IQQQ’s daily-resetting calls returned 24% over the trailing year, beating QYLD’s 21% while capturing more of QQQ’s 27% gain.
Long-term compounders should skip the overlay entirely, given that QQQ’s 97% five-year return outpaces anything a covered-call structure can deliver in a sustained bull run.
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Most covered-call ETFs sell the same trade in different packaging. You get monthly income; you give up upside when the market runs. Global X NASDAQ 100 Covered Call ETF (NASDAQ:QYLD) holders learned this the expensive way over the last decade.
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ProShares Nasdaq-100 High Income ETF (NASDAQ:IQQQ) softens that bargain with financial engineering that matters. Instead of writing calls that expire monthly, IQQQ writes calls that reset daily, letting the fund step back into the market’s upside far more frequently than its slower cousins. The question is whether IQQQ earns its keep or repackages the same tradeoff at a higher expense ratio.
The Daily-Reset Machinery
IQQQ has Nasdaq-100 exposure and layers a covered call overlay on top. The overlay is implemented through total return swap agreements rather than by trading options contracts directly, a structural choice with real tax consequences. Distributions are largely treated as a return of capital, meaning holders often receive more favorable tax treatment than ordinary dividend income.
The mechanical trick is timing. A traditional buy-write fund like QYLD writes an at-the-money call once a month and hopes the index does not run away before expiration. If the Nasdaq rips 8% in three weeks, the fund has already sold its upside. IQQQ writes short-dated (essentially 0DTE, out-of-the-money) calls that reset daily, so a big up-day only caps that single day’s gain before the fund re-participates the next morning. In choppy or grinding-higher markets, that difference compounds.
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Does It Actually Preserve Upside?
Over the trailing year, Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ) returned 26%. IQQQ returned 23%. QYLD returned 20%. IQQQ captured most of the Nasdaq’s climb while writing calls daily and beat the traditional covered-call approach by roughly three percentage points. On this stretch, the daily-reset thesis worked.
The income side held up too. IQQQ paid $2.559396 per share in trailing-twelve-month distributions and projects to an annualized $5.51004. Payments are monthly and lumpy, ranging from $0.027464 in August 2025 to $1.551822 in May 2025, which is what a strategy pegged to option premium capture looks like.
What You Are Actually Buying
Beneath the overlay sits a portfolio that is north of 60% technology, anchored by mega-cap stocks. This is concentrated megacap tech with an option layer bolted on, not diversified income by any stretch. The fee for that engineering is roughly 0.55%, meaningfully above plain QQQ but in line with active covered-call peers.
The tradeoffs are real. In a parabolic melt-up, daily calls still cap each day’s gain, and enough capped days in a row will leave you well behind QQQ. Cain Lee at Seeking Alpha rated the fund a Hold, noting “limited downside protection and underperformance” compared to QQQ in volatile markets. He is right that call premiums cushion rather than hedge. In a real drawdown, IQQQ will fall with the Nasdaq minus whatever premium it collected on the way down.
Who It Fits
IQQQ is one of the more thoughtful answers to the covered-call dilemma, but it is still an answer, not an escape. If you are an income-focused investor who wants Nasdaq-100 exposure, understands the swap structure, accepts the 0.55% fee, and specifically wants more upside participation than QYLD has offered, IQQQ earns a look as a 5% to 10% income sleeve. Retirees who need monthly checks and are willing to trade a couple points of annual return for them will find the design coherent.
Anyone whose primary goal is long-term compounding should keep buying QQQ and skip the overlay. Over the last five years, QQQ returned 95%, and no covered-call structure will keep up with that in a sustained bull market. The daily reset narrows the gap. It does not close it.
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