Bank of America Corporation filings document material events, shareholder governance and the capital structure of a diversified banking company listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Recent Form 8-K reports identify registered securities including BAC common stock, multiple series of preferred stock represented by depositary shares, preferred hybrid income securities, income capital obligation notes and senior medium-term notes associated with BofA Finance LLC guarantees.
The company's definitive proxy statement covers annual meeting matters, shareholder voting procedures and governance topics, including board leadership references and the role of the lead independent director. Together, these filings record the formal securities, governance and material-event disclosures tied to Bank of America's banking, wealth management, investment banking and markets businesses.
Bank of America Corporation (BAC), through BofA Finance, is offering contingent income, issuer-callable yield notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index. Each Note has a $1,000 denomination and a term of approximately three years, subject to early redemption.
Investors may receive a contingent coupon of $8.75 per $1,000 (0.875% per month, 10.50% per annum) on monthly observation dates if all three indices are at or above 70% of their starting values. BofA Finance may redeem the Notes on specified monthly call dates at $1,000 plus any due contingent coupon if conditions for the coupon are met.
At maturity, if the Notes are not called and the least performing index is at or above its 70% threshold, investors receive principal plus any final contingent coupon; if it is below that threshold, repayment is reduced in line with the index decline and investors can lose up to 100% of principal. The initial estimated value is expected to be $898.60–$948.60 per $1,000, below the $1,000 public offering price, reflecting internal funding and hedging costs.
BofA Finance LLC, guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is offering Buffered Enhanced Return Notes linked to the EURO STOXX 50® Index. The notes have a term of approximately 2 years, with the starting value set on December 22, 2025 and maturity on December 28, 2027. The public offering price is $1,000 per note, including a $26 underwriting discount, with proceeds of $974 per note to BofA Finance before expenses. The initial estimated value on the pricing date is expected to range between $920 and $970 per $1,000 principal amount, which is less than the public offering price.
The notes provide a 105.00% upside participation rate in the EURO STOXX 50® Index and a 10% downside buffer via a threshold value at 90% of the starting level. If the index finishes above the starting value, payment at maturity increases based on the index gain times the participation rate; if it finishes between the starting value and the 90% threshold, principal is returned; below the threshold, principal is reduced and up to 90% of the investment can be lost. All payments depend on the credit risk of BofA Finance and BAC and do not include dividends from the index.
BofA Finance, guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is offering approximately 3-year Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 indices. The public offering price is $1,000.00 per Note, with an underwriting discount of $7.50 and initial estimated value expected between $901.60 and $951.60 per $1,000.00.
The Notes pay a contingent coupon of $7.917 per $1,000.00 (0.7917% per month, 9.50% per annum) on each monthly Contingent Payment Date only if all three indices are at or above 70% of their respective starting levels. BofA Finance may redeem the Notes early on specified Call Payment Dates at $1,000.00 per Note plus any contingent coupon due if all indices meet the coupon barrier. At maturity, if not called, principal is fully protected only if the least performing index is at or above 70% of its starting level; otherwise repayment is reduced in line with the negative return of that index, and investors can lose up to their entire principal. All payments depend on the credit of BofA Finance and BAC.
BofA Finance LLC, guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation (BAC), is offering senior unsecured Digital Return Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq‑100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 indices. The notes have an approximate 18‑month term from December 2025 to June 2027 and a public offering price of $1,000.00 per note, with an underwriting discount of $22.00 and proceeds to BofA Finance of $978.00 per note, before expenses.
At maturity, investors receive a fixed digital payment of $1,125.00 per $1,000.00 (a 12.50% gain) if the worst‑performing index is at or above 70% of its starting level. If that index finishes below 70%, repayment is reduced in line with the index loss, and investors can lose up to their entire principal. The initial estimated value is expected to be between $920.00 and $970.00 per $1,000.00, reflecting BAC’s internal funding rate, dealer compensation and hedging costs, so the economic value is lower than the issue price.
All payments depend on the credit of BofA Finance and BAC and do not include dividends from the indices. The notes are complex, involve significant market, structure, and tax risks, are not intended for EEA or UK retail investors, and rely on a tax treatment as single financial contracts that the IRS could challenge.
BofA Finance LLC, guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is offering Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100® Technology Sector Index, the Russell 2000® Index and the S&P 500® Index. Each Note has a $1,000.00 denomination, a term of approximately 3 years, and a public offering price of $1,000.00, with proceeds to the issuer of $973.50 per Note before expenses. The initial estimated value on the pricing date is expected between $875.00 and $925.00 per $1,000.00.
The Notes pay a contingent monthly coupon of $7.084 per $1,000.00 (0.7084% per month, 8.50% per annum) only if on each Observation Date the level of every index is at or above its 70.00% Coupon Barrier. The issuer may redeem the Notes early on specified Call Payment Dates at $1,000.00 per Note plus any applicable contingent coupon if all indices meet the Coupon Barrier.
