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Are Preferred Stocks Safe? An Honest Answer
The short answer
- Safer than the same company's common stock. You get paid first, and you rank ahead in liquidation.
- Riskier than the same company's bonds. You rank behind them, and your dividend is not legally owed.
- Nothing like a CD or savings account. There is no insurance and no principal guarantee. See preferred stock vs CDs.
A preferred is a middle-of-the-capital-structure security. It should be judged that way.
Where you sit when things go wrong
- Secured lenders
- Bondholders and other unsecured debt (including baby bonds)
- Preferred stock
- 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?
- Payment priority over common shareholders — genuinely valuable and enforced.
- Cumulative status, if present: arrears must be cleared before common dividends resume.
- A dividend blocker: the company usually cannot pay common dividends or buy back common shares while your preferred is unpaid.
- Limited voting rights if dividends fall several periods behind.
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
- Issuer quality. The dividend is only as good as the company paying it.
- Cumulative beats non-cumulative, other things equal.
- Trading below par means a call works for you, not against you.
- A near maturity (i.e. a baby bond) provides a pull-to-par anchor a perpetual never has.
- Investment-grade rating and a sector that is not already stressed.
Key takeaways
- Preferreds are middle-risk: above common, below all debt, uninsured.
- The usual loss is caused by interest rates, not bankruptcy.
- Recoveries in bankruptcy are historically low.
- Your protections are real, but they are protections against the common shareholder.
Read the full breakdown in preferred stock risks. This guide is educational and is not investment advice.
Frequently asked questions
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.