Owning stocks while collecting a fat monthly income sounds like financial alchemy. Yet, that’s the premise behind the market’s latest darling – covered call ETFs.
Two popular funds, like JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSE:JEPI) and Global X NASDAQ 100 Covered Call ETF (NASDAQ:QYLD) have swelled to over $53 billion in assets as investors chase yields that can look bond-like or better, but arrive with the gloss of equity exposure.
The problem is timing. If buyers use these products while also betting that the bull market has further to run, it is a contradiction, since these funds trade away part of tomorrow’s upside for cash today.
Capping the Growth
A covered call fund holds equities, then sells call options against them. The premium collected becomes the income that gets distributed to shareholders. In return, the fund hands the option buyer the right to the gains above a set strike price.
In flat or choppy markets, a covered call might be a smart way to harvest yield from a stagnant portfolio. Yet, in a rally it becomes a self-inflicted wound. When an underlying index decisively moves higher, the upside is clipped. Shareholders pocket the distribution but surrender a large share of capital appreciation.
For that reason, tech-heavy covered call funds can dramatically lag their benchmarks during strong advances. A fund writing calls on Nasdaq-100 exposure may advertise a double-digit distribution yield, yet still trail the Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ) by a wide margin when megacap technology stocks are ripping higher.
The gap doesn’t always feel like a fee because it isn’t deducted from the expense ratio. But economically, it can behave like one – an invisible cost paid in foregone gains.
These costs add up because total return, not yield, is what builds wealth. A 10% distribution is not a 10% profit if the fund’s price stagnates, declines, or fails to keep pace with the market. Investors who reinvest those payouts may still compound, but they are compounding from a strategy that deliberately sells off the most explosive part of equity returns.
Taxation and Compounding
The income these funds provide often derives from option premiums, and much of it is taxed less favorably than investors assume. According to SoFi, funds that write options on individual equities typically generate distributions taxed at ordinary income rates, which may reach up to 37% for higher earners — whereas funds using broad-based index options may qualify for more favorable Section 1256 treatment.
That situation rewrites the arithmetic. A yield that looks irresistible on screen can shrink dramatically once the IRS is paid. And because the tax hits every month or quarter, it repeatedly interrupts compounding — instead of letting gains ride untaxed inside an index fund until you sell, you are forced to recognize income the whole way up.
None of this makes covered call ETFs bad products. They can serve a purpose for investors who need current cash flow, want lower volatility, or expect sideways markets.
But they are poor substitutes for growth funds in a bull market. The trap is that investors might think they can collect high income while participating in a rally. In reality, free lunches in any market are exceptionally rare.
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