Preferred Stock
Preferred Stock
A hybrid equity security that combines characteristics of both stocks and bonds. Pays fixed dividends (like bond interest) with priority over common stock dividends, receives priority in liquidation after bondholders but before common shareholders, and typically carries no voting rights. Often callable and less volatile than common stock.
An income-focused retiree might invest in cumulative preferred stock paying a fixed 6% annual dividend, providing more stable income than common stock dividends while accepting less growth potential.
Students often confuse preferred stock with common stock (preferred typically has no voting rights but fixed dividends) or think preferred has priority over bondholders in bankruptcy (bondholders are paid first). Many also miss that preferred stock is sensitive to interest rate changes like bonds.
How This Is Tested
- Determining suitability of preferred stock for income-oriented vs. growth-oriented investors
- Identifying priority order in corporate liquidation (bonds β preferred β common)
- Understanding cumulative vs. non-cumulative preferred dividend features
- Recognizing callable preferred stock benefits the issuer when interest rates fall
- Analyzing why preferred stock has less price volatility than common stock but more than bonds
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
Margaret, a 68-year-old retiree, needs steady income from her portfolio but wants to avoid the volatility of common stocks. Her risk tolerance is moderate, and she currently holds a mix of corporate bonds and money market funds. Her adviser is considering adding preferred stock to her portfolio. Which statement about this recommendation is MOST accurate?
B is correct. Preferred stock is well-suited for Margaret's situation because it pays fixed dividends (providing the steady income she needs) and has significantly less price volatility than common stock, while still offering equity exposure. This fits her moderate risk tolerance and income needs.
A is incorrect because preferred stock DOES provide growth potential (though less than common stock) and typically pays HIGHER dividends than corporate bonds to compensate for lower priority in liquidation. C is incorrect because voting rights are irrelevant to an income-focused retiree; the lack of voting rights is a non-issue for her investment objectives. D is incorrect because preferred stock has LOWER priority than bondholders in bankruptcy (bonds are paid first, then preferred, then common).
The Series 65 exam frequently tests preferred stock suitability for income-oriented investors. You must understand that preferred stock sits between bonds (safest, lowest return) and common stock (riskiest, highest potential return), making it appropriate for moderate-risk investors seeking steady income. This concept appears in client scenario questions testing your ability to match securities to investor profiles.
Which of the following is a typical characteristic of preferred stock?
C is correct. Preferred stock typically pays FIXED dividends (stated as a dollar amount or percentage of par value) and these dividends must be paid before any dividends can be paid to common stockholders. This is one of the defining characteristics that makes preferred stock "preferred."
A is incorrect because preferred stock pays FIXED dividends, not variable dividends (common stock dividends can vary based on earnings and board decisions). B is incorrect because preferred stock typically carries NO voting rights under normal circumstances (though some preferred may gain voting rights if dividends are skipped). D is incorrect because bondholders have priority over preferred stockholders in liquidation; the priority order is: secured creditors β unsecured creditors/bondholders β preferred stockholders β common stockholders.
The Series 65 exam tests your knowledge of the fundamental characteristics that distinguish preferred stock from common stock and bonds. Understanding that preferred pays FIXED dividends with PRIORITY over common (but AFTER bonds) is essential for answering questions about capital structure, suitability, and risk analysis.
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Access Free BetaAn investor owns 500 shares of 6% preferred stock with a $50 par value. What is the total annual dividend income the investor should expect to receive?
C is correct. Calculate: First find the annual dividend per share: $50 par value Γ 6% = $3 per share. Then multiply by number of shares: $3 Γ 500 shares = $1,500 total annual dividend.
A ($150) incorrectly calculates using only 100 shares instead of 500 shares. B ($300) incorrectly uses 6% of 500 shares ($30) instead of 6% of par value per share. D ($3,000) incorrectly uses 6% of the total investment ($50 Γ 500 = $25,000 Γ 6%) instead of 6% of par value per share.
Preferred dividend calculations appear frequently on the Series 65 exam. You must know the formula: (Par Value Γ Dividend Rate) Γ Number of Shares = Total Annual Dividend. This tests your understanding that preferred dividends are based on par value, not market price, unlike common stock yields which use market price.
All of the following statements about preferred stock are accurate EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). Preferred stockholders typically do NOT have voting rights under normal circumstances. This is one of the key differences between preferred and common stock. While some preferred stock agreements grant voting rights if the company misses multiple dividend payments, equal voting rights are NOT a standard feature.
A is accurate: preferred dividends must be paid before common stock dividends (this is what makes it "preferred"). B is accurate: preferred stock has less price volatility than common stock because of its fixed dividend and bond-like characteristics. D is accurate: because preferred pays fixed dividends, it behaves like a bond when interest rates change; when rates rise, preferred stock prices fall (and vice versa).
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to distinguish preferred stock from common stock and bonds. The key concept: preferred stock is a HYBRID securityβit has equity characteristics (residual claim on assets) but bond-like features (fixed payments, interest rate sensitivity). Understanding what preferred stock does NOT have (voting rights, unlimited upside) is as important as knowing what it does have.
A corporation issues callable cumulative preferred stock with a 7% dividend rate. Which of the following statements are TRUE?
1. Missed dividends accumulate and must be paid before common dividends
2. The corporation can redeem the shares if interest rates decline
3. Preferred shareholders vote on major corporate decisions
4. The preferred stock price will likely fall if interest rates rise
B is correct. Statements 1, 2, and 4 are TRUE.
Statement 1 is TRUE: "Cumulative" preferred means all missed dividends accumulate as "dividends in arrears" and must be paid to preferred shareholders before any dividends can be paid to common shareholders.
Statement 2 is TRUE: "Callable" means the corporation has the right to redeem (buy back) the preferred shares at a predetermined price. Companies typically call preferred stock when interest rates fall, allowing them to reissue new preferred at lower dividend rates (similar to refinancing a mortgage).
Statement 3 is FALSE: Preferred shareholders typically have NO voting rights under normal circumstances, regardless of whether the preferred is callable or cumulative.
Statement 4 is TRUE: Because preferred stock pays fixed dividends, it has an inverse relationship with interest rates (like bonds). When interest rates rise, newly issued preferred offers higher yields, making existing preferred with lower fixed rates less attractive, causing prices to fall.
The Series 65 exam tests multi-dimensional understanding of preferred stock features. You must know how cumulative (dividend arrears), callable (issuer can redeem), and fixed-rate (interest rate sensitivity) features interact. These concepts frequently appear together in complex scenario questions testing comprehensive knowledge of preferred stock mechanics.
π‘ Memory Aid
Preferred Stock = Middle child: Gets paid BEFORE common stock (younger sibling) but AFTER bondholders (parents). Has fixed allowance (dividend) but no say in family decisions (voting rights). Think "Preferred for income, not control."
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Where This Appears on the Exam
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: