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Callable Preferred Stock Explained (and Why Paying Above Par Is Risky)

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

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.

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You keep the security when the company does not want it, and lose it precisely when you would most like to keep it. That asymmetry is the definition of call risk.

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:

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"

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

Key takeaways

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

What does it mean when a preferred stock is callable?
The issuer has the right — but not the obligation — to buy your shares back at the call price, usually the $25 par value, on or after a stated call date. You cannot refuse.
What happens when a preferred stock is called?
You receive the call price (normally $25 per share) plus any accrued dividend, and the shares are cancelled. If you paid more than $25, you take a capital loss on the difference.
Why would a company call its preferred stock?
Because it is cheaper to refinance. If a company issued an 8% preferred and could reissue at 5.5% today, calling the old one at par and replacing it saves real money every year.

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.
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