Quick Read
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QDTE’s daily 0DTE Nasdaq-100 strategy pays weekly at a 45% yield, generating over $17,000 more annually than JEPQ on a $50,000 position.
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QDTE’s 0.97% expense ratio and return-of-capital distributions favor tax-advantaged accounts, while JEPQ’s lower cost suits taxable accounts with embedded gains.
For investors wanting Nasdaq-100 exposure paired with a monthly paycheck, JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (NASDAQ:JEPQ) has become the default answer. JEPQ owns large-cap Nasdaq stocks, sells equity-linked notes tied to short-dated call options on the index, and passes the premiums through as monthly distributions. The formula works: JEPQ has delivered a 23.98% total return over the past year, with a dividend yield of 10.01%, at an expense ratio of 0.35%. Those metrics are competitive within the covered-call income category, and JEPQ has scaled accordingly.
Yet the monthly cadence and 10% yield now look modest next to a weekly-pay competitor running a structurally different playbook on the same underlying index.
Where JEPQ’s Design Leaves Yield on the Table
The income engine writes calls roughly one month out. That approach collects a healthy but limited premium and produces its trailing 12-month distribution of $6.26199 per share. Payouts also vary widely by month, from $0.44195 in September 2025 to $0.63658 in July 2026, meaning holders who use distributions to cover bills receive uneven monthly deposits.
Monthly options harvest one volatility cycle every 30 days. Selling shorter-dated options harvests premium more frequently, and time decay accelerates as expiration nears. A fund that writes options that expire the same day they open, then repeats the process four or five times a week, captures a fundamentally larger premium stream.
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QDTE: Weekly Distributions From a 0DTE Engine
The Roundhill Innovation-100 0DTE Covered Call Strategy ETF (CBOE:QDTE) sits on Nasdaq-100 exposure and writes zero-day-to-expiration index calls, rolling positions daily. Its most recent NPORT filing shows derivatives exposure of $717.9 million, or 89.86% of net assets, against total net assets of $798.9 million. The remaining sleeve sits in short-term government obligations and a Roundhill weekly T-bill ETF used as collateral.
The payoff shows in the distribution history. QDTE paid $13.467079 per share over the trailing 12 months against a current price of $29.98, supporting the 44.92% dividend yield Roundhill publishes. Payments arrive weekly, roughly 52 times a year, versus 12 for JEPQ. On a $50,000 position at those trailing rates, QDTE would have distributed roughly $22,400 in income versus about $5,300 for JEPQ.
Total return matters more than headline yield, and QDTE holds up there too. Its one-year total return is 28.51%, ahead of JEPQ’s 23.98%, and year-to-date QDTE is up 13.1% versus JEPQ’s 10.15%.
The Real Tradeoffs
Meaningful costs accompany the richer payout. Its 0.97% expense ratio is nearly triple the 0.35% charged by the other fund, a real drag if the strategy underperforms. The 0DTE approach also caps upside on strong rally days more aggressively than a monthly call program does, so in sustained bull runs, the first fund can trail the Nasdaq-100 in price appreciation while the second participates more. The 52-week range of $26.75 to $39.50 reflects wider NAV volatility.
Tax treatment also differs meaningfully between the two funds. A large portion of QDTE’s weekly payout is often classified as return of capital rather than ordinary income, which defers taxes but also reduces cost basis. JEPQ’s distributions are largely ordinary income taxed at marginal rates. Which structure serves a given holder better depends on the account type and holding period.
Making the Switch Deliberately
The cleanest use case for QDTE is inside a tax-advantaged account, where the weekly income stream compounds without immediate tax friction and the return-of-capital treatment is irrelevant. In a taxable account, JEPQ’s simpler tax mix and lower expense ratio can still make sense, particularly for holders sitting on embedded gains. A partial swap, moving 25% to 50% of a JEPQ position into QDTE inside an IRA, captures the higher payout cadence without abandoning the more conservative monthly program. Readers weighing income cadence more broadly may find our Paycheck Portfolio Method report useful for structuring weekly and monthly streams together.
What Current JEPQ Holders Should Weigh
The first fund remains a competent, low-cost covered-call fund on the Nasdaq-100 and has kept pace with most income peers over the past year. The second offers a materially higher distribution rate and a weekly schedule, at the cost of a higher fee, shorter track record, and more volatile NAV. For holders whose primary goal is to maximize current income from a Nasdaq call-write strategy, the more aggressive tool is the second option. For those prioritizing lower cost and steadier NAV, the first continues to do its job.
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Contact editorial@247wallst.com for any questions or corrections.
