I'm a 52-year-old QA Specialist at Confluera, with an annual income of $150,000. Although I do have a retirement account, I'm keen on exploring short-term investment opportunities as I prepare to shift to part-time work in the near future. What would be the most suitable strategy to achieve my goals?
Yeah, brokerage AdvisoRs could make a lot of difference, particularly in a market such as this. Stocks are pretty unstable at the moment, but if you do the right math, you should be just fine. Bloomberg and other finance media have been recording cases of investors raking in 6 to 7 digits in a space of months. So, I think there are a lot of wealth transfer in this downtime if you know where to look. I have been using an FA since 2020, and the least I returned was $140k ROI, and this does not include capital gain.
I don't know if I am permitted to go into details here, but mine is Jenienne Miniter Fagan and you could also look her up though I'm not so sure she's taking on new people atm.
@@Steelersfootball45 not to me. When I sold with dividends minus NAV decay it yielded 11% with dividends reinvested. The are several others that yield more without the decay.
Totally comparable. One can invest in growth stocks for income by selling regularly. It's no different from collecting income from QQQY and watching its NAV erode.
Everyday a I new etf.. its unreal. Jumped on Nvdy back in may for 25.25… collected to massive divs and it up to 31 now.. rolling all divs back into svol and up big since Jan
Honestly, I don't understand why you're discussing these dubious schemes. There are plenty of options like Unimantic and similar ones that are fast and profitable.
Real total return is 6.1% during the first 6 months of 2024. This takes into account NAV loss and dividends paid. That's not bad. However, this has been a goldilocks market for the QQQ for this strategy.
6.1% with reinvest dividend and you call that "not bad"? growth stock can drip over 10%, other dividend etf can yields 10+% with stable nav. oh btw your 6.1% need to calculate in tax as well... yeah.. you right, its not bad, its terrible.
@@Tempest.213 6.1% over the first 6 months of 2024 or perhaps 12.2% per year if the performance continues. 12.2% is not bad for an income vehicle. Personally if I wanted income I would never tolerate a 15-20% NAV erosion every 6 months. NAV erosion suggest a bait and switch scam. The fund is not making enough money to pay the advertised high distribution so they are paying you back your own money.
Please note the nav drop correlates to dividend distribution. It tracks with the underlying stock. Or index. This is trackable information. For example, if 😮the underlying index grows at 10% over 10 years, this fund will track closely along a similar track. You can not compare call option funds to standard dividend funds which do not distribute premium income to investors. You need to watch implied volatility with these funds. The higher IVR the greater the return to investors. Your exit strategy must be when IVR frops and the stock falls to your entry point. Hope this helps
SPYT is going to be Defiance's best option income all the others QQQY, JEPY, IWMY have too much nav decay . , even though SPYT has a target income of 20% they make well over that the last few months. i think defiance could probably target 25 to 30% if they wanted to
@@crazywaffleking well the last time i checked SPYT had over .0.50 of premium collected already, and the last 3 payments have been in the lower 30 cents per share range
As a short term hold for a year or two and dumping like $200k into it and making over $13k a month in dividends... Only a fool wouldn't do that... The huge monthly dividend completely offsets any share price decline. Over the last 4 or 5 months I've owned QQQY I'm only down like $200 in overall share value, but I'm up nearly $60k in dividend income.
@@michellebudinick-dores6759 bought a few months ago,, gonna hold it at least through 2024 reinvesting the monthly dividend that is paying me $14k month..
It's down 28% over the last 3 quarters. That would be -$56,000 if you had $200k in it. Add in 15% tax on dividends and you're at a total after tax return of -$5,000 during that period. Meanwhile VOO would have been up 21%.
It should be interesting to see how QQQY continues to play out. According to Fidelity the dividends do not include Return of Capital and the funds only holdings are US treasuries, which may be down some recently, but nothing like what is shown in the NAV decline and the dividends are down some, but still really high by any standards. It should only be paying out what it makes, so there should be no NAV erosion at this point, it must all be just based on demand. - So people are saying, the dividend isn't paying enough, so I'm selling. NAV erosion is when the fund has to sell assets to pay the dividend (return of capital) or the underlying assets held continually decline in value, or the yield on the assets continually declines, causing the NAV to continually decline. None of these appear to be happening with QQQY.
