📘 Learn › Preferred Stock vs CDs
Preferred Stock vs CDs: Not the Same Thing at All
The short answer
A certificate of deposit is a bank deposit. Within FDIC limits, your principal is insured by the U.S. government and returned at maturity.
A preferred stock is an investment security. Nothing is insured, the price moves every day, and the dividend can be stopped.
They are both described as "income," which is where the confusion begins. They are not substitutes.
Side-by-side
| CD | Preferred stock | |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | Bank deposit | Security (equity) |
| Principal protection | FDIC-insured to limits | None |
| Price movement | None — you get face value back | Fluctuates daily |
| Income | Contractual interest | Dividend — can be skipped |
| Term | Fixed (3 months – 5 years) | Usually perpetual |
| Getting out early | Early-withdrawal penalty | Sell at whatever the market pays |
| Tax on income | Ordinary income | Often qualified dividends |
The insurance is the whole difference
FDIC insurance covers deposits up to $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, per ownership category. Inside that limit, a CD's principal is about as close to certain as finance gets.
A preferred stock issued by that same bank carries no such protection. If the bank fails, the depositors are made whole and the preferred holders are near the very back of the queue — behind every bondholder.
Where the extra yield comes from
A preferred typically yields several percentage points more than a CD of similar headline duration. That gap is not generosity. It pays you for:
- Market price risk — rates rise, your preferred falls, and there is no maturity date to pull it back to par.
- Credit risk — the issuer must stay solvent and willing to pay.
- Dividend risk — the board can suspend it. See what happens if a preferred dividend is suspended.
- Call risk — your income can be taken away at $25 when rates fall.
Liquidity works differently, not better
A CD locks your money up; leaving early costs a defined penalty, but you know the penalty in advance.
A preferred can be sold any trading day — at whatever the market will pay that day. That may be more than you paid. It may be considerably less. "Liquid" is not the same as "safe."
Tax treatment
CD interest is ordinary income. Many U.S. corporate preferred dividends are qualified and taxed at lower long-term capital-gains rates. In a taxable account this can narrow the after-tax gap — but it never compensates for principal risk. See are preferred stock dividends qualified? Consult a tax professional.
How to think about the two
This site is educational and does not give advice, but the distinction is not subtle:
- A CD is a savings product. Its job is to not lose money.
- A preferred is an investment. Its job is to pay you for accepting defined risks.
Money you cannot afford to see fall in value does not belong in a preferred stock, no matter how attractive the yield looks next to a CD rate.
Key takeaways
- CDs are FDIC-insured deposits; preferreds are uninsured securities.
- A CD returns your principal at maturity. A preferred has no maturity and no guarantee.
- The yield difference is payment for risk, not a better deal.
- Are preferreds safe? Read the honest answer.
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.