JPMorgan Equity Premium Income Is a Popular Active ETF for Income Investors

 | Jan 18, 2023 16:40

A little explored aspect of the ETF industry is how retail investors interact with their products on social media sites. Personally, I think aspiring and established ETF managers should keep abreast of these developments to capitalize on investor trends and interests.

A great example is the Reddit forum r/dividends, which hosts a community of over 356,000 income-oriented investors. And one of their most talked-about ETFs throughout the years is the actively managed JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSE:JEPI).

I'm always on the lookout for interesting ETFs to cover, and JEPI is no exception. This ETF employs some fairly unique strategies that make it notable even among its ever-increasing cohort of income-oriented ETFs. Let's break this ETF down and see how it works.

h2 How JEPI Works/h2

JEPI can best be described as a defensive equity ETF with a covered call overlay. As noted earlier, the ETF is actively managed, with the objective of "delivering a significant portion of the returns associated with the S&P 500 Index with less volatility, in addition to monthly income."

On the equity side, this involves a bottom-up fundamental research process that screens large-cap U.S. stocks using a "proprietary risk-adjusted stock rankings" based on their "relative value." This is a fairly "black-box" approach that isn't outlined in detail in JEPI's prospectus.

To generate monthly income, JEPI can invest up to 20% in exchange-linked notes, or ELNs. These are fixed-income products issued by a counterparty that promise a return linked to a reference asset. Specifically, JEPI holds ELNs that provide exposure to out-of-the-money S&P 500 index call options.

Why ELNs? Well, unlike other covered call ETFs, JEPI does not hold all the stocks required to write call options on the S&P 500 itself. Its portfolio is actively managed and unique. Therefore, it must gain exposure via other instruments, in this case an ELN.

h2 JEPI Performance/h2

JEPI is clearly popular. The ETF currently has assets under management (AUM) of over $18 billion, on which it charges a fairly reasonable 0.35% expense ratio. Currently, the ETF has a 12-month dividend yield of 11.29%, which is very high compared to other income-oriented funds.

How has the ETF performed historically? I conducted a backtest of the fund versus the S&P 500 and a balanced 60/40 portfolio of U.S. stocks and bonds to find out. However, do note that because JEPI has an inception date of May 2020, this backtest is too short as to draw meaningful conclusions.