Is Bank of America a Millionaire Maker?

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You might know Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) as one of the world's largest financial institutions. It is a well-known consumer-facing bank with over $3.2 trillion in assets today. You might also know it for the controversial bailout money it and its peers received following the financial crisis of 2007-2008.

You might also associate Bank of America with famous investor Warren Buffett, who has owned stock in it through Berkshire Hathaway for years. Bank of America is Berkshire's third-largest holding, accounting for approximately 12% of its portfolio.

Either way, many people (including myself) invest in the companies they know, making Bank of America a hot topic. It probably doesn't need to be said that Bank of America is a get-rich-quick stock. The company is already huge, with a $350 billion market cap today.

But can Bank of America make you rich slowly? Can it compound for decades, potentially making you a millionaire over the course of your investing life?

The boom-and-bust nature of the big banks

A bank's business is simple at first glance. A bank pays you interest on the money you deposit. The bank takes your money and loans it to someone else at a higher interest rate. The bank makes money (net interest income) from the difference between the interest they earn on the loan and what they pay on deposits.

Big banks, such as Bank of America, are far more complex. They touch almost every aspect of the economy, including personal and business banking, mortgages, student loans, commercial real estate, and the financial markets. Banks can be very lucrative when the economy is firing on all cylinders, and people and businesses borrow a lot.

But it goes the other way, too. When something goes wrong in the financial markets or the economy, it usually affects the banks. Remember the housing crash and financial crisis of 2007-2008? It was partially due to a bubble in subprime mortgages -- to which, you guessed it, Bank of America and other big banks had major exposure. Their heavy losses prompted financial intervention from the government.

The U.S. economy is a juggernaut over the long term, but sometimes, things break for one reason or another. When this happens, Bank of America and its peers tend to feel it, too. It comes with the territory of being so deeply ingrained in the world's largest economy. This creates a boom-and-bust nature for big banks, and their size and notoriety can sometimes make them a regulatory target.

Banking meltdowns eat into the stock's long-term performance

Over time, the occasional crisis or recession has dragged Bank of America stock down.