The potential for a reverse stock split is the only reason I got out of QQQY. Considering I need the income more than I need the value of the portfolio, I would have considered staying in. The past month or two, the price seems to have found a bottom at around $14/share, so I'm keeping an eye on it.
There’s no point to this fund. The NAV is constantly eroded so you can have that amount paid out to you. So you effectively put your money (that you already paid taxes on) in the fund, the fund hands it back to you so you pay taxes on it again, and then you’re left with the same amount of money you had to begin with. Nothing gained or earned, just taxed again on your own funds. Complete waste of time. You’d swear the IRS made this fund as a money machine for themselves
Investors need to accept the fact that gains in most ultra high yielding ETFs as well as gains in a typical market session aren't high enough to offset the ex-dividend dip.
Wouldn't the intrinsic value of their PUT option give them a "limited" downside protection each day in a bear market? I guess it would depend on how bad each day is, a slow decline vs a cliff.
Why not invest in a Safer Stock to start with? Like the Van Eck Dividend Leader. Price appriciation + 4-5% dividend yield... Or FTSE All World High Div Yield? Why the detour?
@@Chichikn you can "buy" any stock/etf in europe by selling a put option (in the money) on it. The only problem is that an option always means you're trading 100 shares, so for some stocks you'll need a massive amount of cash. For example -> you want to buy this at 15$, make sure you have 1500$ + bit extra in cash. Sell 1 put option at 15$ strike price. If the stock goes below 15$ by the expiration date, you'll buy 100 shares at 15$. If the price is above 15$, nothing happens. But you got a bit in premium and you can try again. If you take a strike price "in the money", so higher than the current amount and close to expiration day, the collected premium should cover most of the difference and you shouldn't pay too much above the current price... Not ideal, but it works. Also: make sure you understand the risks of options and by "buying" this way. If the stock drops to 1$, you still have to buy them at 15$ as that was the agreement.
Nope; UCITS regulations prohibit these type of investments for retail investors in EU and UK. QYLD has a UCITS compliant version but there's not many other options for covered call ETFs.
Because it's based on a day trade format; supposedly, from what I can dig up, and it's been driving me nuts for hours, the Divs will be taxed at the short term tax rate even if you long term hold? 😬 Average .80 cents a month to be taxed at 37% rate? Yikes!
I put in 20k into various assets late last year and flipped into six figures within a few months and still going. I’ve always been an advocate of investing because it has been rather rewarding. I hope to attain financial freedom soon. One more thing, keep up the good work brother.
It’s not rocket science. I got into ETFs, index funds, and REITs, myself but wasn't getting the results I wanted the first couple of months. Got tired of taking losses and decided to seek mentorship from Jonas Herman, a certified fiduciary who helps oversee my investments and has guided me to identify key market trends, pinpointed strategic entry points, and provided risk assessments, ensuring my investment decisions align with market dynamics for optimal profit.
@@Vikturneer That's your view. In my experience, there is no such thing as a mentor, it is nearly impossible to achieve success with investing. It’s all just gambling.
Sounds like I need help so bad. To me, these get rich quick schemes (stocks) are not worth it and I know that's the same mindset holding me back from taking a step forward.
I don't usually leave comments on socials but I feel compelled to. I just wanted to let you know that you’re doing a great job, Jonas. You have made a real difference in my investing journey.
Wondering if you'd be interested in making a video on IQQQ and ISPY? Can anyone offer their insight on either or both of these 2 funds? They're still very small funds, and new. Thank you.
How do you handle taxes? Aren't you selling out of these positions short? Is this strategy more profitable than long term income investing? I've seen its popularity grow on YT channels and it just doesn't make sense to me.
@@8ofwands300 I'm selling options. When I get assigned from a put I write my call it's at the same price of put assignment so it's sold at the same price. Options on stock/etfs are short term cap gains. I also do spreads on indexes like SPX and NDX, those are taxed at 60%long/40%short term cap gains.
