PFF’s $14 Billion Preferred Stock Strategy Holds 60 Percent Bank Issued Preferreds With Call Provisions That Cap Your Upside

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By Marc Guberti Published

Quick Read

  • PFF’s 6.5% distribution yield overstates long-term returns when rates fall and issuers call high-coupon securities at par value.

  • Investors should monitor the 10-year Treasury yield, the yield curve spread, and holdings trading above par to assess call risk monthly.

  • The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here FREE.

PFF’s $14 Billion Preferred Stock Strategy Holds 60 Percent Bank Issued Preferreds With Call Provisions That Cap Your Upside

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Income investors who bought the iShares Preferred and Income Securities ETF (NASDAQ:PFF) for its distribution yield near 6.5% are sitting on a structural feature most never modeled: roughly 60% to 70% of PFF’s portfolio comes from U.S. banks and insurers, and almost all carry call provisions. PFF works fine when rates rise. The problem surfaces when rates fall, banks refinance, and your high coupon paper gets redeemed at par before you capture any price appreciation.

What PFF Is Built To Do

PFF runs about $14 billion in assets against an expense ratio of 0.46%. The fund holds hundreds of preferred securities, which are hybrids: fixed coupon like a bond, perpetual or very long dated like equity, and junior to senior debt in the capital stack. Retirees and income allocators use PFF because the yield is roughly double a 10 year Treasury, which currently sits near 4.5%.

That yield is the entire reason to own this fund. PFF shares trade near $31, down 18% over five years and 20% over ten. Owners are paid to wait, not paid to grow.

The Asymmetry Hiding In The Call Schedule

Almost every preferred in PFF can be called at par, typically $25, beginning five years after issuance. When a bank like JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM | JPM Price Prediction) or Bank of America issues new preferreds at a lower coupon, it pulls the old paper. Holders get $25 back regardless of where the security was trading.

That cap matters because strong banks are the most likely callers. JPMorgan ended Q1 2026 with strong capital levels and produced robust quarterly earnings, with ample capacity to refinance expensive legacy preferreds. Bank of America similarly posted strong earnings and capital ratios. Goldman Sachs Bank USA announced it will redeem $2.65 billion of 5.414% fixed/floating notes plus $850 million of floaters at par on May 21, 2026. That is exactly the mechanic that caps PFF holders.

Consider a retiree with $200,000 in PFF earning 6.5%. If the 10 year drifts back toward 3.5% and issuers call their 7% paper, PFF must reinvest proceeds into newer securities yielding closer to 5%. The headline yield drops, the NAV does not rally to compensate, and the realized five year return ends up well below what the prospectus yield implied at purchase.

Concentration In One Sector

With 60% to 70% of the fund tied to financials, a regional banking event similar to March 2023 hits PFF disproportionately. The Invesco KBW Bank ETF is up 15% over the last year, but down 3.7% in the past week alone. Preferreds sit junior to senior debt, so credit stress flows through faster than most holders expect.

The Indicators That Matter

Three things are worth tracking monthly:

  1. The 10 year Treasury yield, the closest proxy for preferred refinancing economics. The 10 year is currently 4.5%, near the 96th percentile of its trailing 12 months. Any sustained move below 4% raises call probability sharply.
  2. The 10Y minus 2Y spread, currently 0.50% and below its 12 month average of 0.6%. A flattening curve pressures bank funding economics.
  3. The share of PFF holdings trading above $25 par on the iShares fund page. The bigger that bucket, the more upside is already capped.

Lower Call Sensitivity Alternatives

If call risk is the binding concern, the Invesco Variable Rate Preferred ETF is the closest swap. Floating coupons reset higher when rates rise and reduce the issuer’s incentive to call. The Invesco Preferred ETF is a similar fixed coupon product to PFF, while the Invesco Financial Preferred ETF takes the bank concentration even further. The variable rate option gives up some yield in low rate environments; the standard Invesco preferred product carries comparable call exposure.

Where That Leaves PFF Holders

PFF still delivers what it promises: a high distribution yield from a diversified slate of preferreds. The honest framing is that the headline yield overstates the long term realized yield in a falling rate world, because calls quietly skim the best paper out of the portfolio. Holders comfortable with that tradeoff have no reason to act. Holders who assumed the 6.5% would compound for a decade should revisit the model.

Photo of Marc Guberti
About the Author Marc Guberti →

Marc Guberti is a personal finance writer who has written for US News & World Report, Business Insider, Newsweek and other publications. He also hosts the Breakthrough Success Podcast which teaches listeners how to use content marketing to grow their businesses.

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