Bank of America Unveils New Price Target For Apple Stock - Here’s What You Need to Know
Bank of America just slapped a fresh target on Apple—and it's got Wall Street buzzing. Not about the numbers themselves, but about what they represent in a market increasingly defined by digital assets.
The Analyst's Call
Forget the specific digits for a second. The real story is the relentless focus on legacy tech valuations while the underlying financial architecture is being rebuilt. Traditional analysts are still playing checkers, meticulously moving pieces on an old board, while crypto-native builders are coding an entirely new game.
A Glimpse at the Old Guard
This kind of price-target ritual is a hallmark of traditional finance—a comforting, quarterly ceremony of reassessment that offers the illusion of precision. It's a world where a single analyst's adjustment can move billions, yet remains utterly disconnected from the 24/7, globally distributed price discovery happening on-chain.
The Provocative Close
So, Bank of America has a new number for Apple. Meanwhile, decentralized networks are quietly building the infrastructure that could make today's corporate titans look like slow-moving giants. The future of value isn't just about predicting a stock's path—it's about owning a piece of the protocol itself. After all, in the old world, you analyze the company. In the new one, you own the network. (And let's be honest, the only 'target' most banks ever really hit is their own quarterly bonus pool.)
Apple Stock (AAPL) Gets a ‘Buy’ Target From Bank of America

According to a recent note from Bank of America Securities, Apple’s stock price could reach a high of $350. The previous target the leading bank wrote to clients was $325. BofA is confident that AAPL’s revenue growth is outpacing other global competitors in the industry.
Therefore, that’s an uptick and return on investment (ROI) of approximately 30% from its current price of $270. An investment of $1,000 could turn into $1,300 if the Bank of America’s forecast on Apple stock turns out to be accurate.
The Bank of America Securities has also provided a downside scenario for Apple stock in the event of market turbulence. The least AAPL could fall is at the $205 range. That WOULD be a loss of nearly 25% if the stock market heads south this year.
Apple stock remains in the spotlight, having risen by nearly 20% over the past year. After it crashed to the $170 mark during Trump’s Liberation Day, AAPL displayed remarkable price recovery. The tech giant was at the center of the trade wars, with its manufacturing units in China and India coming under pressure.
Both China and India now manufacture iPhones and remain a primary hub for production and assembling units. The note from BofA also highlighted Apple’s store revenue growth of 7% year-on-year, giving the stock a buy target. “Strong capital returns, eventually winner at AI at the edge and optionality from new products and markets,” read the note to clients.