The NEOS S&P 500 High Income ETF (BATS:SPYI) crossed roughly $10 billion in assets under management in June. That makes it one of the largest derivative-income vehicles in the US and forces a real question for anyone using the JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSEARCA:JEPI) as their monthly paycheck. At a share price around $53, SPYI’s recent monthly checks annualize to roughly 12%, a full step above JEPI’s high single digits. The comparison that matters is which of these two holds up when markets sour.
Both funds sell equity volatility to generate income, but the plumbing is different. JEPI owns a defensive, low-beta basket of S&P 500 names and layers on equity-linked notes that replicate a covered-call overlay. Its top holdings are each near 1.5-1.7% of total holdings, a deliberately dampened portfolio meant to bleed less in a drawdown.
SPYI takes the other route. It holds the S&P 500 more directly and writes SPX index options against it, which qualify for Section 1256 tax treatment (60% long-term, 40% short-term, regardless of holding period) and allow the fund to structure much of the distribution as a return of capital. That deferred-tax wrapper is a genuine edge for taxable accounts, and it is the piece most JEPI holders overlook.
Does the Yield Actually Show Up?
The distribution record is where the marketing meets the ledger. SPYI paid $0.5309 in January, $0.5219 in February, $0.5104 in March, $0.5247 in April, $0.5353 in May, and $0.531 in June, a tight band that lets a retiree budget without spreadsheet gymnastics. JEPI, by contrast, ran $0.34443 in February, $0.35134 in March, $0.4205 in April, $0.44761 in May, then back down to $0.38921 in June and $0.38716 in July. Same monthly cadence, very different smoothness.
Total return tells a similar story. SPYI is up 8% year to date and 19% over the trailing year, while JEPI has returned 3% YTD and 8% over the past year. Over five years, SPYI has produced 73%, compared with JEPI’s 43%. The NAV has held its shape even as the yield ran high, sidestepping the failure mode covered-call funds like QYLD are known for.
The Tradeoffs Neither Prospectus Advertises
- Fee gap. JEPI charges 0.35%, compared with SPYI’s 0.68%. An expense ratio nearly double is a real headwind, though SPYI’s tax structure has arguably offset it for taxable holders.
- Upside cap. Both funds sell calls, so both give up the fat right tail. In a face-ripping rally, you will underperform the index. If you cannot live with that, neither fund is a core holding.
- Drawdown shape matters. JEPI’s defensive equity book should cushion a fast crash better than SPYI’s full-index exposure. SPYI tends to hold up better in grinding, sideways markets where the option premium keeps rolling in, and the NAV stays intact.
The Verdict
For a taxable retiree building a monthly-income sleeve of 5% to 15% of the portfolio, SPYI appears to be the stronger core candidate today. The distribution is fatter and steadier, the Section 1256 and return-of-capital treatment defers real dollars in tax, and the NAV has not bled the way skeptics predicted.
JEPI still earns a place for investors in tax-advantaged accounts who prioritize downside cushioning over headline yield and want the comfort of JPMorgan’s institutional overlay. For income investors focused on preserving purchasing power through volatile stretches, SPYI is the fund doing more of the work today.
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