Marketdash

Could Bank of America's Selloff Actually Be a Buy Signal?

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 hours ago
Bank of America shares dropped despite beating earnings, but the stock has landed at a price level that could tell us something interesting about trader psychology and buying opportunities.

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Bank of America Corporation (BAC) beat earnings estimates on Wednesday, and the stock promptly fell anyway. Wall Street, everyone.

But here's where it gets interesting. The shares dropped to a price level that's telling a story about market psychology, and some traders think it might actually be a buying opportunity.

The Regret Trade

There's this fascinating dynamic in bull markets called seller's remorse. You sell a stock, it keeps climbing, and you kick yourself. Eventually you decide you want back in, but your ego demands you only buy at the same price you sold for. No way you're paying more than what you got out at.

So when the stock dips back down to your old selling price, you pounce. And if enough traders do this simultaneously, something magical happens: what used to be resistance becomes support.

Bank of America has been demonstrating this pattern beautifully throughout 2025.

The Pattern Repeats

Back in May, the stock smacked into resistance around $44.50 and sold off. But in June it broke through that ceiling. Then in August, when shares pulled back to that same $44.50 level, suddenly all those remorseful sellers placed buy orders. The old resistance turned into rock-solid support.

The same thing played out at $48.50. Resistance in July became support in October.

Now we're watching it happen again. Bank of America hit resistance at roughly $53.90 in November. That broke in December as the stock climbed higher. But Wednesday's post-earnings drop has sent shares right back down to that former resistance level, and at least for now, it appears to be holding as support.

Get Bank Of America Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS (optional)

Is History About to Rhyme?

The question traders are asking: will this support level hold like the previous two did? If August and October are any guide, this could shape up to be another buying opportunity.

Of course, past performance doesn't guarantee future results, as every disclaimer loves to remind us. But understanding why these levels matter—the psychology of regretful traders determined to get back in at their price—gives you insight into how markets actually work beyond the fundamentals.

For now, Bank of America is testing whether trader psychology will win out over post-earnings disappointment.

Could Bank of America's Selloff Actually Be a Buy Signal?

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 hours ago
Bank of America shares dropped despite beating earnings, but the stock has landed at a price level that could tell us something interesting about trader psychology and buying opportunities.

Get Bank Of America Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS alerts

Bank of America Corporation (BAC) beat earnings estimates on Wednesday, and the stock promptly fell anyway. Wall Street, everyone.

But here's where it gets interesting. The shares dropped to a price level that's telling a story about market psychology, and some traders think it might actually be a buying opportunity.

The Regret Trade

There's this fascinating dynamic in bull markets called seller's remorse. You sell a stock, it keeps climbing, and you kick yourself. Eventually you decide you want back in, but your ego demands you only buy at the same price you sold for. No way you're paying more than what you got out at.

So when the stock dips back down to your old selling price, you pounce. And if enough traders do this simultaneously, something magical happens: what used to be resistance becomes support.

Bank of America has been demonstrating this pattern beautifully throughout 2025.

The Pattern Repeats

Back in May, the stock smacked into resistance around $44.50 and sold off. But in June it broke through that ceiling. Then in August, when shares pulled back to that same $44.50 level, suddenly all those remorseful sellers placed buy orders. The old resistance turned into rock-solid support.

The same thing played out at $48.50. Resistance in July became support in October.

Now we're watching it happen again. Bank of America hit resistance at roughly $53.90 in November. That broke in December as the stock climbed higher. But Wednesday's post-earnings drop has sent shares right back down to that former resistance level, and at least for now, it appears to be holding as support.

Get Bank Of America Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS (optional)

Is History About to Rhyme?

The question traders are asking: will this support level hold like the previous two did? If August and October are any guide, this could shape up to be another buying opportunity.

Of course, past performance doesn't guarantee future results, as every disclaimer loves to remind us. But understanding why these levels matter—the psychology of regretful traders determined to get back in at their price—gives you insight into how markets actually work beyond the fundamentals.

For now, Bank of America is testing whether trader psychology will win out over post-earnings disappointment.