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JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSEARCA:JEPI) and JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSEARCA:JEPQ) pull from very different stock universes. JEPI leans on S&P 500 names with a covered call overlay. JEPQ runs the same income playbook on the Nasdaq-100. The latest fact sheets show why that distinction matters in 2026.
Defensive Blue Chips Anchor One. Mega-Cap Tech Drives the Other.
JEPI’s portfolio includes Johnson & Johnson at 1.8%, Ross Stores at 1.7%, EOG Resources at 1.7%, NextEra Energy at 1.7%, and AbbVie at 1.6%. Sector exposure spreads across Information Technology at 14.6%, Health Care at 12.6%, Industrials at 11.9%, and Financials at 9.4%.
JEPQ starts with NVIDIA at 7.4%, Apple at 6.4%, Alphabet at 5.1%, Microsoft at 4.9%, and Amazon at 4.1%. Information Technology accounts for 41.1% of holdings, with Communication Services adding another 12.1%. The income comes from selling calls against volatile mega-caps.
| Lens | JEPI | JEPQ |
| Benchmark | S&P 500 | Nasdaq-100 |
| Net Assets | $43.96B | $34.27B |
| Expense Ratio | 0.35% | 0.35% |
| Distribution Yield | 8.45% | 11.98% |
| Inception | May 2020 | May 2022 |
Higher Yield, Higher Beta
JEPQ’s richer payout reflects fatter option premiums when implied volatility is high. JEPQ paid $0.59095 in May 2026, after $0.5586 in April. JEPI paid $0.44761 in May 2026 versus $0.4205 a month earlier. Both distribute monthly without a miss.
Total return reveals what the call overlay costs. Over the past year JEPQ rose 28.67%, while Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ | QQQ Price Prediction) ran 43.79%. JEPI returned 9.84% against SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:SPY), which returned 30.37%. The cap on upside is the price of income.
The Next Test Is Volatility
Income from covered calls thrives when markets chop sideways and fades when stocks rip higher. I will watch whether tech volatility stays elevated enough to keep JEPQ’s distributions in the high-$0.50 range. JEPI’s June 2025 distribution of $0.54001 showed the fund can surprise when option premiums spike.
Why I Lean Toward JEPI for Sleep-At-Night Income
For a retirement income sleeve, JEPI fits better. The 8.45% yield comes from a diversified blue-chip book that won’t whip around with every NVIDIA earnings cycle. Top holdings sit at modest weights, the largest under 2%, limiting single-name shocks. JEPQ suits someone comfortable owning concentrated tech exposure who wants the option overlay to convert volatility into cash. You give up meaningful upside in strong Nasdaq runs. I would own JEPQ as a yield-tilted way to stay invested in tech while collecting 11.98% on the way through, not as a defensive income vehicle. The right fund depends on the underlying market exposure an investor wants. The income strategy is the wrapper, not the engine.
