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Callable Preferred Stock Explained (and Why Paying Above Par Is Risky)
The short answer
A callable preferred gives the issuer — not you — the right to buy your shares back at a set price (almost always the $25 par) on or after a stated call date.
It is a one-sided option. The company will exercise it when it benefits the company, which is precisely when it does not benefit you.
Why issuers call
Purely economics. Suppose a company issued an 8% preferred years ago when rates were high. Today it could issue a new one at 5.5%. On $200 million of preferred, that is $5 million a year saved. So it calls the old issue at $25 a share and reissues cheaper.
Notice the pattern: companies call when rates have fallen — which is exactly when your high-coupon preferred had become most valuable.
How call risk caps the price
Because everyone knows the issuer can redeem at $25, the market rarely lets a callable preferred trade far above par once the call date is near or past. Why pay $28 for something that can be taken from you tomorrow at $25?
This creates an invisible ceiling. A bond marching toward maturity has a "pull to par" that protects you. A callable preferred has a pull to par that caps you.
The trap: paying above par
This is where real money is lost, quietly.
Suppose a 7% preferred trades at $26.40 and is callable next month at $25. Your yield looks attractive. But if it is called:
- You receive $25.00 plus the accrued dividend.
- You lose $1.40 per share — a 5.3% capital loss.
- That loss can easily exceed a full year of the dividend you were chasing.
The headline "current yield" does not warn you about this at all. That is why we withhold yield-to-call and show "n/a — callable now" on any issue that is already callable and trading above par: the premium is genuinely at risk, and a computed yield would mislead you.
Call date vs "callable now"
- Before the call date — the issuer cannot redeem. The shares can trade above par with less risk.
- On or after the call date — the issuer may redeem at any time, typically with 30 days' notice. Our symbol pages flag these with ⚑ callable now.
Note "may," not "will." Plenty of preferreds sail years past their call date without being redeemed, because refinancing would cost the issuer more. That is why an issue trading at a discount and past its call date is not automatically about to be called.
What about yield to call?
Yield to call (YTC) assumes the issue is redeemed on the first call date and folds the gain or loss versus your purchase price into the return. It is the honest number when a call is plausible.
Yield to worst (YTW) is the lower of current yield and yield to call — a sensible default for a callable security. When an issue is already callable and above par, no meaningful yield can be computed at all, because the redemption could come tomorrow.
Special call features to know
- Make-whole call — the issuer must pay a premium above par. Friendlier to you.
- Regulatory / tax event call — lets a bank redeem early if the shares stop counting as regulatory capital. Common in bank preferreds.
- Fixed-to-floating reset — many issues that are not called simply switch to a floating rate. See fixed-to-floating preferred stock.
Key takeaways
- Callable means the issuer may redeem at $25 par on or after the call date. You have no say.
- Issuers call when rates fall — when your preferred is most valuable.
- Paying above $25 near or past a call date puts that premium at real risk.
- Check the call date before you check the yield.
Every symbol page shows the SEC-verified call date and flags "callable now." Browse issues trading below par, where call risk works in your favor rather than against you.
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.