ProShares’ High Income ETFs Surpass $1 Billion in Assets
First-to-market innovation solves pitfall of conventional covered call ETFs, enabling investors to target high income with more upside potential
ProShares’ High Income ETF lineup includes the S&P 500 High Income ETF (ISPY), Nasdaq-100 High Income ETF (IQQQ), and Russell 2000 High Income ETF (ITWO). Each fund’s strategy utilizes daily call options—an innovation that ProShares pioneered with the launch of ISPY in
“Investors looking to generate income from their portfolios often face a difficult trade-off: sacrificing upside for higher yields,” said
Traditional covered call ETFs have largely focused on income generation at the expense of total return. ProShares’ first-to-market approach changes that equation. As industry-wide assets in covered call ETFs exceed
“We appreciate the confidence that clients have placed in our strategies, helping us reach this important milestone,” added
About ProShares
ProShares has been at the forefront of the ETF revolution since 2006. ProShares manages over
1 ProShares first surpassed
The Funds seek to replicate a daily covered call strategy by investing in equity securities and derivatives. The Funds do not sell (write) call options.
This is not intended to be investment advice.
Investing involves risk, including the possible loss of principal. These ProShares ETFs are non-diversified and entail certain risks, including risks associated with the use of derivatives (swap agreements, futures contracts and similar instruments), investments in smaller companies, imperfect benchmark correlation, and market price variance, all of which can increase volatility and decrease performance. Please see summary and full prospectuses for a more complete description of risks on ProShares.com.
There is no guarantee any ProShares ETF will achieve its investment objective. The performance of the Funds may not correspond to the performance of their respective indexes, the Funds may not be successful in generating income for investors, and the Funds may not capture returns that traditional covered call strategies may sacrifice.
The S&P 500 Daily Covered Call Index replicates the performance of a covered call investment strategy that combines a long position in the S&P 500 Index with a short position in S&P 500 Index call options. The Nasdaq-100® Daily Covered Call Index replicates the performance of a covered call investment strategy that combines a long position in the Nasdaq-100 Index with a short position in Nasdaq-100® Index call options. The Cboe Russell 2000 Daily Covered Call Index replicates the performance of a covered call investment strategy that combines a long position in the Russell 2000 Index with a short position in Russell 2000 Index call options. In particular, each index is designed to replicate a daily covered call strategy that sells call options with one day to expiration each day.
Shares of any ETF are generally bought and sold at market price (not NAV) and are not individually redeemed from the fund. Your brokerage commissions will reduce returns.
Carefully consider the investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses of ProShares before investing. This and other information can be found in their summary and full prospectuses at ProShares.com .
The S&P 500 Daily Covered Call Index is a product of
Nasdaq®, Nasdaq-100 Index®, Nasdaq-100®, NDX®, Nasdaq-100 Daily Covered Call™ Index, NDXDCC™, Nasdaq-100 Daily Covered Call Option™ Index, NDXDCCOV™, Nasdaq-100 Daily Covered Call Income™ Index, NDXDCCI™, are registered trademarks of Nasdaq, Inc. (which with its affiliates and third party licensors is referred to as the “Corporations”) and are licensed for use by
London Stock Exchange Group plc and its group undertakings (collectively, the “LSE Group”). ©LSE Group 2024. FTSE Russell is a trading name of certain of the
ProShares are distributed by
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Source: ProShares