Preferred Stock Fundamentals
Chapters in this video
- 0:00 The financial platypus: equity that acts like debt
- 1:08 Fixed dividend and the $100 par value trap
- 2:18 Interest rate sensitivity and the price seesaw
- 4:06 Voting rights and contingent exceptions
- 4:47 Bankruptcy priority: where preferred stockholders stand
- 5:55 Preferred versus common stock side by side
- 6:34 Rapid-fire exam recap
What this video covers
- Why preferred stock is classified as equity, not debt, and what that means for bankruptcy priority
- How to calculate the fixed dividend using the $100 par value, and the trap of confusing it with the $1,000 bond par value
- Why preferred stock prices move inversely to interest rates, just like bonds, because of the fixed dividend
- The complete preferred versus common stock comparison: dividends, voting rights, growth potential, liquidation priority, price sensitivity, and preemptive rights
- Why preferred stockholders generally have no voting rights, and the single contingent exception
- The order of payment in corporate liquidation: bondholders and creditors first, then preferred stockholders, then common stockholders last
- Why preferred stock offers income stability but sacrifices growth potential, and how that trade-off shows up in suitability questions
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