Preferred Shares Number
Count of Authorized, Issued, and Outstanding Preferred Shares
Preferred Shares Number refers to the quantity of preferred shares that a company has authorized, issued, and/or has outstanding at a given date. These figures disclose the size and structure of the preferred equity class, which carries priority over common shares for dividends and liquidation but usually limited voting rights. Disclosure helps assess potential claims on assets and earnings ahead of common shareholders.
The Three Key Counts
- Authorized Preferred Shares: Maximum number the charter permits the company to issue (requires shareholder approval to increase).
- Issued Preferred Shares: Total preferred shares actually distributed (includes any repurchased as treasury).
- Outstanding Preferred Shares: Issued minus treasury preferred shares held by the company.
Treasury preferred shares are rare, so issued and outstanding are often equal.
Multiple series (e.g., Series A, Series B) may each have separate authorized/issued counts.
Where to Find the Numbers
Typically disclosed as:
- Parenthetical on balance sheet: 'Preferred stock, $X par value, Y million shares authorized, Z million issued and outstanding'
- Detailed table in equity footnotes by series
- Statement of shareholders' equity movements
SEC filings (10-K/10-Q) provide full breakdown.
Why the Numbers Matter
- Indicates size of senior claim on earnings (fixed dividends)
- Shows potential liquidation preference ahead of common
- Authorized vs. issued gap reveals room for future preferred issuance
- Convertible preferred numbers signal potential common dilution
- Redeemable preferred counts affect refinancing risk
Large outstanding preferred can constrain common dividend growth.
Common Variations
- Multiple series with different dividends, conversion, or redemption terms
- Convertible preferred (common in private/venture financing)
- Mandatorily redeemable (sometimes classified outside equity)
- Cumulative vs. non-cumulative dividend features
Analytical Use
Investors monitor preferred shares number to:
- Calculate preferred dividend burden on earnings
- Assess residual value for common equity in liquidation scenarios
- Evaluate dilution risk from convertible preferred
- Compare capital structure vs. peers
Significant unissued authorized preferred can be used for anti-takeover defenses.
Key Takeaways
Preferred Shares Number discloses authorized, issued, and outstanding counts of preferred equity.
Senior to common for dividends and assets; details in balance sheet/footnotes.
Authorized > Issued โฅ Outstanding; gap shows issuance capacity.
Multiple series commonโreview terms for dividend, conversion, redemption rights.
Impacts common shareholder claims on earnings and liquidation proceeds.
Essential for understanding capital structure priority and potential dilution.
Preferred Shares Number
Count of Authorized, Issued, and Outstanding Preferred Shares
Preferred Shares Number refers to the quantity of preferred shares that a company has authorized, issued, and/or has outstanding at a given date. These figures disclose the size and structure of the preferred equity class, which carries priority over common shares for dividends and liquidation but usually limited voting rights. Disclosure helps assess potential claims on assets and earnings ahead of common shareholders.
Table of Contents
The Three Key Counts
- Authorized Preferred Shares: Maximum number the charter permits the company to issue (requires shareholder approval to increase).
- Issued Preferred Shares: Total preferred shares actually distributed (includes any repurchased as treasury).
- Outstanding Preferred Shares: Issued minus treasury preferred shares held by the company.
Treasury preferred shares are rare, so issued and outstanding are often equal.
Multiple series (e.g., Series A, Series B) may each have separate authorized/issued counts.
Where to Find the Numbers
Typically disclosed as:
- Parenthetical on balance sheet: 'Preferred stock, $X par value, Y million shares authorized, Z million issued and outstanding'
- Detailed table in equity footnotes by series
- Statement of shareholders' equity movements
SEC filings (10-K/10-Q) provide full breakdown.
Why the Numbers Matter
- Indicates size of senior claim on earnings (fixed dividends)
- Shows potential liquidation preference ahead of common
- Authorized vs. issued gap reveals room for future preferred issuance
- Convertible preferred numbers signal potential common dilution
- Redeemable preferred counts affect refinancing risk
Large outstanding preferred can constrain common dividend growth.
Common Variations
- Multiple series with different dividends, conversion, or redemption terms
- Convertible preferred (common in private/venture financing)
- Mandatorily redeemable (sometimes classified outside equity)
- Cumulative vs. non-cumulative dividend features
Analytical Use
Investors monitor preferred shares number to:
- Calculate preferred dividend burden on earnings
- Assess residual value for common equity in liquidation scenarios
- Evaluate dilution risk from convertible preferred
- Compare capital structure vs. peers
Significant unissued authorized preferred can be used for anti-takeover defenses.
Key Takeaways
Preferred Shares Number discloses authorized, issued, and outstanding counts of preferred equity.
Senior to common for dividends and assets; details in balance sheet/footnotes.
Authorized > Issued โฅ Outstanding; gap shows issuance capacity.
Multiple series commonโreview terms for dividend, conversion, redemption rights.
Impacts common shareholder claims on earnings and liquidation proceeds.
Essential for understanding capital structure priority and potential dilution.
Related Terms
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