@@8ofwands300 more profitable if you consistently make good trades. You can make profit both directions easier with options and you don’t have to worry about NAV decay like high dividend income stocks. Options profit is income so not any worse than short term capital gains.
the chart you are getting shows total returns, aka dividends included. the charts that show it going down are share price only, and don't include dividends
And of course (as you pointed out) it has lost nearly 25% of its value since the IPO, and it's fall has been a fairly straight line down. Most of these very high yield dividend stocks look like this, and so it warrants a wait and see approach. I like to see a five year history of stability in both share price and dividend payments, and lots of dividend stock options are available with these constraints, many paying between 8-12% or even higher. Get rich quick strategies are fool hearty. Wealth is attained over a long period of time, and the hard work and patience involved yields a far greater appreciation for that wealth once attained, which in turn leads to wise management of that wealth.
isnt this etf supposed to be "income" generate? what's the point to reinvest the dividend? and with total return it yields a hell less than growth etf. so if you trying to grow portfolio then you got into the wrong etf, if you chasing dividend yield then you get nav erosion on this etf. lol
In a past video you denied using using software generated voice to produce your videos. Liar. With that being said, you tend to repeat yourself. With that being said, you should stop copying and pasting the same text into your software, as it gets annoying. With that being said, please edit your elevator pitch, it gets repetitive. With that being said, by now you should have figured out what line you've worn out. With that being said, this concludes my TH-cam Comment.
qqqy is stupid..... its NAV ALWAYS goesd down....sure it pays alot.....but you have to pay taxes on that....and you lose you captial.....no other way around it....
*Amazing video, you work for 40yrs to have $1M in your retirement, meanwhile some people are putting just $10K into trading from just few months ago and now they are multimillionaires*
Same, I operate a wide- range of Investments with help from My Financial Adviser. My advice is to get a professional who will help you, plan and enhance your management skills. For the record, working with Andrew Louis Stella, has been an amazing experience.
YES!!! That's exactly her name (Andrew Louis Stella) so many people have recommended highly about her and am just starting with her 😊from Brisbane Australia🇦🇺
Good day all👍🏻 from Australia 🇦🇺. I have read a lot of posts that people are very happy with the financial guidance she is giving them ! What way can I get to her exactly ?
If you bought TSLY when Tesla shares were falling that was a mistake. It works when you buy the Yieldmax fund when the underlying company hits a support level and starts to trend upward APLY(underlying AAPL) or when it is on a long upward trend NVDY (underlying NVDA).
Bro you don't need a video this ETF is trash It has lost all of its nav values since inception I sold it months ago after it paid me a ton. QQQY, JEPY, all trash. The only one working at the moment is NVDY, But that's strictly based on NVDA.
@@Whiskydanger wait, so you telling me, reinvest dividend into a "income" etf? then how you using the dividend to pay bills? and with this trash etf, total return its way less than any other growth etf. so if you thinking about reinvest dividend for total return then why not just go for growth etf.
I'm a 52-year-old QA Specialist at Confluera, with an annual income of $150,000. Although I do have a retirement account, I'm keen on exploring short-term investment opportunities as I prepare to shift to part-time work in the near future. What would be the most suitable strategy to achieve my goals?
If you're not familiar with market investing tactics, you should get advice from a financial counselor.
Yeah, brokerage AdvisoRs could make a lot of difference, particularly in a market such as this. Stocks are pretty unstable at the moment, but if you do the right math, you should be just fine. Bloomberg and other finance media have been recording cases of investors raking in 6 to 7 digits in a space of months. So, I think there are a lot of wealth transfer in this downtime if you know where to look. I have been using an FA since 2020, and the least I returned was $140k ROI, and this does not include capital gain.
Could you kindly elaborate on the advisor's background and qualifications?
I don't know if I am permitted to go into details here, but mine is Jenienne Miniter Fagan and you could also look her up though I'm not so sure she's taking on new people atm.
Thank you for this amazing tip. I just looked up Jenienne, wrote her explaining my financial market goals and scheduled a call
The NAV decay is brutal, i sold it all
Me t00
1 day they run out of trading capital Then L00K 0UT below!
Same
Dividends aren’t worth it ?
