Want $9,000 in Annual Passive Income? Invest $100,000 Into These 3 Monthly Paying Funds

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By Ian Cooper Published

Quick Read

  • Blended, the three sleeves produce roughly $9,000 to $10,300 annually on $100,000, with supplementals from MAIN cushioning when option premiums compress in quiet markets.

  • Put the portfolio inside an IRA if you have room. Ordinary-income tax treatment eats 20% to 30% of cash flow in a taxable account, the single most expensive mistake with monthly-payer portfolios.

  • If you're focused on picking the right stocks and ETFs you may be missing the bigger picture: retirement income. That is exactly what The Definitive Guide to Retirement Income was created to solve, and it's free today. Read more here
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Want $9,000 in Annual Passive Income? Invest $100,000 Into These 3 Monthly Paying Funds

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A retiree with $100,000 in a brokerage account wants a predictable monthly check covering recurring bills. The target is $750 a month, or $9,000 a year, a 9% blended yield. That exceeds what an S&P 500 index fund or bond ladder pays today. So the income must come from covered-call ETFs and a business development company.

This scenario appears constantly on retirement forums. A recent r/Dividends thread asked how to turn a six-figure rollover into rent and grocery money without selling shares monthly. The answer is straightforward: a small set of monthly-paying funds chosen with a clear understanding of the tradeoffs.

The Setup at a Glance

  • Capital: $100,000, split evenly into three sleeves of about $33,333
  • Income target: $750/month ($9,000/year)
  • Required blended yield: 9%
  • Cadence: All three holdings pay monthly, with one adding quarterly supplementals

Why the Yield Comes From Options Income and Private Credit

To clear 9%, you sacrifice some upside. Covered-call ETFs cap equity gains for option premiums, and BDCs lend to private companies at floating rates that compress when the Fed cuts. A 9% distribution on $100,000 produces $9,000 in cash, but if the underlying NAV drifts down 2% annually, the real return approaches 7%. That remains meaningful supplemental income for a retiree whose principal is not earmarked for heirs.

Account location matters more than most realize. Covered-call premiums and BDC dividends are taxed largely as ordinary income, not qualified dividends. Holding these inside an IRA shelters the drag. In a taxable account, a retiree in the 12% bracket keeps most of it; one in the 24% bracket loses real ground.

The Three Sleeves

  1. NEOS S&P 500 High Income ETF (NYSEARCA: SPYI) sells call options on the S&P 500 to generate monthly cash. Recent payouts have run $0.51 to $0.53 per share on a $54 share price, annualizing near 11.5%. The fund holds nearly $6.9 billion in assets and charges 0.68%. SPYI delivered a 23% total return over the past year, so the capped-upside critique has not materialized recently.
  2. JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSEARCA: JEPI) uses equity-linked notes against a low-volatility stock basket and distributes around 8% monthly. The 0.35% expense ratio is the cheapest sleeve, and the lower-beta basket dampens drawdowns when SPYI’s options book gets whipsawed.
  3. Main Street Capital (NYSE: MAIN | MAIN Price Prediction) anchors private credit. The BDC pays $0.26 monthly plus a $0.30 quarterly supplemental, now in its nineteenth consecutive quarter as a top-up, stacking to $4.32 annually, or roughly 8.4% on a $51 share price. Coverage looks healthy: Q1 distributable net investment income was $1.00 per share against $0.82 paid, NAV rose to $33.46, and insiders bought across multiple coordinated windows between March and May.

Blended, the three sleeves produce roughly $9,000 to $10,300 annually on $100,000, with supplementals from MAIN cushioning when option premiums compress in quiet markets.

What to Do With This

Put the portfolio inside an IRA if you have room. Ordinary-income tax treatment eats 20% to 30% of cash flow in a taxable account, the single most expensive mistake with monthly-payer portfolios.

Treat distributions as variables. SPYI’s payout has swung from $0.46 to $0.55 in the last two years, so build a one-month cash buffer rather than auto-paying bills the day a distribution lands.

Do not chase higher yields by concentrating in any single fund. Diversification across S&P call writing, low-volatility equity income, and private credit keeps a bad quarter in one strategy from disrupting the monthly check.

Photo of Ian Cooper
About the Author Ian Cooper →

Ian Cooper is a veteran market analyst and investment strategist with more than 20 years of experience covering stocks, commodities, and macro trends. Since 1999, he has helped investors identify market opportunities using a blend of technical analysis, fundamental research, and market sentiment.

He is the creator of the ADD News Flow Strategy, which focuses on trading market reactions to major news events and investor psychology. Cooper was also among the analysts who warned about the 2008 financial crisis and major financial institution collapses ahead of the broader market.

Before joining 247 Wall St., Cooper wrote extensively for InvestorPlace and other financial publications, covering market trends, trading strategies, and investment opportunities.

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