| Regular Preferred Shares Sorted Alphabetically From this page you can start your research on Preferred Stocks. With current prices and yields you should be able to select a few that appear to meet your yield requirements. Preferred shares are shares issued by a corporation as part of its capital structure. Preferred shares normally carry no voting rights (unlike common shares). Dividends are either cumulative or non-cumulative. Cumulative means that dividends continue to accrue if they have been suspended, but they are not paid until the company decides to pay them after suspension. Non Cumulative means they do not continue to accrue (they are gone forever). In either case if the dividends are suspended the company is likely in deep financial trouble. Preferred shares are senior to common stock, but junior to all bonds. Dividends are generally paid quarterly--although a few pay monthly. The earliest call dates are given below. The issues generally have no maturity date. PLEASE NOTE - $100 issues have been REMOVED (as of 1/5/2012). These issues have little to no liquidity and they hinder our ability to format our lists with important information as the Google Cloud limits cell formatting. |
| Copyrights SGM Publishing 2010-2013 |

| The Yield Hunter Let's Make some money and sleep well at night In our 7th Year |
| Navigation A link on the security description will take you to a security summary and other links |
| How to Buy a Preferred Stock Preferred stocks may be bought in either a standard cash (or margin) brokerage account or in a IRA or 401(K) account---in other words in almost any account. Preferred stocks are bought and sold generally the same as any common stock--enter an order in your account (ticker symbol, shares and price) and wait for execution. The KEY DIFFERENCE is you likely want to enter as a 'limit' order versus a 'market' order. Preferred stocks usually trade much smaller volumes than common stocks, thus to control your buy price you want to specify your price--spreads between the bid/ask can be high so use a 'limit' to optimize the price you pay. |
| S&P Credit Ratings Investment Grade AAA, AA, A, BBB, BBB- Speculative Grade BB+, BB, B, CCC, CC, C, D NR--Not Rated Detailed Info on S & P Credit Ratings |
| YIELD TO CALL ASSUMPTIONS 1st---it is assumed that a security will be called (redeemed) on the first day it is able to be called. 2ndly - it is assumed that any security past its initial call (redemption) eligible date will be called the next day. |
| Error Reporting Suggestions? Help Us Improve This Website |
| Moodys Credit Ratings Investment Grade Aaa, Aa, A, Baa Speculative Grade Ba, B, Caa Ca, C Moodys may add 1, 2 and 3 to any of the above to 'fillet' each rating--1 is the top of the rating--3 the low end NR--Not Rated |