311 2,014 
Other418 604 189 142 87 207 221 
Total sales and trading revenue$12,964 $12,253 $4,092 $4,153 $4,719 $2,936 $3,614 
(1)    Includes Global Banking sales and trading revenue of $785 million and $412 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, and $287 million, $319 million and $179 million for the third, second and first quarters of 2022, and $98 million and $138 million for the fourth and third quarters of 2021, respectively.
(2)    For this presentation, sales and trading revenue excludes net debit valuation adjustment (DVA) gains (losses) which include net DVA on derivatives, as well as amortization of own credit portion of purchase discount and realized DVA on structured liabilities. Sales and trading revenue excluding net DVA gains (losses) represents a non-GAAP financial measure. We believe the use of this non-GAAP financial measure provides additional useful information to assess the underlying performance of these businesses and to allow better comparison of period-to-period operating performance.
(3)Net DVA gains (losses) were $213 million and $(56) million for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, and $(14) million, $158 million, $69 million, $2 million and $(20) million for the third, second and first quarters of 2022 and the fourth and third quarters of 2021, respectively. FICC net DVA gains (losses) were $205 million and $(53) million for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, and $(15) million, $160 million, $60 million, $4 million and $(16) million for the third, second and first quarters of 2022 and the fourth and third quarters of 2021, respectively. Equities net DVA gains (losses) were $8 million and $(3) million for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, and $1 million, $(2) million, $9 million, $(2) million and $(4) million for the third, second and first quarters of 2022 and the fourth and third quarters of 2021, respectively.




Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
23


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
All Other Results (1,2)
(Dollars in millions)
 Nine Months Ended
September 30
Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
 20222021
Net interest income$73 $193 $37 $43 $(7)$53 $65 
Noninterest income (loss)(3,599)(3,661)(836)(1,329)(1,434)(1,927)(1,110)
Total revenue, net of interest expense(3,526)(3,468)(799)(1,286)(1,441)(1,874)(1,045)
Provision for credit losses(130)(148)(58)(25)(47)(34)(48)
Noninterest expense1,830 962 716 531 583 556 352 
Loss before income taxes(5,226)(4,282)(1,457)(1,792)(1,977)(2,396)(1,349)
Income tax expense (benefit)(4,263)(6,345)(1,176)(1,474)(1,613)(1,723)(1,294)
Net income (loss)$(963)$2,063 $(281)$(318)$(364)$(673)$(55)
Balance Sheet
Average
Total loans and leases$13,457 $19,190 $10,629 $14,391 $15,405 $16,240 $17,581 
Total assets (3)
140,620 193,896 142,650 124,923 154,425 185,707 187,233 
Total deposits20,128 14,062 20,221 19,663 20,504 23,780 13,767 
Period end
Total loans and leases$10,351 $16,880 $10,351 $10,825 $15,090 $15,863 $16,880 
Total assets (4)
128,051 199,738 128,051 136,673 132,186 214,153 199,738 
Total deposits19,031 12,521 19,031 19,374 20,990 21,182 12,521 
(1)Effective October 1, 2021, a business activity previously included in the Global Markets segment is being reported as a liquidating business in All Other, consistent with a realignment in performance reporting to senior management. The activity was not material to Global Markets’ results of operations, and historical results for the nine months ended September 30, 2021 and the third quarter of 2021 were not restated.
(2)All Other primarily consists of asset and liability management (ALM) activities, liquidating businesses and certain expenses not otherwise allocated to a business segment. ALM activities encompass interest rate and foreign currency risk management activities for which substantially all of the results are allocated to our business segments.
(3)Includes elimination of segments’ excess asset allocations to match liabilities (i.e., deposits) and allocated shareholders’ equity of $1.1 trillion for both the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, $1.1 trillion, $1.1 trillion and $1.2 trillion for the third, second and first quarters of 2022, and $1.2 trillion and $1.1 trillion for the fourth and third quarters of 2021, respectively.
(4)Includes elimination of segments’ excess asset allocations to match liabilities (i.e., deposits) and allocated shareholders’ equity of $1.1 trillion, $1.1 trillion, $1.2 trillion, $1.2 trillion and $1.2 trillion at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022, March 31, 2022, December 31, 2021 and September 30, 2021, respectively.




Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
24


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Outstanding Loans and Leases
(Dollars in millions)
September 30
2022
June 30
2022
September 30
2021
Consumer
Residential mortgage$229,062 $227,970 $216,940 
Home equity26,845 27,120 29,000 
Credit card87,296 84,010 76,869 
Direct/Indirect consumer (1) 
107,159 108,826 99,845 
Other consumer (2) 
171 195 202 
Total consumer loans excluding loans accounted for under the fair value option450,533 448,121 422,856 
Consumer loans accounted for under the fair value option (3) 
355 377 616 
Total consumer450,888 448,498 423,472 
Commercial
U.S. commercial355,370 355,731 295,927 
Non-U.S. commercial123,035 125,796 102,850 
Commercial real estate (4) 
67,952 64,253 60,723 
Commercial lease financing12,956 13,612 15,044 
559,313 559,392 474,544 
U.S. small business commercial (5)
17,769 17,757 22,770 
Total commercial loans excluding loans accounted for under the fair value option577,082 577,149 497,314 
Commercial loans accounted for under the fair value option (3) 
4,496 5,119 6,950 
Total commercial581,578 582,268 504,264 
Total loans and leases $1,032,466 $1,030,766 $927,736 
(1)Includes primarily auto and specialty lending loans and leases of $50.7 billion, $50.8 billion and $47.2 billion, U.S. securities-based lending loans of $52.6 billion, $54.0 billion and $48.7 billion and non-U.S. consumer loans of $2.9 billion, $3.0 billion and $3.0 billion at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively.
(2)Substantially all of other consumer is consumer overdrafts.
(3)Consumer loans accounted for under the fair value option includes residential mortgage loans of $74 million, $79 million and $241 million and home equity loans of $281 million, $298 million and $375 million at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively. Commercial loans accounted for under the fair value option includes U.S. commercial loans of $2.4 billion, $2.9 billion and $4.5 billion and non-U.S. commercial loans of $2.1 billion, $2.2 billion and $2.4 billion at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively.
(4)Includes U.S. commercial real estate loans of $63.9 billion, $60.1 billion and $56.6 billion and non-U.S. commercial real estate loans of $4.0 billion, $4.1 billion and $4.1 billion at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively.
(5)Includes card-related products and Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans.



Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
25


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Quarterly Average Loans and Leases by Business Segment and All Other
(Dollars in millions)
 Third Quarter 2022
 Total
Corporation
Consumer BankingGWIMGlobal
Banking
Global
Markets
All 
Other
Consumer
Residential mortgage$228,474 $118,173 $102,204 $1 $ $8,096 
Home equity27,282 21,939 2,480  216 2,647 
Credit card85,009 82,081 2,929   (1)
Direct/Indirect and other consumer108,300 51,130 57,167   3 
Total consumer449,065 273,323 164,780 1 216 10,745 
Commercial
U.S. commercial377,183 21,897 52,090 233,027 69,962 207 
Non-U.S. commercial127,793  1,278 84,287 42,190 38 
Commercial real estate66,707 11 5,586 53,042 8,067 1 
Commercial lease financing13,586   13,948  (362)
Total commercial585,269 21,908 58,954 384,304 120,219 (116)
Total loans and leases$1,034,334 $295,231 $223,734 $384,305 $120,435 $10,629 
 Second Quarter 2022
 Total
Corporation
Consumer BankingGWIMGlobal
Banking
Global
Markets
All 
Other
Consumer
Residential mortgage$228,529 $117,355 $99,615 $$— $11,558 
Home equity27,415 21,835 2,433 — 231 2,916 
Credit card81,024 78,174 2,850 — — — 
Direct/Indirect and other consumer108,639 50,498 58,138 — — 
Total consumer445,607 267,862 163,036 231 14,477 
Commercial
U.S. commercial363,978 21,722 50,334 225,820 65,897 205 
Non-U.S. commercial128,237 — 1,181 86,092 40,888 76 
Commercial real estate63,072 11 4,726 50,973 7,359 
Commercial lease financing13,992 — — 14,362 — (370)
Total commercial569,279 21,733 56,241 377,247 114,144 (86)
Total loans and leases $1,014,886 $289,595 $219,277 $377,248 $114,375 $14,391 
 Third Quarter 2021
 Total
Corporation
Consumer BankingGWIMGlobal
Banking
Global
Markets
All 
Other
Consumer
Residential mortgage$215,652 $110,549 $91,015 $$— $14,087 
Home equity30,069 23,627 2,565 — 266 3,611 
Credit card75,569 72,981 2,588 — — — 
Direct/Indirect and other consumer98,148 47,059 51,084 — — 
Total consumer419,438 254,216 147,252 266 17,703 
Commercial
U.S. commercial323,659 27,151 46,891 187,047 62,329 241 
Non-U.S. commercial101,967 — 1,237 71,859 28,836 35 
Commercial real estate59,881 13 4,284 49,868 5,714 
Commercial lease financing15,564 — — 15,961 (400)
Total commercial501,071 27,164 52,412 324,735 96,882 (122)
Total loans and leases$920,509 $281,380 $199,664 $324,736 $97,148 $17,581 




Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
26


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Commercial Credit Exposure by Industry (1, 2, 3, 4, 6)
(Dollars in millions)
Commercial UtilizedTotal Commercial Committed
September 30
2022
June 30
2022
September 30
2021
September 30
2022
June 30
2022
September 30
2021
Asset managers & funds$118,183 $112,812 $84,420 $172,468 $167,163 $132,205 
Real estate (5)
70,535 68,897 67,925 98,590 97,617 94,462 
Capital goods47,669 46,923 40,501 89,447 89,785 87,011 
Finance companies50,749 49,740 49,979 74,003 76,051 78,110 
Healthcare equipment and services32,693 32,768 30,442 57,834 57,901 59,632 
Materials26,552 27,295 24,629 55,599 59,699 53,967 
Retailing26,850 27,398 22,882 52,916 52,645 47,037 
Government & public education36,635 37,141 37,468 48,991 50,189 49,730 
Food, beverage and tobacco23,258 23,654 21,813 48,317 48,337 44,508 
Consumer services26,250 27,703 27,856 46,186 48,453 48,559 
Individuals and trusts34,976 30,501 28,379 44,640 45,733 38,119 
Commercial services and supplies23,010 22,852 19,192 43,769 43,520 38,222 
Utilities19,280 19,781 14,475 39,560 39,448 32,975 
Energy16,934 17,726 14,850 37,829 39,613 33,378 
Transportation21,671 21,583 21,862 34,033 35,569 32,753 
Global commercial banks30,639 29,674 19,017 32,912 30,667 21,168 
Technology hardware and equipment10,993 11,411 9,866 28,135 29,697 25,520 
Media12,282 12,661 12,450 27,331 27,270 26,521 
Software and services13,908 13,472 9,553 26,678 30,761 24,549 
Consumer durables and apparel10,251 11,275 9,028 21,167 22,841 20,243 
Insurance12,427 10,238 4,977 20,901 19,496 13,381 
Vehicle dealers11,788 11,849 9,282 19,698 20,027 15,247 
Pharmaceuticals and biotechnology7,722 7,088 4,534 18,779 19,072 17,672 
Telecommunication services8,530 7,495 8,435 16,608 15,986 19,072 
Automobiles and components7,529 8,395 9,104 15,685 17,256 16,967 
Financial markets infrastructure (clearinghouses)7,894 9,274 3,680 12,704 14,252 5,905 
Food and staples retailing7,046 7,745 5,322 11,728 12,441 11,424 
Religious and social organizations2,736 2,883 3,446 4,990 5,130 5,383 
Total commercial credit exposure by industry$718,990 $710,234 $615,367 $1,201,498 $1,216,619 $1,093,720 
(1)Includes loans and leases, standby letters of credit and financial guarantees, derivative assets, assets held-for-sale, commercial letters of credit, bankers’ acceptances, securitized assets, foreclosed properties and other collateral acquired. Derivative assets are carried at fair value, reflect the effects of legally enforceable master netting agreements and have been reduced by cash collateral of $40.7 billion, $35.8 billion and $31.2 billion at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively. Not reflected in utilized and committed exposure is additional non-cash derivative collateral held of $59.3 billion, $51.9 billion and $40.3 billion, which consists primarily of other marketable securities, at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively.
(2)Total utilized and total committed exposure includes loans of $4.5 billion, $5.1 billion and $6.9 billion and issued letters of credit with a notional amount of $37 million, $37 million and $86 million accounted for under the fair value option at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively. In addition, total committed exposure includes unfunded loan commitments accounted for under the fair value option with a notional amount of $3.5 billion, $3.6 billion and $4.9 billion at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively.
(3)Includes U.S. small business commercial exposure.
(4)Includes the notional amount of unfunded legally binding lending commitments net of amounts distributed (e.g., syndicated or participated) to other financial institutions.
(5)Industries are viewed from a variety of perspectives to best isolate the perceived risks. For purposes of this table, the real estate industry is defined based on the primary business activity of the borrowers or the counterparties using operating cash flows and primary source of repayment as key factors.
(6)Includes $1.5 billion, $2.1 billion and $8.4 billion of PPP loan exposure across impacted industries at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively.





Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
27


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Nonperforming Loans, Leases and Foreclosed Properties
(Dollars in millions)
September 30
2022
June 30
2022
March 31
2022
December 31
2021
September 30
2021
Residential mortgage$2,187 $2,245 $2,422 $2,284 $2,296 
Home equity532 563 615 630 676 
Direct/Indirect consumer41 58 67 75 45 
Total consumer2,760 2,866 3,104 2,989 3,017 
U.S. commercial640 742 818 825 909 
Non-U.S. commercial274 279 268 268 272 
Commercial real estate282 218 361 382 414 
Commercial lease financing11 44 54 80 70 
1,207 1,283 1,501 1,555 1,665 
U.S. small business commercial16 15 20 23 32 
Total commercial1,223 1,298 1,521 1,578 1,697 
Total nonperforming loans and leases3,983 4,164 4,625 4,567 4,714 
Foreclosed properties (1)
173 162 153 130 117 
Total nonperforming loans, leases and foreclosed properties (2, 3)
$4,156 $4,326 $4,778 $4,697 $4,831 
Fully-insured home loans past due 30 days or more and still accruing$672 $734 $817 $887 $930 
Consumer credit card past due 30 days or more and still accruing 1,202 1,008 1,003 997 934 
Other loans past due 30 days or more and still accruing3,281 3,494 3,736 3,398 2,583 
Total loans past due 30 days or more and still accruing (4, 5)
$5,155 $5,236 $5,556 $5,282 $4,447 
Fully-insured home loans past due 90 days or more and still accruing$427 $492 $574 $634 $648 
Consumer credit card past due 90 days or more and still accruing
547 493 492 487 450 
Other loans past due 90 days or more and still accruing647 720 607 336 232 
Total loans past due 90 days or more and still accruing (4, 5)
$1,621 $1,705 $1,673 $1,457 $1,330 
Nonperforming loans, leases and foreclosed properties/Total assets (6)
0.14 %0.14 %0.15 %0.15 %0.16 %
Nonperforming loans, leases and foreclosed properties/Total loans, leases and foreclosed properties (6)
0.40 0.42 0.48 0.48 0.52 
Nonperforming loans and leases/Total loans and leases (6)
0.39 0.41 0.47 0.47 0.51 
Commercial reservable criticized utilized exposure (7)
$17,659 $18,114 $20,682 $22,381 $24,142 
Commercial reservable criticized utilized exposure/Commercial reservable utilized exposure (7)
2.88 %2.95 %3.54 %3.91 %4.53 %
Total commercial criticized utilized exposure/Commercial utilized exposure (7)
2.82 2.99 3.47 3.91 4.55 
(1)Foreclosed property balances do not include properties insured by certain government-guaranteed loans, principally loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), that entered foreclosure of $75 million, $71 million, $61 million, $52 million and $55 million at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022, March 31, 2022, December 31, 2021 and September 30, 2021, respectively.
(2)Balances do not include past due consumer credit card, consumer loans secured by real estate where repayments are insured by the FHA and individually insured long-term stand-by agreements (fully-insured home loans), and in general, other consumer and commercial loans not secured by real estate.
(3)Balances do not include nonperforming loans held-for-sale of $222 million, $270 million, $336 million, $264 million and $279 million and nonperforming loans accounted for under the fair value option of $8 million, $11 million, $19 million, $21 million and $13 million at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022, March 31, 2022, December 31, 2021 and September 30, 2021, respectively.
(4)Balances do not include loans held-for-sale past due 30 days or more and still accruing of $81 million, $179 million, $654 million, $523 million and $222 million at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022, March 31, 2022, December 31, 2021 and September 30, 2021, respectively, and loans held-for-sale past due 90 days or more and still accruing of $33 million, $22 million, $50 million, $41 million and $9 million at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022, March 31, 2022, December 31, 2021 and September 30, 2021, respectively. At September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022, March 31, 2022, December 31, 2021 and September 30, 2021, there were $4 million, $34 million, $8 million, $12 million and $9 million, respectively, of loans accounted for under the fair value option past due 30 days or more and still accruing interest.
(5)These balances are excluded from total nonperforming loans, leases and foreclosed properties.
(6)Total assets and total loans and leases do not include loans accounted for under the fair value option of $4.9 billion, $5.5 billion, $7.1 billion, $7.8 billion and $7.6 billion at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022, March 31, 2022, December 31, 2021 and September 30, 2021, respectively.
(7)Criticized exposure corresponds to the Special Mention, Substandard and Doubtful asset categories defined by regulatory authorities. The reservable criticized exposure excludes loans held-for-sale, exposure accounted for under the fair value option and other nonreservable exposure.


Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
28


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Nonperforming Loans, Leases and Foreclosed Properties Activity (1)
 (Dollars in millions)
Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
Nonperforming Consumer Loans and Leases:
Balance, beginning of period$2,866 $3,104 $2,989 $3,017 $3,044 
Additions236 365 644 371 353 
Reductions:
Paydowns and payoffs(124)(147)(175)(179)(163)
Sales(1)(269)(131)(1)(1)
Returns to performing status (2)
(193)(157)(202)(198)(201)
Charge-offs (3)
(12)(23)(15)(15)(12)
Transfers to foreclosed properties(12)(7)(6)(6)(3)
Total net additions (reductions) to nonperforming loans and leases(106)(238)115 (28)(27)
Total nonperforming consumer loans and leases, end of period2,760 2,866 3,104 2,989 3,017 
Foreclosed properties125 115 118 101 87 
Nonperforming consumer loans, leases and foreclosed properties, end of period$2,885 $2,981 $3,222 $3,090 $3,104 
Nonperforming Commercial Loans and Leases (4):
Balance, beginning of period$1,298 $1,521 $1,578 $1,697 $1,863 
Additions307 321 183 372 275 
Reductions:
Paydowns(180)(342)(159)(290)(297)
Sales(12)(16)(25)(71)(29)
Returns to performing status (5)
(148)(146)(5)(95)(82)
Charge-offs(42)(40)(12)(35)(33)
Transfers to loans held-for-sale — (39)— — 
Total net reductions to nonperforming loans and leases(75)(223)(57)(119)(166)
Total nonperforming commercial loans and leases, end of period1,223 1,298 1,521 1,578 1,697 
Foreclosed properties48 47 35 29 30 
Nonperforming commercial loans, leases and foreclosed properties, end of period$1,271 $1,345 $1,556 $1,607 $1,727 
(1)For amounts excluded from nonperforming loans, leases and foreclosed properties, see footnotes to Nonperforming Loans, Leases and Foreclosed Properties table on page 28.
(2)Consumer loans and leases may be returned to performing status when all principal and interest is current and full repayment of the remaining contractual principal and interest is expected, or when the loan otherwise becomes well-secured and is in the process of collection. Certain troubled debt restructurings are classified as nonperforming at the time of restructuring and may only be returned to performing status after considering the borrower’s sustained repayment performance for a reasonable period, generally six months.
(3)Our policy is not to classify consumer credit card and non-bankruptcy related consumer loans not secured by real estate as nonperforming; therefore, the charge-offs on these loans have no impact on nonperforming activity and, accordingly, are excluded from this table.
(4)Includes U.S. small business commercial activity. Small business card loans are excluded as they are not classified as nonperforming.
(5)Commercial loans and leases may be returned to performing status when all principal and interest is current and full repayment of the remaining contractual principal and interest is expected, or when the loan otherwise becomes well-secured and is in the process of collection. Troubled debt restructurings are generally classified as performing after a sustained period of demonstrated payment performance.



Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
29


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Quarterly Net Charge-offs and Net Charge-off Ratios (1) 
(Dollars in millions)
 Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
AmountPercentAmountPercentAmountPercentAmountPercentAmountPercent
Net Charge-offs
Residential mortgage (2)
$(3)(0.01)%$86 0.15 %$(10)(0.02)%$(11)(0.02)%$(7)(0.01)%
Home equity (3)
(18)(0.25)(24)(0.37)(30)(0.44)(26)(0.37)(34)(0.46)
Credit card328 1.53 323 1.60 297 1.53 280 1.42 321 1.69 
Direct/Indirect consumer9 0.03 0.02 0.02 (3)(0.01)(18)(0.07)
Other consumer143 n/m136 n/m79 n/m72 n/m67 n/m
Total consumer459 0.41 525 0.47 340 0.32 312 0.29 329 0.31 
U.S. commercial 23 0.03 15 0.02 (14)(0.02)(19)(0.02)15 0.02 
Non-U.S. commercial(6)(0.02)(5)(0.01)— (6)(0.02)— 
Total commercial and industrial17 0.01 10 0.01 (13)(0.01)(25)(0.02)16 0.02 
Commercial real estate13 0.08 (4)(0.03)23 0.15 0.04 — — 
Commercial lease financing(1)(0.05)0.13 — — — — (1)— 
29 0.02 10 0.01 10 0.01 (19)(0.02)15 0.01 
U.S. small business commercial32 0.72 36 0.79 42 0.94 69 1.32 119 1.76 
Total commercial61 0.04 46 0.03 52 0.04 50 0.04 134 0.11 
Total net charge-offs$520 0.20 $571 0.23 $392 0.16 $362 0.15 $463 0.20 
By Business Segment and All Other
Consumer Banking$512 0.69 %$502 0.70 %$416 0.59 %$411 0.58 %$489 0.69 %
Global Wealth & Investment Management5 0.01 0.02 — 0.01 0.01 
Global Banking26 0.03 14 0.01 (12)(0.01)(28)(0.03)0.01 
Global Markets(1) (4)(0.01)21 0.08 10 0.04 — — 
All Other (22)(0.80)50 1.40 (34)(0.91)(36)(0.91)(41)(0.92)
Total net charge-offs$520 0.20 $571 0.23 $392 0.16 $362 0.15 $463 0.20 
(1)Net charge-off ratios are calculated as annualized net charge-offs divided by average outstanding loans and leases excluding loans accounted for under the fair value option during the period for each loan and lease category.
(2)Includes loan sale net charge-offs (recoveries) of $0, $90 million and $(6) million for the third, second and first quarters of 2022, respectively.
(3)Includes loan sale net charge-offs (recoveries) of $0, $(6) million and $(2) million for the third, second and first quarters of 2022, respectively.
n/m = not meaningful





Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
30


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Year-to-Date Net Charge-offs and Net Charge-off Ratios (1) 
(Dollars in millions)
 Nine Months Ended September 30
 20222021
AmountPercentAmountPercent
Net Charge-offs
Residential mortgage (2)
$73 0.04 %$(17)(0.01)%
Home equity (3)
(72)(0.35)(93)(0.40)
Credit card948 1.55 1,443 2.59 
Direct/Indirect consumer17 0.02 0.01 
Other consumer358 n/m198 n/m
Total consumer1,324 0.40 1,535 0.49 
U.S. commercial 24 0.01 (4)— 
Non-U.S. commercial(10)(0.01)41 0.06 
Total commercial and industrial14  37 0.01 
Commercial real estate32 0.07 28 0.06 
Commercial lease financing3 0.03 (1)— 
49 0.01 64 0.02 
U.S. small business commercial110 0.82 282 1.16 
Total commercial159 0.04 346 0.09 
Total net charge-offs$1,483 0.20 $1,881 0.28 
By Business Segment and All Other
Consumer Banking$1,430 0.66 %$1,924 0.90 %
Global Wealth & Investment Management15 0.01 20 0.01 
Global Banking28 0.01 47 0.02 
Global Markets16 0.02 — 
All Other(6)(0.06)(113)(0.80)
Total net charge-offs$1,483 0.20 $1,881 0.28 
(1)Net charge-off ratios are calculated as annualized net charge-offs divided by average outstanding loans and leases excluding loans accounted for under the fair value option during the period for each loan and lease category.
(2)Includes loan sale net charge-offs (recoveries) of $84 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2022.
(3)Includes loan sale net charge-offs (recoveries) of $(8) million for the nine months ended September 30, 2022.
n/m = not meaningful




Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
31


Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Allocation of the Allowance for Credit Losses by Product Type
(Dollars in millions)
September 30, 2022June 30, 2022September 30, 2021
Amount
Percent of
Loans and
Leases
Outstanding (1, 2)
Amount
Percent of
Loans and
Leases
Outstanding 
(1, 2)
Amount
Percent of
Loans and
Leases
Outstanding (1, 2)
Allowance for loan and lease losses
Residential mortgage$282 0.12%$280 0.12%$353 0.16%
Home equity102 0.38116 0.43202 0.70
Credit card5,879 6.745,684 6.776,055 7.88
Direct/Indirect consumer525 0.49475 0.44541 0.54
Other consumer92 n/m57 n/m43 n/m
Total consumer6,880 1.536,612 1.487,194 1.70
U.S. commercial (3)
3,018 0.813,012 0.813,235 1.02
Non-U.S. commercial1,191 0.971,168 0.931,032 1.00
Commercial real estate1,161 1.711,128 1.761,621 2.67
Commercial lease financing52 0.4053 0.3973 0.48
Total commercial 5,422 0.945,361 0.935,961 1.20
Allowance for loan and lease losses12,302 1.2011,973 1.1713,155 1.43
Reserve for unfunded lending commitments1,515 1,461 1,538  
Allowance for credit losses$13,817 $13,434 $14,693  
Asset Quality Indicators
Allowance for loan and lease losses/Total loans and leases (2)
1.20%1.17%1.43%
Allowance for loan and lease losses/Total nonperforming loans and leases (4)
309288279
Ratio of the allowance for loan and lease losses/Annualized net charge-offs5.965.227.16
(1)Ratios are calculated as allowance for loan and lease losses as a percentage of loans and leases outstanding excluding loans accounted for under the fair value option. Consumer loans accounted for under the fair value option include residential mortgage loans of $74 million, $79 million and $241 million, and home equity loans of $281 million, $298 million and $375 million at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively. Commercial loans accounted for under the fair value option include U.S. commercial loans of $2.4 billion, $2.9 billion and $4.5 billion and non-U.S. commercial loans of $2.1 billion, $2.2 billion and $2.4 billion at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively.
(2)Total loans and leases do not include loans accounted for under the fair value option of $4.9 billion, $5.5 billion and $7.6 billion at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively.
(3)Includes allowance for loan and lease losses for U.S. small business commercial loans of $864 million, $921 million and $1.4 billion at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively.
(4)Allowance for loan and lease losses includes $6.7 billion, $6.6 billion and $7.4 billion allocated to products (primarily the Consumer Lending portfolios within Consumer Banking) that are excluded from nonperforming loans and leases at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively. Excluding these amounts, allowance for loan and lease losses as a percentage of total nonperforming loans and leases was 140 percent, 129 percent and 123 percent at September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022 and September 30, 2021, respectively.
n/m = not meaningful


Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
32



Exhibit A: Non-GAAP Reconciliations
Bank of America Corporation and Subsidiaries
Reconciliations to GAAP Financial Measures
(Dollars in millions, except per share information)

The Corporation evaluates its business based on the following ratios that utilize tangible equity, a non-GAAP financial measure. Tangible equity represents shareholders’ equity or common shareholders’ equity reduced by goodwill and intangible assets (excluding mortgage servicing rights), net of related deferred tax liabilities ("adjusted" shareholders' equity or common shareholders’ equity). Return on average tangible common shareholders’ equity measures the Corporation’s net income applicable to common shareholders as a percentage of adjusted average common shareholders’ equity. The tangible common equity ratio represents adjusted ending common shareholders’ equity divided by total tangible assets (total assets less goodwill and intangible assets (excluding mortgage servicing rights), net of related deferred tax liabilities). Return on average tangible shareholders’ equity measures the Corporation’s net income as a percentage of adjusted average total shareholders’ equity. The tangible equity ratio represents adjusted ending shareholders’ equity divided by total tangible assets. Tangible book value per common share represents adjusted ending common shareholders’ equity divided by ending common shares outstanding. These measures are used to evaluate the Corporation’s use of equity. In addition, profitability, relationship and investment models all use return on average tangible shareholders’ equity as key measures to support our overall growth goals.

