Skip to navigationSkip to main contentSkip to right columnADVERTISEMENTAustin SmithMon, June 15, 2026 at 8:10 PM GMT+2 4 min readQuick ReadJEPQ's 10% monthly yield spans 48 straight months of payments, but per-share distributions swing between $0.44 and $0.62 depending on market volatility.JEPQ's capped upside cost shareholders roughly 9 percentage points versus QQQ last year, while sibling fund JEPI's steadier approach returned just 7%.Most JEPQ distributions are taxed as ordinary income rather than qualified dividends, making an IRA or Roth the smarter account for retirees holding the fund.Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.For retirees writing a check to themselves every month, the JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (NASDAQ:JEPQ) is one of the most popular destinations in the ETF universe right now. JEPQ pairs a portfolio of Nasdaq-100 stocks with an options overlay that produces a trailing yield north of 10%, paid monthly, at a net expense ratio of 0.35%. The question is whether that income stream is actually something retirees can plan around, or whether the headline yield masks a payout that swings hard with the market.Ridofranz / Getty Images[company-data ticker="JEPQ"]How JEPQ actually generates its incomeJEPQ runs a two-engine income strategy. The first engine is an actively managed, lower-volatility slice of Nasdaq-100 stocks. As of the most recent fact sheet, the largest positions include NVIDIA at 7.9%, Apple and Alphabet at 6.4% each, Microsoft at 5%, Amazon at 4.8%, and Meta at 3%. Those companies kick off only modest dividends, so they are not the income story.The second engine is the options overlay. JPMorgan's portfolio managers buy equity-linked notes (ELNs) issued by banks that embed short, out-of-the-money call options on the Nasdaq-100. Each month, the premium collected on those calls flows through to shareholders as a distribution. The fund's stated objective is monthly distributable income and Nasdaq 100 exposure with less volatility through a fundamentally driven equity portfolio and disciplined options overlay. Translation: when volatility is high, option premiums are fat and distributions rise. When markets are calm, premiums shrink and the check shrinks with them.Why the monthly check movesThe distribution history shows exactly that. Over the trailing twelve months, JEPQ has paid as much as $0.62074 per share in June 2025 and as little as $0.44195 in September 2025. The most recent payment, on June 3, 2026, was $0.56444. That is a meaningful spread. A retiree budgeting around the peak month will come up short in quieter months.Terms and Privacy PolicyPrivacy & Cookie SettingsMore Info