The covered call ETF that came out on top was the NEOS S&P 500 High Income ETF for three reasons: they had full exposure to the holdings inside of the S&P 500, wrote out-of-the-money covered calls, and used Section 1256 contracts for enhanced tax-efficiency.
I share these figures because the team that built SPYI — and all of the category leading performance that came with it — has used the same techniques and strategy to build the NEOS Nasdaq-100 High Income ETF (NASDAQ:QQQI).
What Is QQQI?
The NEOS Nasdaq-100 High Income ETF is an ETF that aims to offer high monthly income in a tax-efficient manner and upside potential when the Nasdaq-100 Index (QQQ) rises.
Let’s break that down simply — as we all know, an ETF is a basket of stocks.
The Nasdaq-100 Index delivered +54.9% returns for its investors in 2023, the best year since 1999. Again, this was largely due to the AI craze we saw by companies like Microsoft, Nvidia, and others — but incredibly impressive nonetheless.
So, what's the difference between QQQ and QQQI?
A single letter, I.
And that letter stands for income.
Think about it like this — a 55% return in an investment is awesome. However, to realize that return in your bank account, you’ll need to sell shares of stock. Considering the trailing twelve month dividend yield of the Nasdaq-100 Index is 0.52%, 99.48% of that return was in the form of share price appreciation — not cash dividends paid to you.
But what if there was an ETF that aimed to offer exposure to the Nasdaq-100 Index while also optimizing for tax-efficient income for their shareholders?
Enter QQQI.
The NEOS team has successfully done this with their S&P 500 Index equivalent ETF, SPYI — paying a 12.14% annual distribution yield (as of 3/15/24) to investors while also allowing their share price to trend higher over time. Again, SPYI delivered a total return of 18.1% in 2023 — with 12% of that being paid out as monthly income to their shareholders.
I’m a shareholder in and receive monthly income from SPYI.
Now the team is introducing QQQI — a way for income-focused investors to have exposure to the Nasdaq-100, in a tax-efficient manner.
How Does QQQI Work?
Let’s start by understanding how the normal QQQ ETF works — by investing into the same stocks that represent the Nasdaq-100 Index, the QQQ ETF experiences the same return as the Nasdaq-100 Index.
Simple enough, right? Have the same stuff, experience the same returns. I mean, this is precisely how every index-focused ETF works.
So, what does QQQI do?
They hold the exact same stocks in the exact same weightings as the Nasdaq-100 Index, as shown below. Therefore it should perform similarly to the Nasdaq-100 Index, but why not exactly the same...?
This article is from an unpaid external contributor. It does not represent Benzinga's reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.
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