AMZW’s Weekly Payouts Drop 79% as Volatility Collapses; Can Investors Count on Them?

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By Austin Smith Published
AMZW’s Weekly Payouts Drop 79% as Volatility Collapses; Can Investors Count on Them?

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Roundhill’s weekly-pay ETF lineup has built a following among income seekers willing to swap diversification for fat, frequent checks. Roundhill AMZN WeeklyPay ETF (CBOE:AMZW) is the Amazon flavor, and its weekly distributions have ranged from $0.152133 to $0.737091 per share since launch. The question is whether that paycheck holds up when Amazon’s stock cools or volatility compresses further.

How AMZW Manufactures a Weekly Paycheck

AMZW is a single-name, leveraged synthetic product built around one stock. The prospectus states the fund seeks weekly distributions and calendar week returns equal to 1.2 times (120%) the calendar week total return of Amazon common shares, with Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) as the reference asset. It launched June 18, 2025, runs $34.9 million in assets, and charges a 0.99% expense ratio.

The income comes from short-dated options written against the synthetic Amazon exposure. Premiums collected each week are passed through as the distribution. When Amazon is volatile, premiums fatten. When the tape goes quiet, the checks shrink. This is structurally different from a traditional dividend, where a board approves a payout from earnings.

What the Distribution Record Actually Shows

The weekly amounts tell the story. In summer 2025, distributions hit $0.737091 on July 21 and $0.692777 on August 18. Recent weeks have been lighter: $0.152133 on February 23, 2026 and $0.206965 on April 6, 2026. That is the volatility tax. The CBOE Volatility Index is near 17, down 33% from a month earlier, after a March spike to 31. Compressed VIX means compressed premiums, and AMZW holders are feeling it.

The Underlying: Amazon Looks Healthy

The good news for AMZW is that its reference asset is in strong shape. Amazon posted Q1 2026 EPS of $2.78 against a $1.73 consensus, a 61% beat, with revenue of $181.52 billion, up 17% year over year. AWS grew 28%, the fastest in 15 quarters. The balance sheet carries $101.8 billion in cash and interest coverage of 35x.

The wrinkle is capital intensity. Amazon plans roughly $200 billion in 2026 capex, and trailing free cash flow has compressed sharply. That capex cycle is the sort of thing that can drive the stock sideways for stretches, which is fine for AMZW’s premium engine but not for share-price recovery.

Total Return, Not Just the Yield

AMZW shares trade near $44, with a one-year total return of 26%. Amazon itself returned 41% over the same window. Despite the 1.2x leverage, AMZW lagged the underlying by roughly 15 percentage points. That gap is the cost of the income overlay, paid in capped upside, decay, and fees.

How Safe Is the Weekly Check

AMZW will keep paying weekly, so the distribution is structurally durable. Safety, in the sense most dividend investors mean, is another matter. The dollar amount per week is variable by design, has already swung more than 4x between high and low weeks, and trends with Amazon’s realized volatility, not its earnings. With the VIX percentile rank at 42.6 and trending lower, expect the next several distributions to look more like recent quiet weeks than last summer’s peaks.

AMZW makes sense for investors who want concentrated Amazon exposure with cash flow along the way and accept that headline yield numbers extrapolated from peak weeks are misleading. Retirees relying on a stable check, or anyone who would not own a leveraged single-stock product on its own, should think twice. The reference asset is solid; the payout, by construction, is not predictable.

Photo of Austin Smith, PhD, MD, CFA
About the Author Austin Smith, PhD, MD, CFA →

Austin Smith is a financial publisher with over two decades of experience as an investor, analyst, and advisor. He covers stocks, ETFs, Artificial intelligence and personal finance for 24/7 Wall St. Previously, he spent over a decade at The Motley Fool as a senior editor for Fool.com, portfolio advisor for Millionacres, and launched The Ascent to help reader take control of their personal finances.

His work has been featured on Fool.com, NPR, CNBC, USA Today, Yahoo Finance, MSN, AOL, Marketwatch, and many other publications. He is as an advisor to private companies, and co-hosts The AI Investor Podcast with Eric Bleeker. 

When not looking for investment opportunities, he can be found skiing, running, or playing soccer with his children. Learn more about Austin's investment approach here.

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