Quick Read
SPYI delivers an 11.9% distribution yield and 18.9% total return over the past year without missing a single monthly payment or bleeding NAV.
SPYI trailed SPY by roughly 4 percentage points annually, and JEPI offers a more conservative alternative using equity-linked notes instead of direct index calls.
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Income investors who want S&P 500 exposure without giving up monthly cash flow have flocked to the NEOS S&P 500 High Income ETF (CBOE:SPYI), and the fund has rewarded them with a payout that has not missed a month since inception. SPYI has gathered $10 billion in assets behind a covered call strategy that currently throws off a distribution yield north of 11.9%, a figure that looks almost too good next to the 4.50% available on the 10-year Treasury. The question SPYI holders should be asking is whether that income stream is structurally durable or borrowed from future returns.
How the Options Overlay Actually Pays You
SPYI owns the S&P 500 directly and then sells index call options against that exposure, collecting premium that gets distributed to shareholders each month. The fund uses a data-driven approach to selecting strike prices and expirations, and it routes much of the income through Section 1256 contracts, which receive a blended 60/40 long-term and short-term tax treatment. That tax wrinkle is a real edge for taxable accounts, and the 0.68% expense ratio is reasonable for an actively managed options strategy.
The income comes from two places: the small dividend yield on the underlying S&P 500 stocks, and the much larger stream of call premium. Premium size is a direct function of implied volatility, which is why every covered call ETF lives or dies on the VIX.
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The Volatility Backdrop Is Thin, Not Broken
The CBOE Volatility Index sits near 16, in the lower quartile of its 12-month range and well below the 31 peak hit in March. Lower VIX means thinner premiums, which is the first place to look for distribution strain. Yet SPYI’s 2026 monthly payouts have run $0.51 to $0.54, slightly above the 2025 cadence. The manager has held the line by adjusting strike selection and using flexible expirations rather than locking into a rigid weekly schedule.
That said, a sustained VIX collapse below 13 would force a choice between cutting the distribution or selling closer-to-the-money calls that cap upside harder. Holders should treat the current payout as a fair-weather number, not a floor.
