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The JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (JEPI) fund rose and is nearing at its all-time high. JEPI was trading at $57.2, a few ...
JEPI’s rigid options strategy limits upside capture and exposes investors to downside. See why this ETF underperforms the S&P ...
JEPI's structure cushions downside risk and maintains stable yields, appealing to income-oriented investors. Find out why the ...
JEPI may be one of the most popular ETFs on the market, but that doesn’t make it bulletproof. With falling yields, rising ...
JEPI has soared by 16% from its lowest point in April, while the JEPQ ETF has jumped by nearly 27%. This article explains why this week could be notable for these boomer candyETFs. AI demand gaining ...
Exchange-traded funds have become a popular investment option for investors seeking to establish a passive income strategy. ETFs have low risk, offer regular distributions, and are highly diversified.
JEPI’s 0.35% expense ratio is competitive for an active ETF. It’s not a direct cash grab and for a $10,000 stake yielding 7.4% (or $740), that means just $26 less, or 7.1% net.
JEPI is JPMorgan’s well-known and much-discussed covered-call ETF that yields about 10.5% and pays a monthly dividend that has taken the market by storm since its 2020 launch.
JEPI lucked out because it launched right after the COVID bear market and missed those losses. It gained yet underperformed in 2021, but 2022 was where it really shined.
JEPI, on average, writes options that are 2% out-of-the-money. That allows for a little share price appreciation, but not much (the underlying index rising in value to at-the-money during the ...
To complement JEPI, I’ve introduced the NEOS S&P 500 High Income ETF to my portfolio — a very similar ETF that has been able to capture over 97% of the S&P 500’s total return year-to-date ...
Investors who like JEPI’s style now have another high-yield competitor to consider — the NEOS S&P 500 High Income ETF (BATS:SPYI), which also pays on a monthly basis and yields 10.7%.