📘 Learn › What Happens If a Preferred Dividend Is Suspended?
What Happens If a Preferred Dividend Is Suspended?
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:
- The company cannot pay a single cent of common dividend — or usually repurchase common shares — until every arrear is cleared. This is the dividend blocker.
- Many prospectuses grant preferred holders the right to elect directors once the company is a set number of periods behind (often six quarters).
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.
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
- Cash preservation during a downturn — often the healthiest reason, and the most likely to reverse.
- Regulatory pressure — a bank regulator may bar distributions while capital is rebuilt.
- Covenant restrictions — lenders can block dividends when leverage tests are breached.
- Genuine distress — the company cannot afford it, and the common dividend is usually already gone.
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
- Is it cumulative? That determines whether you are waiting for something or nothing.
- Has the common dividend also been suspended? If not, something is unusual.
- Is the company refinancing or restructuring its debt? Preferred holders sit below every lender.
- Are arrears accruing, and how large are they getting relative to the share price?
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
- Suspension is legal and not a default.
- Cumulative → arrears accrue and block common dividends. Non-cumulative → the money is gone.
- Any yield shown on a suspended issue is fiction.
- A suspended preferred usually means the common dividend went first — the situation is serious.
We flag suspended issues explicitly rather than showing a phantom yield. Read cumulative vs non-cumulative next.
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.