YieldMax DDDD ETF (NYSEARCA:DDDD), launched on March 11, 2026, owns SCHD and writes options on its holdings to double the yield. If you already hold Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEARCA:SCHD), which currently yields 3.39%, DDDD targets roughly double that yield through an actively managed options overlay, putting the distribution target near double that yield annually. But before chasing that income, understand what is actually generating it.
What DDDD Actually Owns
DDDD’s largest equity holding is SCHD itself at 19.04% of net assets, giving it direct exposure to SCHD’s top dividend payers. Two of the most meaningful underlying positions are Verizon Communications (NYSE:VZ | VZ Price Prediction) at 4.49% of SCHD and Altria Group (NYSE:MO) at 4.14%. Both represent some of the highest-yielding positions in the portfolio.
Verizon: Steady Cash, Heavy Debt
Verizon has raised its dividend for over 20 consecutive years. Free cash flow came in at $19.8 billion in FY2024, against operating cash flow of $36.9 billion which provides strong dividend coverage. The annualized dividend of $2.735 annualized dividend compares to TTM EPS of $4.06.
The risk is the balance sheet. Total debt stands at approximately $144 billion, with shareholders equity of $100.575 billion. This is a telecom reality, not an anomaly, but it limits flexibility. Verizon’s 2025 guidance calls for free cash flow of $17.5 billion to $18.5 billion, still comfortably above the dividend obligation.
Altria: Extraordinary Margins, Shrinking Volumes
Altria is a Dividend King with 60 dividend increases in 56 years. The current annualized dividend of $4.16 per share yields approximately 6.16% at the current price. Adjusted EPS came in at $5.42 for the full year.
The smokeable segment operating margin runs near 64%, funding a generous dividend through structural volume declines. CEO Billy Gifford said on the Q4 2025 earnings call: “For the full year, we grew adjusted diluted earnings per share by 4.4% and returned $8 billion to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases combined.” The company targets mid-single digit annual dividend per share growth through 2028. Negative shareholders equity reflects aggressive buybacks, not financial distress.
The DDDD Trade-Off: More Yield, Less Upside
DDDD is a brand-new fund with only $2.32 million in net assets and no operating history. The options overlay, primarily covered call spreads on SCHD constituents, caps upside in exchange for premium income. Distributions may also include return of capital, which can reduce NAV over time. The gross expense ratio is 0.99%, versus SCHD’s 0.06%.
Verizon and Altria have demonstrated dividend durability, but DDDD itself is untested. The doubled yield comes with real costs: capped appreciation, tax inefficiency from short-term gains, and NAV erosion risk if distributions outpace earnings.