@@Steelersfootball45 not to me. When I sold with dividends minus NAV decay it yielded 11% with dividends reinvested. The are several others that yield more without the decay.
With the NAV falling, I think I'm just getting my own money back via dividends. But now I have to pay tax on those dividends. Not worth it.
You don't get taxed on Return of Capital.
😂😂😂
@@ChristiantrospectiveGameryes, you do.
Did you not know you have to pa tax?
@@sebastianlucas704 No, you don't. I just dealt with this this tax season. You don't pay tax on your money that is returned to you.
Comparing an income stock to a growth stock is like comparing a banana to a potato chip. Two different vehicles for two different purposes …
I don’t know why so many people don’t get this.
@@JohnsFishTales these funds are meant to generate money for the fund managers. think critically. if its too good to be true, then it probably is.
Totally comparable. One can invest in growth stocks for income by selling regularly. It's no different from collecting income from QQQY and watching its NAV erode.
Problem is that share price can only drop so much, before the dividend also declines.
@@bentobox7788 This
During the bear market is better to have qqqy then nasdaq and get dividents, QQQY will take avantage of the volatility
We can only know it's a bear market in hindsight.
Wrong. QQQY has all the downsides off the Qs and none of the up.
@@charlesherrington2694
How? Premiums are higher with higher volatility, so it’s strictly better than just holding shares
Everyday a I new etf.. its unreal. Jumped on Nvdy back in may for 25.25… collected to massive divs and it up to 31 now.. rolling all divs back into svol and up big since Jan
How do you buy into NVDY?
@@max-ciccone fidelty
I've got a similar strategy. I'm glad to see that I have some idea what I'm doing.
I sold out to go YMAX and FEPI for higher yield.
Honestly, I don't understand why you're discussing these dubious schemes. There are plenty of options like Unimantic and similar ones that are fast and profitable.
I agree completely with this video. I prefer a stable stock price and fluctuating dividend if that’s required to maintain the price
Real total return is 6.1% during the first 6 months of 2024. This takes into account NAV loss and dividends paid. That's not bad. However, this has been a goldilocks market for the QQQ for this strategy.
The guy running it is sure getting rich off it 🤣🤣 1% fee
Forgot income taxes too.
That means qqqi has better yield in reality.
6.1% with reinvest dividend and you call that "not bad"? growth stock can drip over 10%, other dividend etf can yields 10+% with stable nav. oh btw your 6.1% need to calculate in tax as well... yeah.. you right, its not bad, its terrible.
@@Tempest.213 6.1% over the first 6 months of 2024 or perhaps 12.2% per year if the performance continues. 12.2% is not bad for an income vehicle. Personally if I wanted income I would never tolerate a 15-20% NAV erosion every 6 months. NAV erosion suggest a bait and switch scam. The fund is not making enough money to pay the advertised high distribution so they are paying you back your own money.
Please note the nav drop correlates to dividend distribution. It tracks with the underlying stock. Or index. This is trackable information. For example, if 😮the underlying index grows at 10% over 10 years, this fund will track closely along a similar track. You can not compare call option funds to standard dividend funds which do not distribute premium income to investors. You need to watch implied volatility with these funds. The higher IVR the greater the return to investors. Your exit strategy must be when IVR frops and the stock falls to your entry point. Hope this helps
So NAV erosion is when the price goes down? What about SBUX or O? NAV erosion?
SPYT is going to be Defiance's best option income all the others QQQY, JEPY, IWMY have too much nav decay . , even though SPYT has a target income of 20% they make well over that the last few months. i think defiance could probably target 25 to 30% if they wanted to
I just checked and it is right at $20, so if they upped the yield the NAV wouldn't maintain
@@crazywaffleking well the last time i checked SPYT had over .0.50 of premium collected already, and the last 3 payments have been in the lower 30 cents per share range
As a short term hold for a year or two and dumping like $200k into it and making over $13k a month in dividends... Only a fool wouldn't do that... The huge monthly dividend completely offsets any share price decline. Over the last 4 or 5 months I've owned QQQY I'm only down like $200 in overall share value, but I'm up nearly $60k in dividend income.
