I didn’t discover covered calls because I was some kind of options genius. I discovered them the way most people stumble into “advanced” strategies—by being annoyed. Annoyed that I was holding stocks that weren’t doing much. Annoyed that dividends felt slow. Annoyed that the market seemed to reward chaos while I was out here trying to be disciplined. So when I first heard about covered calls, the pitch sounded almost suspiciously perfect: “You can generate income from stocks you already own… just by selling options against them.” Oh. So I can get paid for doing what I was already doing—holding shares and waiting? Sign me up. Immediately. What I didn’t realize at the time is that covered calls are one of those strategies that sound simple, are simple at a surface level, but come with a handful of trade-offs that quietly determine whether you feel like a genius… or like you just capped your own upside right before a rally. So let me walk you through how I actually think about...
I didn’t fall into option-income ETFs because I’m some kind of derivatives wizard. I fell into them the same way most people do—by staring at my portfolio during a flat market and thinking, “So… we’re just going to sit here and do nothing?” That’s the moment these ETFs show up like a smooth-talking financial bartender and say, “What if your money worked while it waited?” And suddenly, I’m listening. Because the pitch is seductive: steady income, less reliance on market direction, and yields that look like they were typed with a wink. It’s not just investing—it’s monetizing boredom. But like most things that sound a little too clever, there’s more going on under the hood than the marketing suggests. So let me walk you through how I think about option-income ETFs—the good, the bad, and the quietly complicated. What Option-Income ETFs Actually Do (Without the Buzzwords) Here’s the simplest way I can explain it without turning this into a derivatives lecture: These ETFs own a bask...