The post Bank of America or Wells Fargo: Which Mega-Cap Delivers Better Returns? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Retirement investors weighing Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) against Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC) face a deceptively similar scorecard at the top of the analyst page: both megabanks carry a Buy consensus, and both project meaningful upside from current levels. So which belongs in a retirement portfolio right now? The headline numbers look close, but the conviction behind them, and the income, valuation, and risk profiles underneath, point to a clear winner for different investor types.
Start with the price-target scorecard. BofA trades at $57.88 against an analyst target of $63.70. Wells Fargo trades at $83.86 against a target of $96.30. Analysts on average recommend buying shares of each, but they diverge on conviction. While BofA has near-unanimous bullish coverage, Wells Fargo has notably more analysts sitting on the fence.
Wells Fargo pays a $0.45 quarterly dividend, yielding 2.2%, versus Bank of America’s $0.28 quarterly payout at a 1.9% yield. Yet the buyback gap reverses the picture. Wells Fargo returned $23 billion to shareholders in 2025, including $18 billion in buybacks, and raised its dividend 13%. BofA returned about $30 billion in 2025 and had an 8% mid-year dividend hike. BofA is returning significantly more cash to shareholders, making it the decisive winner for income-focused retirees seeking total capital return.
Wells Fargo trades at a trailing P/E of 13 on TTM EPS of $6.47, versus BofA at 14 on TTM EPS of $4.03. Forward multiples are nearly identical at about 12, but the underlying catalyst supports a more attractive valuation for Wells Fargo. The Federal Reserve asset cap was removed in Q2 2025, allowing unrestricted balance sheet growth for the first time in years. Management raised its medium-term ROTCE target to 17% to 18%, up from 15%. Investors are thus paying a lower multiple for a structurally improving franchise. Wells Fargo is the winner.
Bank of America’s balance sheet is the stronger of the two. CET1 stands at 11.4% versus Wells Fargo’s 10.3%, which declined from 11.1% a year ago. Q1 2026 EPS at BofA rose 25% year-over-year to $1.11, beating consensus for the fourth consecutive quarter. Wells Fargo grew EPS 15% to $1.60 but saw net interest margin compress to 2.47% from 2.67%. BofA’s revenue mix is also more diversified, with Q1 sales and trading up 13% and investment banking fees up 21%. Prediction markets reinforce this safety assessment: BofA’s implied failure probability of 2.4% is comfortably below that of the European megabank cohort.
Bank of America takes the head-to-head for the income-focused retiree. By leading on capital return, it offers a superior combination of current yield and dividend growth momentum. Combined with its stronger balance sheet and earnings momentum, CEO Brian Moynihan’s firm gives investors a robustly covered payout backed by fundamental tailwinds. For a retirement strategy that prioritizes total shareholder return alongside a strengthening operational profile, BofA provides the more compelling vehicle.
Wells Fargo wins for the value-conscious retiree whose primary focus is entry price and margin of safety. Winning strictly on valuation, the stock trades at a cheaper P/E multiple, offering a lower-volatility entry point for investors wary of paying a premium. The trade-off for this cheaper multiple is a thinner relative yield and less near-term capital return intensity compared to its peer.
For a retirement-focused investor today, Bank of America offers the more dynamic risk-reward profile. While Wells Fargo provides a cheaper valuation, BofA’s superior yield, aggressive buyback potential, and fundamental earnings momentum combine into a total-return setup that its rival’s cheaper multiple alone cannot match.
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