📘 Learn › Preferred Stock vs Baby Bonds
Preferred Stock vs Baby Bonds: They Look Identical, But Aren't
The short answer
They look the same on a screen: $25 face value, a ticker on the NYSE, a payment every quarter. But a baby bond is debt and a preferred is equity — and that changes almost everything that matters.
Side-by-side
| Baby bond | Preferred stock | |
|---|---|---|
| Legal nature | Debt | Equity |
| Payment | Interest — legally owed | Dividend — can be skipped |
| Missed payment | Default (usually) | Not a default |
| Maturity | Yes — principal repaid | Usually perpetual |
| Ranking | Above preferred | Below all debt |
| Face value | $25 (principal) | $25 (liquidation preference) |
| Tax on income | Ordinary income | Often qualified dividends |
1. The payment is a legal obligation
A baby bond's interest is owed. Skip it and — subject to any grace period — the issuer is in default and bondholders have remedies. A preferred dividend is discretionary: the board simply declines to declare it, and nothing legally breaks.
That is the core reason baby bonds from the same issuer normally yield less than its preferreds. You are giving up yield for a genuine promise.
2. Maturity gives you an anchor
A baby bond matures on a stated date and repays $25 of principal. As that date nears, the price is pulled toward $25 — which dampens volatility and gives you a defined exit.
Most preferreds are perpetual. Nothing ever forces the price back to par. The only exit is the issuer choosing to call it.
3. The exception: junior subordinated notes
Not all baby bonds are equally safe. Many are junior subordinated notes, which sit at the very bottom of the debt stack — above preferreds, but below every other lender.
Crucially, these often permit the issuer to defer interest for an extended period (commonly up to five years) without triggering a default. The interest still accrues and is still owed — but you may wait years to receive it, and the price will reflect that.
So "it's debt" does not automatically mean "the cash arrives on time." Read the deferral clause.
4. Tax treatment is genuinely different
Baby bond payments are interest — ordinary income, taxed at your marginal rate, and reported on a 1099-INT. Many U.S. corporate preferred dividends are qualified dividends, taxed at lower long-term capital-gains rates if you meet the holding period.
For an investor in a high bracket, this gap can be substantial. See Are preferred stock dividends qualified? Tax rules change and depend on your circumstances — consult a tax professional.
5. How to tell which one you own
You cannot reliably tell from the ticker. Some baby bonds have a plain four- or five-letter symbol that looks nothing like a preferred. The only authority is the prospectus.
Every security on this site is classified from its SEC filing, and the symbol page states plainly whether it is a preferred stock or a baby bond, with a link to the filing itself. See how to read a prospectus.
Key takeaways
- Baby bond = debt with a maturity and legally owed interest. Preferred = equity with a skippable dividend and usually no maturity.
- Baby bonds rank above preferreds in bankruptcy.
- Watch for junior subordinated notes that allow multi-year interest deferral.
- Baby bond interest is ordinary income; many preferred dividends are qualified.
See every issue we track in the baby bonds list.
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.