If the Notes are not called, at maturity investors receive $1,000.00 per Note plus any final contingent coupon if the least performing index finishes at or above its 70.00% Threshold Value. If the least performing index ends below its Threshold Value, repayment of principal is reduced in line with the index loss and can be as low as $0, meaning investors could lose their entire investment. All payments are subject to the credit risk of BofA Finance and BAC and are sensitive to the performance of the three indices.
Bank of America Corporation (BAC), through BofA Finance, is offering buffered auto-callable notes linked to the least performing of the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index. The notes have an approximate 5-year term, with automatic call features starting in December 2026 that can pay preset call amounts up to $1,356.25 per $1,000 if both indices are at or above their call levels on a call observation date.
The structure includes a 15% downside buffer: if held to maturity and the worst-performing index finishes between 85% and 100% of its starting level, investors receive full principal back; below 85%, principal is reduced in line with the loss, with up to 85% of principal at risk. The initial estimated value is expected to be between $886.20 and $936.20 per $1,000, less than the $1,000 public offering price, reflecting internal funding and hedging costs. All payments depend on the credit risk of BofA Finance as issuer and BAC as guarantor and are not FDIC insured.
Bank of America’s BofA Finance is offering three-year Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the least performing of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector Index and Russell 2000 Index. The Notes are issued at $1,000 per Note, with underwriting discounts of $28.75 and initial estimated value between $910 and $960 per $1,000, reflecting hedging costs and BAC’s internal funding rate.
Holders may receive a contingent coupon of at least $7.50 per $1,000 (at least 0.75% monthly, or at least 9.00% per annum) on each monthly Observation Date, but only if the level of each index is at or above its Coupon Barrier of 70% of its Starting Value. BofA Finance can redeem the Notes early on specified Call Payment Dates at $1,000 plus any due coupon. If the Notes are not called and, at maturity, the least performing index is below its 70% Threshold Value, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with the index loss and can be as low as $0, meaning a total loss of principal is possible. All payments depend on the credit risk of BofA Finance and BAC.
BofA Finance, fully guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is issuing approximately 5-year buffered auto-callable notes linked to the least performing of the Russell 2000® Index and the S&P 500® Index. The public offering price is $1,000.00 per Note, while the initial estimated value is $945.50, reflecting internal funding and hedging costs.
The Notes may be automatically called beginning on November 24, 2026 if both indexes are at or above their Call Values, with scheduled Call Amounts rising from $1,070.00 up to $1,332.50 per $1,000.00. If not called, investors are protected against declines in the least performing index down to a Threshold Value set at 85.00% of its Starting Value, but can lose up to 85.00% of principal if that index finishes below the threshold. Payments depend on the credit risk of BofA Finance and BAC, and do not include dividends from the underlying indexes.
BofA Finance LLC, guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is offering approximately 3‑year Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the least performing of the Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLE), the Nasdaq‑100 Index (NDX) and the Russell 2000 Index (RTY).
The Notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $8.542 per $1,000 (0.8542% per month, 10.25% per annum) only if on each Observation Date all three underlyings are at or above their Coupon Barriers, set at 70% of their Starting Values. The issuer may redeem the Notes on specified Call Payment Dates at $1,000 plus any due coupon if conditions for the contingent coupon are met, ending all future payments.
If the Notes are not called and, on the Valuation Date, the least performing underlying is at or above its Threshold Value (also 70% of its Starting Value), investors receive $1,000 per Note plus any final contingent coupon. If it is below its Threshold Value, repayment is reduced in line with the underlying’s loss and can be as low as $0, meaning up to 100% loss of principal. The initial estimated value is $944.20 per $1,000, below the $1,000 public offering price, reflecting internal funding, hedging costs and fees. All payments depend on the credit of BofA Finance and BAC.
Bank of America (via BofA Finance) is offering 5‑year auto‑callable notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq‑100 Index and the Russell 2000 Index. Each Note has a $1,000 public offering price, with a $25 underwriting discount and $975 in proceeds to BofA Finance. The initial estimated value on the pricing date is expected between $910 and $960 per $1,000, reflecting BAC’s internal funding rate and hedging‑related charges.
The Notes can be automatically called starting December 21, 2026 if both indices are at or above 100% of their respective Starting Values on a Call Observation Date, paying fixed Call Amounts of $1,092.50, $1,185.00, $1,277.50 or $1,370.00 per $1,000, depending on the call year. If not called, at maturity in December 2030 investors receive $1,462.50 per $1,000 if the least performing index is at or above its Redemption Barrier of 100% of its Starting Value, $1,000 if it is between 60% and 100%, and a reduced amount if it is below 60%, with up to 100% loss of principal possible.
All payments depend on the credit risk of BofA Finance as issuer and Bank of America Corporation as guarantor, and investors do not receive dividends from the underlying indices.