Sunstone's Preferred Stock Trades at 23% Discount With Call Date Four Months Away
SHO's Series I preferred shares are trading around $19.30 against a $25.00 liquidation preference, yielding north of 7.3%... and the company can redeem them at par starting July 16. The math here tells two very different stories depending on which side of the trade you're sitting on.
Sunstone's 5.70% Series I Cumulative Redeemable Preferred (SHO/PI) closed last week around $19.30. Liquidation preference is $25.00. The optional redemption date is July 16, 2026. That's a $5.70 spread on a security the issuer can call at par in four months.
The real number here is the implied yield. At $19.30, you're collecting $1.425 annually on a $19.30 basis... that's roughly 7.4%. Not bad for a lodging REIT preferred with a coverage buffer the company itself pegged at over 9% of FFO. But the discount to par tells you the market doesn't expect a call. And the market is probably right. Sunstone repurchased 9,027 Series I shares in 2025 at an average price of $19.25. Why would you redeem at $25.00 what you can buy back at $19.25? That's a $5.75-per-share difference across nearly 4 million shares outstanding. The math on a full redemption versus open-market repurchase is straightforward: calling the whole series costs roughly $99.7M. Buying it back at current prices costs approximately $77M. That's $22.7M the company keeps in its pocket by not calling.
The board reauthorized a $500M repurchase program in February covering both common and preferred. They filed a mixed shelf the same week. This is a company actively managing its capital stack, not passively waiting for maturity dates. Q4 2025 came in above expectations... $236.97M in revenue against a $223.36M forecast, EPS of $0.02 versus a projected loss. The preferred dividend is well covered. Nobody should be losing sleep over payment risk here. The question isn't whether Sunstone can pay. It's whether Sunstone will call.
I've seen this structure play out at three different REITs. The preferred trades at a persistent discount. The issuer nibbles in the open market. Retail holders sit waiting for a call that economics don't support. Meanwhile, the issuer is effectively retiring capital below book value... which is accretive to common shareholders at the expense of preferred holders who bought at par in 2021 and are now underwater by 23%. The 5.70% coupon looked reasonable when it priced in July 2021. Today, with the 10-year well above where it was at issuance, 5.70% fixed on a lodging REIT preferred doesn't clear the bar for most institutional buyers. That's the discount.
For preferred holders, the calculus is simple but uncomfortable. You're collecting 7.4% current yield on a security that's unlikely to be called and has limited price appreciation catalyst absent a significant rate decline. The dividend is safe (check the coverage). The principal recovery to $25.00 is theoretical. Sunstone has every incentive to keep buying these back at $19 instead of redeeming at $25. If you own this, you own the income stream. Stop waiting for par.
Here's the thing about lodging REIT preferred stock that most operators never think about... it tells you how the capital markets are pricing YOUR asset class. When Sunstone's preferred trades at a 23% discount to par, that's the bond market saying lodging risk requires north of 7% to hold. If you're an owner thinking about refinancing or recapitalizing in 2026, that's your benchmark. Don't walk into a lender's office expecting 2021 pricing. The preferred market is telling you exactly where hotel capital costs sit today. Listen to it.