When did you first buy it? And do you still hold it?
@@michellebudinick-dores6759 bought a few months ago,, gonna hold it at least through 2024 reinvesting the monthly dividend that is paying me $14k month..
It's down 28% over the last 3 quarters. That would be -$56,000 if you had $200k in it. Add in 15% tax on dividends and you're at a total after tax return of -$5,000 during that period. Meanwhile VOO would have been up 21%.
@@pioneer7777777 I'm down $11k in stock price value but i've received $57k in dividends, so i'm actually up $46k overall.
It should be interesting to see how QQQY continues to play out. According to Fidelity the dividends do not include Return of Capital and the funds only holdings are US treasuries, which may be down some recently, but nothing like what is shown in the NAV decline and the dividends are down some, but still really high by any standards. It should only be paying out what it makes, so there should be no NAV erosion at this point, it must all be just based on demand. - So people are saying, the dividend isn't paying enough, so I'm selling.
NAV erosion is when the fund has to sell assets to pay the dividend (return of capital) or the underlying assets held continually decline in value, or the yield on the assets continually declines, causing the NAV to continually decline. None of these appear to be happening with QQQY.
Ok then! I am investing in it today!
-25% this year. The Nav errosion is strong with this one. Its a pass for me. I will stick with JEPQ/JEPI maybe some ymax.
The potential for a reverse stock split is the only reason I got out of QQQY. Considering I need the income more than I need the value of the portfolio, I would have considered staying in. The past month or two, the price seems to have found a bottom at around $14/share, so I'm keeping an eye on it.
Help me understand how they can give a $3.45 distribution after making a 1 for 3 reverse split?
The only Defiance fund I'm interested in is spyt as they target 20% yield and try to maintain NAV at $20.
There’s no point to this fund. The NAV is constantly eroded so you can have that amount paid out to you. So you effectively put your money (that you already paid taxes on) in the fund, the fund hands it back to you so you pay taxes on it again, and then you’re left with the same amount of money you had to begin with. Nothing gained or earned, just taxed again on your own funds. Complete waste of time. You’d swear the IRS made this fund as a money machine for themselves
You like this better then FEPI?
I mean wouldn't it just be better to invest into the QQQ or BDC's that hold their value atleast.
Investors need to accept the fact that gains in most ultra high yielding ETFs as well as gains in a typical market session aren't high enough to offset the ex-dividend dip.
Wouldn't the intrinsic value of their PUT option give them a "limited" downside protection each day in a bear market? I guess it would depend on how bad each day is, a slow decline vs a cliff.
Defiance spyt is my main focus. I own some jepy and spyt
I own that ETF ( SPYT) too but I see very little coverage of it. Would love this channel to evaluate it.
Put in your ROTH and see how it pans out
Sold out of this fund a few weeks ago,was up a little with dividends reinvested,rather stick with cony till that falls off
What about if you just used the dividends push in to a safer stock or ETF?
Why not invest in a Safer Stock to start with? Like the Van Eck Dividend Leader. Price appriciation + 4-5% dividend yield... Or FTSE All World High Div Yield?
Why the detour?
Can we buy that in Europe ?
Didn't found how yet. Searching and searching but nothing... Hope someone has a way to buy this
@@Chichikn you can "buy" any stock/etf in europe by selling a put option (in the money) on it. The only problem is that an option always means you're trading 100 shares, so for some stocks you'll need a massive amount of cash.
For example -> you want to buy this at 15$, make sure you have 1500$ + bit extra in cash. Sell 1 put option at 15$ strike price. If the stock goes below 15$ by the expiration date, you'll buy 100 shares at 15$. If the price is above 15$, nothing happens. But you got a bit in premium and you can try again. If you take a strike price "in the money", so higher than the current amount and close to expiration day, the collected premium should cover most of the difference and you shouldn't pay too much above the current price... Not ideal, but it works.
Also: make sure you understand the risks of options and by "buying" this way. If the stock drops to 1$, you still have to buy them at 15$ as that was the agreement.
no pretty much all covered call funds aren't available in europe or the UK.
Nope; UCITS regulations prohibit these type of investments for retail investors in EU and UK. QYLD has a UCITS compliant version but there's not many other options for covered call ETFs.
In fact, the ones who introduced me to Alpaca and covered calls were a Greek friend and an Italian friend.
Wasn’t QQQY losing money for a while? Plus they charge more
Because it's based on a day trade format; supposedly, from what I can dig up, and it's been driving me nuts for hours, the Divs will be taxed at the short term tax rate even if you long term hold? 😬 Average .80 cents a month to be taxed at 37% rate? Yikes!
Great video, keep up the awesome work. Thank you,
I put in 20k into various assets late last year and flipped into six figures within a few months and still going. I’ve always been an advocate of investing because it has been rather rewarding. I hope to attain financial freedom soon. One more thing, keep up the good work brother.
To be honest, I've had a hard time grasping the basics. What assets did you invest in?
It’s not rocket science. I got into ETFs, index funds, and REITs, myself but wasn't getting the results I wanted the first couple of months. Got tired of taking losses and decided to seek mentorship from Jonas Herman, a certified fiduciary who helps oversee my investments and has guided me to identify key market trends, pinpointed strategic entry points, and provided risk assessments, ensuring my investment decisions align with market dynamics for optimal profit.
@@Vikturneer That's your view. In my experience, there is no such thing as a mentor, it is nearly impossible to achieve success with investing. It’s all just gambling.
Sounds like I need help so bad. To me, these get rich quick schemes (stocks) are not worth it and I know that's the same mindset holding me back from taking a step forward.
I don't usually leave comments on socials but I feel compelled to. I just wanted to let you know that you’re doing a great job, Jonas. You have made a real difference in my investing journey.
Considering doubling down on my Cyberopolis investment. The upside is just too good to ignore.
Wondering if you'd be interested in making a video on IQQQ and ISPY? Can anyone offer their insight on either or both of these 2 funds? They're still very small funds, and new. Thank you.
Please continue to list the distribution rate of any stock you mention as standard for your videos.
How can I invest in QQQY ETF
Spyt from defiance is better for the people concerned about nav decay
Cyberopolis's partnership announcements have been impressive. They're clearly playing to win.
I have 250 shares in Roth and not complaining... yet at least
Wtf, -28% since inception while the market was up during that time? No thank you
The Cyberopolis community is one of the most positive and supportive I've come across. Big things ahead!
This is risky as freak because one day of intense volatility and the fund goes bust
Except they profit off high vol.
been buy this more lately
I just wheel on spy and qqq, control my own fate.
How do you handle taxes? Aren't you selling out of these positions short? Is this strategy more profitable than long term income investing? I've seen its popularity grow on YT channels and it just doesn't make sense to me.
@@8ofwands300 short term cap gains on stocks and etfs, I also do put spreads on indexes (SPX, NDX) which is 60 long/ 40 short term
@@8ofwands300 I'm selling options. When I get assigned from a put I write my call it's at the same price of put assignment so it's sold at the same price. Options on stock/etfs are short term cap gains. I also do spreads on indexes like SPX and NDX, those are taxed at 60%long/40%short term cap gains.
@@8ofwands300 more profitable if you consistently make good trades. You can make profit both directions easier with options and you don’t have to worry about NAV decay like high dividend income stocks. Options profit is income so not any worse than short term capital gains.
What div reinvest calculator is that?
Try the dividend channel website
I’m confused. The chart I get shows the value increasing. Wtf am I missing???
the chart you are getting shows total returns, aka dividends included. the charts that show it going down are share price only, and don't include dividends
@@gregorykeller5710 weird since it shows the bid and ask prices
@@gregorykeller5710 ok I’m seeing now when I use something other than Webull’s charts. And it sheds better light on QDTE too lol
NAV is " net asset value" essentially the share price, different from dividends.
Cyberopolis's innovative solutions could make it the leader in its niche. Definitely one to watch.
And of course (as you pointed out) it has lost nearly 25% of its value since the IPO, and it's fall has been a fairly straight line down. Most of these very high yield dividend stocks look like this, and so it warrants a wait and see approach. I like to see a five year history of stability in both share price and dividend payments, and lots of dividend stock options are available with these constraints, many paying between 8-12% or even higher. Get rich quick strategies are fool hearty. Wealth is attained over a long period of time, and the hard work and patience involved yields a far greater appreciation for that wealth once attained, which in turn leads to wise management of that wealth.
