I used to think investing was supposed to feel intelligent. Then I watched a guy on financial television scream about “market efficiency” five minutes before recommending investors pile into the exact same seven companies every other investor already owns. That’s when I realized modern investing isn’t really a sophisticated system anymore. It’s a crowded concert exit with earnings reports. And nowhere is that more obvious than in mega-cap concentrated indexes — those beautiful little financial machines where a handful of gigantic companies quietly dominate everything while the rest of the index shows up like unpaid interns. We pretend these indexes are diversified. That’s adorable. You buy an index expecting broad exposure to the economy and end up owning a technologically enhanced worship ceremony for a few trillion-dollar corporations. The whole thing starts feeling less like investing and more like economically sanctioned celebrity culture. And honestly? I love it. Becaus...
There’s something deeply funny about modern investing. People will spend three hours researching the “best ergonomic office chair” because they’re worried about lumbar support, but then casually dump their retirement savings into financial products they barely understand because some guy on YouTube used the phrase “enhanced yield.” That’s how we ended up here. An entire generation of investors discovered passive growth investing, realized index funds were too emotionally boring, and collectively decided: “What if we added options strategies on top of them?” And thus emerged the strange, beautiful, slightly unhinged world of call overwrite strategies in passive growth exposure. Which is Wall Street terminology for: “We’re going to cap some upside in exchange for income and then explain it with enough charts that nobody notices the existential tradeoff.” I know that sounds cynical. That’s because it is. But it’s also true. And honestly, the more I study these strategies, the m...