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📘 Learn › Are Preferred Stocks Safe?

Are Preferred Stocks Safe? An Honest Answer

Updated 2026-07-09 · Educational guide — not investment advice

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"Safe" is only meaningful against a comparison. Safe compared with what? The honest answer changes completely depending on the alternative.

The short answer

A preferred is a middle-of-the-capital-structure security. It should be judged that way.

Where you sit when things go wrong

  1. Secured lenders
  2. Bondholders and other unsecured debt (including baby bonds)
  3. Preferred stock
  4. Common stock

Being third of four sounds better than it is. By the time a company is liquidated, the assets are usually exhausted somewhere in step 2. Historically, preferred recoveries in bankruptcy are low.

The four things that actually hurt preferred holders

1. Rising interest rates

This is the most common way preferred investors lose money — not bankruptcy, but rates. A perpetual preferred has enormous duration: no maturity date ever pulls its price back to $25. When rates rise, prices can fall 20–30% while the company remains perfectly healthy and keeps paying every dividend.

2. A suspended dividend

Legal, and not a default. If the issue is non-cumulative — as nearly every bank preferred is — the missed dividends are gone permanently.

3. Being called at the worst moment

Your best-performing preferred gets redeemed at $25 exactly when rates have fallen and you cannot replace the income. If you paid above par, you also book a loss. See what happens when a preferred is called.

4. Concentration

The preferred universe is heavily concentrated in banks, insurers and REITs. A portfolio of "twenty different preferreds" may in truth be one bet on financial-sector health. In 2023, regional bank preferreds demonstrated exactly this.

What protection do you actually have?

These are real. They are also all relative to the common shareholder — not absolute protections of your capital.

What makes one preferred safer than another

Key takeaways

Read the full breakdown in preferred stock risks. This guide is educational and is not investment advice.

Frequently asked questions

Are preferred stocks a safe investment?
They sit in the middle. Preferred stock ranks above common stock but below every bond the company has issued. The dividend can legally be suspended, the price fluctuates, and there is no FDIC insurance. It is safer than common equity and riskier than debt from the same issuer.
Can you lose all your money in a preferred stock?
Yes. In a bankruptcy, preferred holders rank behind all lenders and frequently recover little or nothing. Outside bankruptcy, a suspended dividend plus a falling price can also cause large losses.
Are preferred stocks safer than bonds?
No. From the same issuer, bonds are safer: interest is legally owed, there is a maturity date, and bondholders rank ahead of preferred holders in a bankruptcy.

This guide is for education only. Nothing here is investment, tax, or legal advice, or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Figures on this site are drawn from SEC filings and live market data; always verify terms in the issuer's own prospectus before investing.

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About this site

This site tracks preferred stocks and baby bonds — investments that pay regular, scheduled dividends. Every figure shown is drawn from companies' SEC filings and live market quotes.

What you're looking at
A preferred stock sits between a common stock and a bond. It usually trades near a $25 face value and pays a fixed dividend on a set schedule. Baby bonds are similar, but they are debt that matures on a stated date.
Income & dividends
Current YieldAnnual income ÷ today's price — what you'd actually earn buying now. The headline income number.
Annual Dividend / InterestTotal cash paid per share each year. A preferred pays a "dividend"; a baby bond pays "interest."
Original CouponThe annual rate set when it was issued, as a % of par (6% of $25 = $1.50/yr). Fixed stays put; floating/reset rates change later.
Pay FrequencyHow often it pays — usually quarterly, sometimes monthly or twice a year.
Recent Ex-DateOwn it before this date to receive the next payment; buy on or after and you miss that one.
Price & value
Recent Market PriceThe latest market quote, delayed at least 20 minutes.
Liquidation Preference (Par)Face value — almost always $25 (some are $50, $100, or $1,000). What you're owed if the company winds down, and the price it can be redeemed at.
Disc / Prem to ParHow far the price sits below par (a discount) or above it (a premium). A discount can add return if it's redeemed at par; a premium is what you'd lose if it is.
Call & redemption
Call DateThe first date the issuer may redeem (buy back) the share at par. Before it you're protected; after it, it can be called at any time.
RedeemableWhether the issuer has the right to buy it back at all.
Yield to CallYour annual return if bought today and redeemed at par on the call date. If it's below the current yield, a call would cost you.
Yield to WorstThe lowest of the possible outcomes (to call, to maturity, or simply held) — the cautious yield to judge by.
Dividend terms & structure
CumulativeIf a payment is skipped, a cumulative issue still owes it (and must catch up before any common dividend); a non-cumulative one does not.
Interest DeferrableOn some baby bonds the issuer may postpone interest for a period — common on junior subordinated notes.
Floating / Reset RateThe rate isn't fixed forever — after a set date it resets to a benchmark (e.g. 3-month SOFR or the 5-year Treasury) plus a spread.
MaturityFor a baby bond, the date the principal is repaid. Most preferreds are perpetual — no maturity.
ConvertibleWhether it can turn into the company's common stock. "Change-of-control conversion" means that right applies only if the company is taken over.
Conversion Price / RatioFor convertibles, the price or number of common shares each unit converts into.
SeriesThe class label from the SEC filing (e.g. Series A). Note: it can differ from the ticker letter.
IssuedThe date the security first settled — when it came to market.
Shares OfferedHow many shares (or depositary shares) were sold in the original offering.
Finding your way around
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Lists & ScreenerBrowse by highest yield, largest discount, monthly payers, ETFs and more.
Ask the dataThe chat box answers plain questions like “highest-yield monthly REIT under par.”
$10K CalculatorSee what a past investment would be worth today.

This is information, not investment advice.

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