The pitch for covered-call ETFs is the same everywhere. Trade some upside for a fat monthly check. The reality, as anyone holding JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSEARCA:JEPI) through 2026 can tell you, is that not all covered-call funds behave the same when the market runs.
JEPI, Goldman Sachs S&P 500 Premium Income ETF (NASDAQ:GPIX), and ProShares S&P 500 High Income ETF (BATS:ISPY) all sell you S&P 500 exposure with an options-income overlay, yet their year-to-date total returns are separated by a canyon. The mechanics explain why.
Three different return engines wearing the same jacket
JEPI does not directly write index calls. It builds a lower-volatility sleeve of large-cap stocks targeting roughly 80% of S&P beta, and layers on equity-linked notes that synthesize the premium of an S&P 500 call-write. You are buying JPMorgan’s stock picks plus a bank counterparty’s derivative wrapper, not an index option.
GPIX is more literal. Goldman holds a portfolio designed to track the S&P 500 and actively sells short-dated calls on a dynamically chosen 25% to 75% of the notional, dialing coverage up when premiums are rich and down when they are stingy. Net expense ratio 0.29%, distribution around 8.5% annualized, roughly $4.3 to $4.7 billion in AUM.
ISPY is the weirdest and most interesting. Rather than writing options monthly, it uses swap agreements to replicate an index that sells one-day-to-expiration S&P 500 calls every single trading day. Daily premiums are smaller than monthly premiums, but they are collected 250-ish times a year instead of twelve. ProShares also changed the distribution policy on January 29, 2026 to include a minimum-yield provision, a genuinely underdiscussed development for anyone modeling forward income.
What actually happened in 2026
Through July 1, SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:SPY) was up roughly 9% year-to-date. GPIX kept pace on total return at nearly 10%, which is remarkable for a fund also handing out roughly 8.5% in annualized distributions. ISPY delivered about 8%, close behind. JEPI returned about 2%.
That gap is not a fluke. JEPI’s defensive stock sleeve deliberately underweights the AI and mega-cap tech names that drove most of the index’s gains, so when NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA | NVDA Price Prediction) and the hyperscalers rip, JEPI watches from the porch. Over one year the pattern holds. SPY up about 21%, GPIX 21%, ISPY 19%, JEPI 7%. JEPI’s July 2026 distribution came in at $0.38716, still on schedule, still monthly, still real income.
The frustration for retail is about total return leaving town while the checks keep arriving.
Reddit sentiment on JEPI has stayed bullish (scores in the 62 to 72 range through May 2026). Dividend investors accept the trade. Growth-adjacent investors do not.
The tradeoffs nobody puts on the fact sheet
- Structure risk differs. JEPI’s ELNs introduce a bank counterparty into your income stream. ISPY’s swaps do the same. GPIX writes actual listed options, which is cleanest but leaves the manager on the hook to time coverage well.
- Tax location matters. Distributions from all three are largely ordinary income, making an IRA or 401(k) the natural home. Holding these in a taxable brokerage account is a choice most spreadsheets punish.
- Coverage cadence changes the payoff. Daily 0DTE writing (ISPY) caps upside every day but harvests more volatility events. Dynamic monthly writing (GPIX) participates more in trends. ELN-based synthetic (JEPI) inherits whatever the underwriter negotiated.
Who fits where
GPIX is the closest thing to a free-lunch story in this trio. It captured index-like total return alongside high monthly income, and its 0.29% expense ratio undercuts JEPI’s 0.35%. That does not make it a permanent winner. Its 3-year record is short and includes only bull-tilted tape.
ISPY makes sense for investors who specifically want daily premium harvesting and are comfortable with a swap wrapper and a $1.25 to $1.3 billion AUM fund. The minimum-yield policy makes forward income more predictable.
JEPI is a defensive income vehicle. It will lag in AI-led rallies and cushion in drawdowns. Retirees who wanted a lower-volatility monthly paycheck got exactly what was advertised. Investors who assumed “S&P 500 plus income” meant S&P 500 returns plus income read the ticker, not the prospectus.
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