I think QQQY has been pretty good if you include dividends.😮
isnt this etf supposed to be "income" generate? what's the point to reinvest the dividend? and with total return it yields a hell less than growth etf. so if you trying to grow portfolio then you got into the wrong etf, if you chasing dividend yield then you get nav erosion on this etf. lol
25% loss of the stock value since inception, and around 5% total return I believe... I don´t see it
The word synthetic just means more risk imo
Just looking at the rapidly decreasing nav, I got one thing to say. Stay away!
Nikolaus Oval
Harris Jose Jackson Larry Perez Kevin
Synthetic? So a replica of a real stock?
In a world of volatile cryptos, Cyberopolis stands out with its strong fundamentals and clear vision.
Sounds like a poor man’s covered call. They buy a long dated call and sell covered calls against it.
The more I dig into Cyberopolis, the more bullish I become. This isn't hype, it's substance.
In a past video you denied using using software generated voice to produce your videos. Liar. With that being said, you tend to repeat yourself. With that being said, you should stop copying and pasting the same text into your software, as it gets annoying. With that being said, please edit your elevator pitch, it gets repetitive. With that being said, by now you should have figured out what line you've worn out. With that being said, this concludes my TH-cam Comment.
Only in Qyld and Ryld.
QYLD/RYLD/XYLD have been delapidating for the past couple of years though. I'm not sure if putting money into those is such a good idea.
Try QQQI
Not worth it when you factor in the total return.
Defiance = NAV erosion... good luck.
Exp Ratio is way too expensive .99 😂😂😂
qqqy is stupid..... its NAV ALWAYS goesd down....sure it pays alot.....but you have to pay taxes on that....and you lose you captial.....no other way around it....
*Amazing video, you work for 40yrs to have $1M in your retirement, meanwhile some people are putting just $10K into trading from just few months ago and now they are multimillionaires*
Same, I operate a wide- range of Investments with help from My Financial Adviser. My advice is to get a professional who will help you, plan and enhance your management skills. For the record, working with Andrew Louis Stella, has been an amazing experience.
YES!!! That's exactly her name (Andrew Louis Stella) so many people have recommended highly about her and am just starting with her 😊from Brisbane Australia🇦🇺
Hello how do you make such monthly?? I'm a born Christian and sometimes I feel so down 🤦♀️of myself because of low finance but I still
believe in God
Good day all👍🏻 from Australia 🇦🇺. I have read a lot of posts that people are very happy with the financial guidance she is giving them ! What way can I get to her exactly ?
A lot of good news about her even on the news today and so many recommendations on TH-cam. She must be a great person, I’m willing to work with her
Anyone else remembering that ETN not so long agi THAT VANISHED 0VERNIGHT that left its shareholders stuck?
DO UTLY PLEASE
Fepi, qqqi, and spyt are much better income plays with a much more stable NAV
All of these enhanced ETFs drop in price at a rate faster than you can collect the dividend. There is no such thing as free money. Just stop it.
Jesus! This ETF sounds like a nightmare! No thank you!
Hard pass for me, learned from TSLY. Not messing with any of this super high yield garbage.
If you bought TSLY when Tesla shares were falling that was a mistake. It works when you buy the Yieldmax fund when the underlying company hits a support level and starts to trend upward APLY(underlying AAPL) or when it is on a long upward trend NVDY (underlying NVDA).
Bro you don't need a video this ETF is trash It has lost all of its nav values since inception I sold it months ago after it paid me a ton. QQQY, JEPY, all trash. The only one working at the moment is NVDY, But that's strictly based on NVDA.
This is an idiotic statement. Total return is positive. Full stop.
@@Whiskydanger wait, so you telling me, reinvest dividend into a "income" etf? then how you using the dividend to pay bills? and with this trash etf, total return its way less than any other growth etf. so if you thinking about reinvest dividend for total return then why not just go for growth etf.
YMAG
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