NEW YORK, July 17, 2026, 11:10 (EDT)
The Global X Nasdaq 100 Covered Call ETF NASDAQ:QYLD had a 0.90-point reported yield edge in March. Its return gap ran the other way. JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF NASDAQ:JEPQ led three-year annualized performance by 6.24 points.
That mismatch is the sharper investor test. A slightly richer payout coincided with much weaker wealth growth. The data put fund design and retained upside at the center.
The comparison uses each sponsor’s March 31 payout measure. QYLD reported a 12.06% trailing distribution. JEPQ reported an 11.16% rolling dividend yield.
| Fund | Reported payout rate | Three-year annualized NAV return | Expense ratio | $10,000 after three years |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QYLD | 12.06% | 12.90% | 0.60% | $14,391 |
| JEPQ | 11.16% | 19.14% | 0.35% | $16,911 |
Both measures are dated March 31, 2026. Their definitions differ.
Reporter calculation using published annualized NAV returns, with distributions reinvested and taxes excluded.
The yield edge was 0.90 point. JEPQ’s annualized return was 6.24 points higher. Its fee was also 25 basis points lower.
A $10,000 investment compounded at those rates ended about $2,520 higher in JEPQ. The comparison is historical, not causal. Still, QYLD’s extra payout was small beside the growth gap.
Current disclosures make the payout source clearer. QYLD’s 12.28% trailing distribution stood beside a 0.03% SEC yield Thursday. The spread was 12.25 points.
Global X includes income, capital gains and return of capital in the trailing figure. It estimates that some of the payout is return of capital. The sponsor says its distribution rate “does not represent total return.” Global X ETFs
Global X S&P 500 Covered Call ETF (NYSEARCA:XYLD) showed the same split. Its trailing distribution was 10.76%, against a 0.54% SEC yield.
The three recent commentaries reached different portfolio conclusions. Two argued that QYLD and XYLD surrender too much upside. A third favored gradual buying and stressed NAV stability.
Wall Street was open Friday as chip shares extended their slide. In late-morning trading, QYLD was $17.76, down 1.5%. JEPQ was $58.55, down 1.2%. SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust NYSEARCA:SPY fell 0.6% to $745.93. XYLD slipped 0.2% to $41.20.
The structures explain part of the difference. QYLD owns Nasdaq-100 stocks and writes calls on the index. JEPQ combines active stock selection with options and equity-linked notes.
Longer S&P data reinforce the opportunity cost. XYLD returned 8.36% annually over ten years through June. SPY returned 15.35%.
Compounded from $10,000, those rates produce about $22,320 and $41,704. The gap is nearly $19,400 before taxes. It is historical arithmetic, not a forecast.
Covered calls still have favorable periods. During the May-June roll, QYLD returned 4.65%. The Nasdaq-100 gained 4.48% after QYLD collected a 2.93% premium.
Barry Martin, a Shelton Capital portfolio manager, framed that benefit during 2025’s volatility. “This year, with the increased volatility, it is especially a good market to sell calls in,” he told Reuters. Reuters
Risks remain. Full call coverage caps rallies and offers only a limited loss cushion. JEPQ’s notes add liquidity and counterparty risks. Monthly payouts can fall.
For income investors, the useful comparison is cash paid against capital retained. QYLD’s headline edge was small. The return gap was much larger.