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📘 Learn › What Happens If a Preferred Dividend Is Suspended?

What Happens If a Preferred Dividend Is Suspended?

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

The short answer

The board simply declines to declare the dividend. That is all it takes.

It is not a default. No lender can accelerate, no bankruptcy is triggered. This is the fundamental difference between owning a preferred and owning the same company's bonds.

What happens next depends almost entirely on one word: cumulative.

If the issue is cumulative

The skipped payments accumulate as arrears. They are a debt of honour, not a legal debt, but they come with real teeth:

So management has a powerful incentive to catch up: it cannot reward common shareholders until it does.

If the issue is non-cumulative

The dividend is gone permanently. Not deferred. Not owed. It simply never happened.

The company may resume paying next quarter, or never. Because bank preferreds are nearly always non-cumulative for regulatory reasons, this is the scenario most bank preferred holders actually face.

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Two preferreds can suspend on the same day with identical yields. The cumulative holder has a claim that must be settled before common shareholders see a dime. The non-cumulative holder has nothing.

What happens to the price and the yield

The price usually falls hard and fast. The security exists to deliver income; that income has stopped.

The yield figure becomes meaningless. A screener that keeps multiplying the old coupon by par will display a large, entirely fictional yield — often 9%, 12%, or more — on a security paying nothing at all. This is one of the most dangerous artefacts in income investing.

On this site a suspended issue shows the contractual amount marked "(suspended)", a DIVIDEND SUSPENDED badge, and its yield is displayed as "Suspended" — never as a number we do not believe.

Why companies suspend

The order of events is informative: a company almost always cuts the common dividend first. When the preferred goes, the situation is serious.

What to watch during a suspension

Reinstatement

When a cumulative issue recovers, the company must pay all arrears before resuming common dividends — sometimes as a single lump sum. Prices often move sharply in anticipation. For non-cumulative issues, resumption simply restarts the payments; nothing is repaid.

Key takeaways

We flag suspended issues explicitly rather than showing a phantom yield. Read cumulative vs non-cumulative next.

Frequently asked questions

Can a company legally stop paying a preferred dividend?
Yes. A preferred dividend must be declared by the board. Choosing not to declare it is lawful and is not an event of default, unlike missing a bond interest payment.
Do I get suspended preferred dividends back?
Only if the issue is cumulative. Cumulative dividends accumulate as arrears and must be paid in full before any common dividend. Non-cumulative dividends are gone permanently.
What happens to the share price when a preferred dividend is suspended?
It typically falls sharply, because the income the security exists to provide has stopped. Any published yield also becomes meaningless — there is no dividend being paid.

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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This is information, not investment advice.

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