See the tables below for reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most closely related financial measures defined by GAAP for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, and the three months ended September 30, 2022, June 30, 2022, March 31, 2022, December 31, 2021 and September 30, 2021. The Corporation believes the use of these non-GAAP financial measures provides additional clarity in understanding its results of operations and trends. Other companies may define or calculate supplemental financial data differently.
 Nine Months Ended September 30Third
Quarter
2022
Second
Quarter
2022
First
Quarter
2022
Fourth
Quarter
2021
Third
Quarter
2021
 20222021
Reconciliation of income before income taxes to pretax, pre-provision income
Income before income taxes$23,072 $26,158 $8,301 $6,892 $7,879 $7,818 $8,950 
Provision for credit losses1,451 (4,105)898 523 30 (489)(624)
Pretax, pre-provision income$24,523 $22,053 $9,199 $7,415 $7,909 $7,329 $8,326 
Reconciliation of average shareholders’ equity to average tangible shareholders’ equity and average tangible common shareholders’ equity
Shareholders’ equity$269,514 $274,726 $271,017 $268,197 $269,309 $270,883 $275,484 
Goodwill(69,022)(68,999)(69,022)(69,022)(69,022)(69,022)(69,023)
Intangible assets (excluding mortgage servicing rights)(2,127)(2,181)(2,107)(2,127)(2,146)(2,166)(2,185)
Related deferred tax liabilities925 916 920 926 929 913 915 
Tangible shareholders’ equity$199,290 $204,462 $200,808 $197,974 $199,070 $200,608 $205,191 
Preferred stock(28,094)(23,837)(29,134)(28,674)(26,444)(24,364)(23,441)
Tangible common shareholders’ equity$171,196 $180,625 $171,674 $169,300 $172,626 $176,244 $181,750 
Reconciliation of period-end shareholders’ equity to period-end tangible shareholders’ equity and period-end tangible common shareholders’ equity
Shareholders’ equity$269,524 $272,464 $269,524 $269,118 $266,617 $270,066 $272,464 
Goodwill(69,022)(69,023)(69,022)(69,022)(69,022)(69,022)(69,023)
Intangible assets (excluding mortgage servicing rights)(2,094)(2,172)(2,094)(2,114)(2,133)(2,153)(2,172)
Related deferred tax liabilities915 913 915 920 926 929 913 
Tangible shareholders’ equity$199,323 $202,182 $199,323 $198,902 $196,388 $199,820 $202,182 
Preferred stock(29,134)(23,441)(29,134)(29,134)(27,137)(24,708)(23,441)
Tangible common shareholders’ equity$170,189 $178,741 $170,189 $169,768 $169,251 $175,112 $178,741 
Reconciliation of period-end assets to period-end tangible assets
Assets$3,073,383 $3,085,446 $3,073,383 $3,111,606 $3,238,223 $3,169,495 $3,085,446 
Goodwill(69,022)(69,023)(69,022)(69,022)(69,022)(69,022)(69,023)
Intangible assets (excluding mortgage servicing rights)(2,094)(2,172)(2,094)(2,114)(2,133)(2,153)(2,172)
Related deferred tax liabilities915 913 915 920 926 929 913 
Tangible assets$3,003,182 $3,015,164 $3,003,182 $3,041,390 $3,167,994 $3,099,249 $3,015,164 
Book value per share of common stock
Common shareholders’ equity$240,390 $249,023 $240,390 $239,984 $239,480 $245,358 $249,023 
Ending common shares issued and outstanding8,024.5 8,241.2 8,024.5 8,035.2 8,062.1 8,077.8 8,241.2 
Book value per share of common stock$29.96 $30.22 $29.96 $29.87 $29.70 $30.37 $30.22 
Tangible book value per share of common stock
Tangible common shareholders’ equity$170,189 $178,741 $170,189 $169,768 $169,251 $175,112 $178,741 
Ending common shares issued and outstanding8,024.5 8,241.2 8,024.5 8,035.2 8,062.1 8,077.8 8,241.2 
Tangible book value per share of common stock$21.21 $21.69 $21.21 $21.13 $20.99 $21.68 $21.69 
Current-period information is preliminary and based on company data available at the time of the presentation.
33