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What Happens When a Preferred Stock Is Called?
The short answer
The issuer announces a redemption, and on the stated date your shares are bought back at the call price — almost always $25 plus any accrued dividend — and cancelled. Cash appears in your account. The ticker stops trading.
You have no say in it. See callable preferred stock explained for why issuers do this.
The sequence, step by step
- The notice. The company issues a press release and files an 8-K announcing it will redeem the series. The prospectus dictates the notice period — typically 30 to 60 days.
- The price snaps. Within minutes the market price moves to roughly the call price. A preferred trading at $26.10 will drop toward $25 plus accrued. That drop is not a market panic; it is arithmetic.
- Trading continues. You can still sell in the market until the redemption date. You will simply receive about what the call pays.
- The redemption date. Your shares are taken. You receive the call price plus dividends accrued and unpaid through that date.
- Dividends stop. Nothing accrues after the redemption date, even if the cash settles a few days later.
- The ticker is delisted. The security ceases to exist.
What you actually receive
Two components:
- The call price — the liquidation preference, normally $25.00. Some issues, particularly early-redemption or make-whole provisions, pay a premium above par.
- Accrued and unpaid dividends — the portion earned since the last payment date.
Note what you do not receive: the remaining future dividends. That income stream simply ends.
The math of gain and loss
| You paid | Called at | Result per share |
|---|---|---|
| $22.00 | $25.00 | +$3.00 gain |
| $25.00 | $25.00 | Break even |
| $26.40 | $25.00 | −$1.40 loss |
This is exactly why an issue trading at a discount to par carries call upside, while one trading at a premium carries call risk.
Partial calls
An issuer may redeem only part of a series. In that case shares are usually selected pro rata or by lottery, per the depository's procedures. You could have half your position redeemed and keep the rest.
Tax
A redemption is generally treated as a sale of the shares: you realise a capital gain or loss based on your cost basis versus the call price. The accrued dividend is normally taxed as a dividend. Rules depend on your circumstances — consult a tax professional.
Then what? Reinvestment risk
Here is the sting. Issuers call when rates have fallen. So your capital comes back precisely when comparable new issues pay less than the security you just lost.
You are handed cash at the worst possible moment to redeploy it. That is reinvestment risk, and it is the hidden cost of chasing a high coupon on a callable security.
Key takeaways
- You receive the call price (usually $25) plus accrued dividends, and the shares are cancelled.
- The market price snaps to the call price the moment redemption is announced.
- Paying above $25 turns a call into a realised capital loss.
- Calls arrive when rates are low — the worst time to reinvest the proceeds.
Check the SEC-verified call date on any symbol page before you buy above par.
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.