JEPQ vs QQQI — Dividend & DRIP Comparison
Side-by-side live data and DRIP projection for JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF and NEOS Nasdaq-100 High Income ETF.
- Price
- $61.15
- Forward yield
- 10.24%
- 5Y dividend CAGR
- —
- 5Y price growth
- 4.51%
- Frequency
- monthly
- Price
- $57.22
- Forward yield
- 13.27%
- 5Y dividend CAGR
- —
- 5Y price growth
- —
- Frequency
- monthly
Key metrics
| Metric | JEPQ | QQQI | Δ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Forward yield | 10.24% | 13.27% | +3.03pp QQQI |
| 5Y dividend CAGR | — | — | — |
| 5Y share-price CAGR | 4.51% | — | — |
| Distribution frequency | Monthly | Monthly | — |
| Expense ratio | 0.35% | 0.68% | — |
| Strategy | Nasdaq-100 covered-call equity income, ~100 stocks | Nasdaq-100 with Section 1256 index options, tax-optimized | — |
| Tax treatment | ~80% ordinary | ~80% ordinary | — |
| AUM | $28.0B | $2.6B | — |
| Inception | May 2022 | Jan 2024 | — |
Historical — $10,000 invested 2 years ago
| JEPQ | QQQI | Δ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial shares purchased | 185.9 | 197.9 | — |
| DRIP shares accumulated | +43.5 | +65.3 | +21.8 QQQI |
| End shares | 229.4 | 263.3 | — |
| End share price | $61 | $57 | — |
| End value (with DRIP) | $14,030 | $15,064 | +$1,034 QQQI |
| Total return (no DRIP) | 35.39% | 42.80% | — |
| Total return (with DRIP) | 40.30% | 50.64% | — |
| Total CAGR (with DRIP) | 18.45% | 22.74% | — |
| Cumulative dividends paid | $2,168 | $2,954 | — |
| Yield on cost (today) | 14.37% | 20.00% | — |
Project both into the future
Dividend behavior
How they differ
JEPQ and QQQI both harvest option premium from Nasdaq-100 volatility to generate high monthly income, but they do so through structurally different mechanisms that carry meaningfully different tax consequences. JEPQ, from JPMorgan Asset Management, uses equity-linked notes (ELNs) to synthesize covered-call exposure on the Nasdaq-100. Its forward yield is approximately 10.48%, and distributions are classified as ordinary income. QQQI, from NEOS Investments, writes index options directly under Section 1256 of the tax code. Its forward yield is approximately 13.42%, and Section 1256 contracts receive blended tax treatment — 60% taxed at long-term capital gains rates and 40% at short-term rates — regardless of how long the position is held.
That 60/40 blended rate is QQQI's structural tax advantage in taxable accounts. An investor in a 37% ordinary income bracket pays an effective rate closer to 26–28% on QQQI's distributions, compared to the full marginal rate on JEPQ's. On a $100,000 position generating $13,420 per year versus $10,478, the after-tax gap between them can close meaningfully or invert depending on the investor's bracket. JEPQ, by contrast, is well-suited to tax-deferred accounts — IRAs and 401(k)s — where the ordinary-income classification is irrelevant and the JPMorgan active management process can be evaluated purely on distribution yield and NAV durability.
JEPQ has no measurable five-year dividend growth rate given its shorter history, but its five-year share price growth sits at roughly 3.97%. QQQI launched more recently still and has no established five-year growth metrics in either category. Both funds are subject to the same core dynamic: when Nasdaq-100 implied volatility compresses, option premium falls and distributions shrink; when volatility spikes, premium income rises but the underlying portfolio can fall simultaneously.
JEPQ fits naturally inside a tax-deferred account as a high-yield Nasdaq-income sleeve. QQQI is the more tax-efficient option for a taxable brokerage account where the Section 1256 treatment reduces the drag on net income.
About
Nasdaq-100 covered-call equity income, ~100 stocks
- Issuer
- JPMorgan
- Inception
- May 3, 2022
- AUM
- $28.0B
- Expense ratio
- 0.35%
- Payout
- Monthly
- Strategy
- Option income
Nasdaq-100 with Section 1256 index options, tax-optimized
- Issuer
- NEOS Investments
- Inception
- Jan 30, 2024
- AUM
- $2.6B
- Expense ratio
- 0.68%
- Payout
- Monthly
- Strategy
- Option income