Investor Appetite Buoys Preferreds Amid Macro and Fiscal Shifts

Key takeaways

  • The ICE BofA Fixed Rate Preferred Index returned 1.45% in July, bringing YTD gains to 2.47%. The $25 par ICE BofA Core Plus Fixed Rate Preferred Securities Index rebounded with a 2.77% return, while ETF inflows exceeded $150 million.
  • Q2 bank results showed stable net interest income (NII), modest loan growth and healthy credit quality. Several banks raised full-year NII guidance, and capital positions remain robust.
  • July payrolls rose by just 73,000, with large downward revisions to prior months. The unemployment rate ticked up to 4.2%, and market pricing now reflects a likely rate cut at the September 17 FOMC meeting.
  • The Fed is fast-tracking Basel Endgame and SLR reforms, supporting capital flexibility and M&A. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) codifies student loan reforms, but tariff income may offset much of the fiscal impulse from the $3.4 trillion bill.

Recap

Preferred securities continued to deliver solid performance in July, with the ICE BofA Fixed Rate Preferred Index up 1.45% for the month and 2.47% year-to-date. The $25 par ICE BofA Core Plus Fixed Rate Preferred Securities Index reversed months of underperformance, gaining 2.77%, while the $1,000 par ICE BofA US Investment Grade Institutional Capital Securities Index returned 0.42%. Investor demand remains robust, as evidenced by over $150 million in ETF inflows for July— including a $100 million rebound in the final week.

On the supply side, technicals remain favorable. Year-to-date bank preferred issuance has reached $27.5 billion, a 27% increase over the same period last year. Redemptions and calls totaled $18.7 billion, resulting in positive net issuance of $8.8 billion. July’s new issue calendar was active:

  • One money-center bank priced $2.7 billion of Ba1/BB $1,000 par perpetual non-call 5 preferreds at 6.875% (reset CMT5 +2.89%).
  • A second money-center bank issued $2.5 billion of Baa2/ BBB- $1,000 par perpetual non-call 5 preferreds at 6.25% (reset CMT5 +2.351%).
  • A regional bank brought $400 million of Baa3/BB+ $25 par perpetual non-call 5 preferreds at 6.50% (reset CMT5 +2.629%).

These deals were well absorbed by the market, reflecting both the diversity of issuers and the ongoing appetite for yield and income.