NYSEARCA:JEPI

Jpmorgan Equity Premium Income Etf ETF News

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$55.41
+0.0800 (+0.145%)
At Close: Jun 03, 2026
The JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSEARCA:JEPI) has become the default income vehicle for investors seeking S&P 500 exposure without full equity risk.
TappAlpha Innovation 100 Growth & Daily Income ETF offers a differentiated, high-yield covered call strategy ideal for income-focused portfolios in today's inflationary environment. TDAQ's indirect Na
The JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF ( NYSEARCA :JEPI ) is the most popular covered call ETF in the market for a reason.
Generating $7,500 a month in dividend income means producing $90,000 a year from a portfolio without needing to regularly sell principal, though the underlying portfolio value can still fluctuate. For
At 60, Catherine thought the retirement math worked. Between her husband's pension, their savings, and the Social Security benefits they expected to collect together, the plan looked stable. Then her
Four thousand dollars a month in passive income can support a modest but stable retirement alongside Social Security, covering housing, groceries, utilities, insurance, transportation, and a couple of
The average retired worker collected roughly $2,071 a month from Social Security in 2026, the result of a 2.8% cost-of-living adjustment announced last October. Annualized, that works out to approxima
JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (JEPI) has deviated completely from the broader US stock market. It has dropped by over 5.90% from its highest point this year, even as the S&P 500, Dow Jones, and N
TORONTO, May 25, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- J. P. Morgan Asset Management (JPMAM)* today announced the final May 2026 cash distributions for the below listed JPMorgan ETFs. The JPMorgan ETFs trade on th
A 69-year-old couple with $850,000 in investable assets faces a specific problem: they want equity exposure without the risk of a bear market gutting their principal in the first years of retirement,
Holding a high-yield dividend portfolio in a taxable account at the 24% federal bracket means writing the IRS a $14,400 check every year on $60,000 of income that should have been yours.
A 65-year-old single retiree with $300,000 split evenly between two JPMorgan covered-call ETFs can pull roughly $24,000 in annual distributions without filing a single K-1.
At the 24% federal bracket, a portfolio throwing off $42,000 in dividend income hands roughly $10,080 to the IRS every year.
Retirees who want a monthly income without the wild ride of high-yield specialty funds often land on the Amplify CWP Enhanced Dividend Income ETF (NYSEARCA:DIVO). The pitch is straightforward: pair ro
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