Bank of America Corp. said it won’t cut any jobs this year as a result of the coronavirus, and is helping clients affected by the pandemic through increased commercial lending to companies and expanded forbearance for Main Street customers.
The Charlotte, N.C.-based lender has hired 2,000 people this month and is shifting more than 3,000 employees to new roles in its consumer and small-business divisions to deal with the crisis, according to a company memo seen by Bloomberg. The moves include internal and external hires.

“We don’t want our teammates to worry about their jobs during a time like this,” Chairman and CEO Brian Moynihan said in a CNBC interview Friday. “And we’ll continue to pay everybody, even those who can’t work from home.”
Bank of America joins U.S. lenders Citigroup, Wells Fargo and Morgan Stanley, along with European counterparts including HSBC Holdings, in pledging to preserve jobs amid the widespread impact of the coronavirus. The banks are seeking to reassure their employees as the pandemic roils markets and raises the prospect of deep losses industrywide.
BBVA USA in Birmingham, Ala., says it will use a proprietary score based on multiple sources of coronavirus-related information to determine when certain branches are ready for walk-in traffic.
The Governmental Accounting Standards Board released a technical bulletin with guidance for applying existing GASB standards to transactions related to the CARES Act and outflows incurred in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department released proposed regulations and temporary regulations to offer guidance for consolidated groups on net operating losses in the wake of changes under both the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 and the CARES Act.
Bank of America has extended more than $50 billion in loans to commercial clients this month so they can build up cash and pay employees, according to Moynihan.
“We’ve put our capital to work to increase the new lines of credit, the draws in lines of credit, the access to markets,” he said.
Other takeaways from the interview:
- “We’re going to make sure we maintain strong capital ratios and strong liquidity right through this crisis,” Moynihan said.
- The nation’s top 40 banks are all waiting for the implementation of government assistance programs.
- Bank of America has “a limited number of cases” of the virus among staff members.
- About 150,000 of the company’s 208,000 employees are working from home, and it boosted the number of staffers who have compter monitors at home to 50,000 from 10,000 in five weeks.